METAL NANOPARTICLE ENHANCED SEMICONDUCTOR FILM FOR FUNCTIONALIZED TEXTILES
A method for forming superior and stable metallic nanoparticle and semiconductor coated fiber materials is provided. The method can include the steps of coating at least one surface of a material, for example a textile material, with a semiconducting layer, and growing metallic nanoparticles directly on the semiconducting layer. The steps for coating the surface of the material with a semiconducting layer can include forming a titanium dioxide film on the surface of the textile material, immersing the coated textile layer in a metallic nanoparticle precursor solution, drying the coated textile layer and exposing the textile layer to UV radiation. The metallic nanoparticles can include gold and/or silver nanoparticles. Also disclosed are materials resistant to microbes, including bacteria and viruses. These materials comprise at least one treated surface coated with metallic nanoparticles. The treated surface may comprise the surface of a textile material, such as a cotton fiber surface. Personal protection equipment, that are effective for preventing exposure to bacteria and viruses, such as surgical masks and protective garments, are provided, and are made with the textiles described.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Ser. No. 62/830,953, filed Apr. 8, 2019, and to U.S. Ser. No. 16/818,751, filed Mar. 13, 2020, the contents of which are specifically incorporated herein by reference.
GOVERNMENT LICENSE RIGHTSThis invention was made with government support under D01_W911SR-14-2-0001-0003 awarded by the Department of Defense. The government has certain rights in the invention.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates to the field of surface coatings and methods for providing a surface coating to a material, as a method of treating a material, for example a textile material, such that at least one surface of the material comprises a nanostructured coating, is provided. The invention also relates to the field of nanostructured coatings that are self-cleaning, anti-microbial (anti-bacterial, anti-viral), and radiation-protective. The invention further relates to the field of semiconducting metal oxide thin film coatings, as a semiconducting metal oxide thin film coating comprising metallic nanoparticle incorporated to a semiconducting film is provided, the film providing an active photocatalyst layer imparting the above characteristics to a surface having the film provided thereon. The invention also relates to the field of methods for providing a thin film to a surface, as a method for generating a thin, homogenous, nanostructured film of titanium dioxide on a cellulosic substrate, and generating noble metal nanoparticles (silver and gold) directly on the titanium oxide surface to provide a treated surface, is presented. The treated surface enhances photocatalytic activity at the surface, and renders the treated surface self-cleaning and antimicrobial. A surface treated with a titanium dioxide coating process alone does not possess these characteristics. The invention also relates to methods of treating materials and surfaces of other natural or synthetic substrates, other semiconductor-based thin films, and the use and incorporation of other noble/common metallic nanoparticles.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONConventional fabric treatment methods aim to provide stain resistance, extend the lifetime of the textile material, or provide anti-microbial action through the use of chemicals that seal and protect the fabric, or through treatment methods that leave the fabric innately resistant to stains. Treatment methods that rely on semiconducting materials being deposited on a textile typically rely on complicated methods ill-suited to scaling to industrial scale, and also typically yield a textile material that is impregnated by and/or decorated with discrete semiconductor nanotubes or nanoparticles, which both have the disadvantage of being more readily removed from the fabric and less photocatalytically active than a thin, uniform film. Sol-gel based treatment techniques are one of the developed procedures for depositing a surface photocatalytic coating on textile materials.
Medical and disaster associated protective gear, including masks, garments, hospital draping materials, and the like, remain at best of limited protective effectivity, especially in regards virus and virus related pathologies. Research in this area reports that particles having a size of 0.04 to 0.2 μm can penetrate commonly used surgical (medical) and personal use masks. The particle size of the coronavirus responsible for SARS has been estimated to be within the range of 0.08 to 0.14 μm. Therefore, conventional surgical masks and personal use masks are not effective for blocking the penetration of the coronavirus. Assuming that SARS-CoV-2 has a similar size, currently available surgical masks are unlikely to effectively filter this virus. The size and concentrations of SARS-CoV-2 in aerosols generated during coughing remain unknown.
When noting greater contamination on the outside versus the inside of the mask, investigators have speculated the contamination may be due to the aerodynamic features of the mask, or the small aerosols of SARS-CoV-2 generated during a high-velocity cough.
While these and other findings reinforce the importance of hand hygiene after touching the outside of masks, it also highlights the grave deficiencies in current, widely used public health protective devices, including face masks, in shielding the user and the public at large from virus exposure and spread. More effective materials are needed in the medical arts to create personal protective devices, such as masks and protective garments, to control and/or reduce the spread of viral diseases.
While some improvements have been made in the development of advanced textile materials with a photocatalytic film or layer, current methods and techniques remain ill-suited for large scale production, and fail to provide more than limited self-cleaning, anti-microbial, anti-viral and/or radiation-protective properties. Accordingly, a need continues to exist in the medical arts for improved textiles and fiber materials amenable to large scale production, and that preferably are self-cleaning, anti-microbial, anti-viral and possess radiation-protective properties.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention provides a solution to the various problems and limitations in the medical arts. The method and system disclosed herein provides for the generation of a nanostructured photocatalytic system on at least one surface of a textile material, for example a cotton textile material, using an elegant and scalable method. The techniques described herein provide for the construction of a nanostructured photocatalytic system on a surface using a sol-gel based synthetic method. A semiconducting thin film (e.g., a thickness of about 1 mM) is thereby deposited on the surface of the textile (e.g., a fabric), and thereby facilitates photocatalytic chemical reactions to occur on the surface, beneficially providing for the absorption of UV light. In this manner, penetration of materials may be prevented by UV radiation. Noble metal nanoparticles are directly grown on the semiconducting thin film surface by using a solution-based coating method, followed by irradiation with UV light. This method holds several advantages over alternative metal particle incorporation techniques, as this method reduces and/or prevents the formation of noble metal precursors. The initial deposited semiconducting layer at the surface acts to reduce the noble metal precursors, and serves to permit the direct growth of nanostructured gold nanoparticles and/or nanostructured silver nanoparticles directly on the semiconducting thin film surface. This semiconducting thin film surface may be advantageously provided onto the surface of any variety of natural fiber materials, such as natural cotton fibers. In turn, these treated functionalized fibers provide for fabrication of functionalized textile materials, that may be used in the production of any variety of products, including personal protective equipment.
