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Adaptive methodology to determine hydrophobicity of nanomaterials in situ

The hydrophobicity of nanoparticles (NPs) is a key property determining environmental fate, biological partitioning and toxicity. However, methods to characterize surface hydrophobicity are not uniformly applied to NPs and cannot quantify surface changes in complex environments. Existing methods des...

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Published in:PloS one 2020-06, Vol.15 (6), p.e0233844
Main Authors: Crandon, Lauren E, Boenisch, Kylie M, Harper, Bryan J, Harper, Stacey L
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description The hydrophobicity of nanoparticles (NPs) is a key property determining environmental fate, biological partitioning and toxicity. However, methods to characterize surface hydrophobicity are not uniformly applied to NPs and cannot quantify surface changes in complex environments. Existing methods designed to evaluate the hydrophobicity of bulk solids, chemicals, and proteins have significant limitations when applied to NPs. In this study, we modified and evaluated two methods to determine the hydrophobicity of NPs, hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) and dye adsorption, and compared them to the standard octanol-water partitioning protocol for chemicals. Gold, copper oxide, silica, and amine-functionalized silica NPs were used to evaluate methods based on their applicability to NPs that agglomerate and have surface coatings. The octanol water partitioning and HIC methods both measured Au NPs as hydrophilic, but despite having a small size and stable suspension, NPs could not be fully recovered from the HIC column. For the dye adsorption method, hydrophobic (Rose Bengal) and hydrophilic (Nile Blue) dyes were adsorbed to the NP surface, and linear isotherm parameters were used as a metric for hydrophobicity. CuO was determined to be slightly hydrophilic, while SiO.sub.2 was hydrophilic and Ami-SiO.sub.2 was hydrophobic. The advantages and limitations of each method are discussed, and the dye adsorption method is recommended as the most suitable for application across broad classes of nanomaterials. The dye assay method was further used to measure changes in the surface hydrophobicity of TiO.sub.2 NPs after being suspended in natural water collected from the Alsea Rivers watershed in Oregon. TiO.sub.2 NPs adsorbed Rose Bengal when suspended in ultrapure water, but adsorbed Nile Blue after being incubated in natural water samples, demonstrating a shift from hydrophobic to hydrophilic properties on the outer surface. The dye adsorption method can be applied to characterize surface hydrophobicity of NPs and quantify environmental transformations, potentially improving environmental fate models.
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For the dye adsorption method, hydrophobic (Rose Bengal) and hydrophilic (Nile Blue) dyes were adsorbed to the NP surface, and linear isotherm parameters were used as a metric for hydrophobicity. CuO was determined to be slightly hydrophilic, while SiO.sub.2 was hydrophilic and Ami-SiO.sub.2 was hydrophobic. The advantages and limitations of each method are discussed, and the dye adsorption method is recommended as the most suitable for application across broad classes of nanomaterials. The dye assay method was further used to measure changes in the surface hydrophobicity of TiO.sub.2 NPs after being suspended in natural water collected from the Alsea Rivers watershed in Oregon. TiO.sub.2 NPs adsorbed Rose Bengal when suspended in ultrapure water, but adsorbed Nile Blue after being incubated in natural water samples, demonstrating a shift from hydrophobic to hydrophilic properties on the outer surface. 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subjects Adsorption
Analysis
Bioaccumulation
Bioavailability
Biological properties
Chemical properties
Chemicals
Chromatography
Contact angle
Copper
Copper oxides
Dyes
Earth Sciences
Engineering and Technology
Environment models
Environmental engineering
Evaluation
Fate
Hydrophilicity
Hydrophobicity
Lipids
Measurement methods
Methods
Nanomaterials
Nanoparticles
Nanotechnology
Octanol
Partitioning
Physical Sciences
Povidone
Proteins
Research and Analysis Methods
Silica
Silicon dioxide
Surface chemistry
Titanium dioxide
Toxicity
Toxicology
Water
Water analysis
Water sampling
title Adaptive methodology to determine hydrophobicity of nanomaterials in situ
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