The noble metal nanoparticles are variably sized, which allows for the absorption (and thus the photochemical utilization) of a range of incident radiation that wouldn't be absorbed by the semiconducting oxide layer alone. These nanoparticles are also capable as acting as electron acceptors for the photo-generated electrons from the oxide surface, which absorbs incident high-energy UV radiation. The nanoparticles thus help to reduce charge recombination and also generate additional excitons from the absorption of incident light at a longer wavelength than that absorbed by the semiconducting material. The tandem semiconducting oxide layer/nanoparticle system exhibits more efficient photocatalytic performance than other methods, and the synthetic techniques used in this invention are facile and scalable.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for the deposition of a thin, uniform semiconducting film, and subsequent decoration of said film with noble metal nanoparticles grown directly on the semiconducting film surface.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, this method provides a means for the large-scale facile manufacture of textile materials with said coating, which lends the finished materials self-cleaning, antimicrobial, antiviral and UV-protective properties.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for the direct reduction of gold chloride and silver nitrate (gold and silver nanoparticle precursors) on the semiconducting surface under intense UV radiation during the manufacturing process, thus enabling the direct growth of the nanoparticles on the oxide surface and improving manufacturing time compared to the utilization of various chemical reducing agents and/or the separate growth of the nanoparticles and subsequent deposition onto the semiconductor-coated fabric, which would further complicate manufacture.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for coating all fibrous/non-fibrous textile materials with a semiconducting layer and nanoparticles to lend them anti-microbial, self-cleaning, and radiation-protective properties.
The present invention advances the art of treating textile materials with the aim of obtaining a textile material that has self-cleaning, anti-microbial, or radiation protective properties, and, in addition, provides an improved method for the application of the coating in a scalable manufacturing process.
Other aspects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the accompanying drawing figures.
A clear understanding of the methodology employed and results obtained by this novel treatment technique can be had by referencing the appended drawings which illustrate the method and results of the innovative treatment technique, although it will be understood that such drawings depict preferred embodiments of the invention and, therefore, are not to be considered as limiting its scope with regard to other embodiments which the invention is capable of contemplating.
Accordingly, in the accompanying drawing, which forms a part of the specification and is to be read in conjunction therewith in which like reference numerals are used to indicate like or similar parts in the various views:
The invention will now be described with reference to the drawing figures, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout. For purposes of clarity in illustrating the characteristics of the present invention, proportional relationships of the elements have not necessarily been maintained in the drawing figures.
The following detailed description of the invention references specific embodiments in which the invention can be practiced. The embodiments are intended to describe aspects of the invention in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention. Other embodiments can be utilized and changes can be made without departing from the scope of the present invention. The present invention is defined by the appended claims and the description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense and shall not limit the scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled.
The present invention is directed to noble metal particles, such as gold and/or silver, titanium dioxide coated fibers or textile materials 10. Such fibers 10 of the present invention have been shown to have substantial benefits, including being self-cleaning, anti-microbial, and protective against UV radiation. The present invention is also directed to a method 100 for constructing metallic nanoparticle and semiconductor layer textile materials. According to one embodiment, method 100 includes procedures for depositing and/or growing gold/silver nanoparticles onto a nanostructured titanium dioxide (TiO2) film applied to a textile material or fiber surface. As described in greater detail herein, the method 100 of the present invention can be utilized to apply a uniform and high surface area film of TiO2 onto a cotton fiber or other textile material, and subsequently directly incorporate gold/silver nanoparticles on the nanostructured TiO2 surface of the fiber/textile material. The method 100 described herein can produce a TiO2 film that is substantially homogenous with uniformly distributed Au/Ag nanoparticles on the TiO2 film distributed using photocatalytic reduction method.
According to one embodiment the Ag—TiO2 coated textile material 10 of the present invention was observed to have the largest improvement in rate of stain extinction compared to the untreated fibers with a methylene blue stain. According to one embodiment, the Au and/or Ag—TiO2 coated textile material 10 of the present invention were observed to have the largest improvement versus untreated fibers when stained with Congo red. The Ag/Au—TiO2 coated textile material 10 can maintain consistent photocatalytic activity over multiple cycles and have resistance to degradation, which was verified using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The Ag/Au—TiO2 coated textile material 10 are also configured for efficient anti-microbial activity, which was confirmed by exposure of the fibers to bacterial culture (Escherichia Coli) and direct observation of antimicrobial activity.
As described herein, the present invention is directed to a method 100 for depositing and/or growing nanostructured gold and silver nanoparticles on the surface of natural fibers (i.e., textile materials) that have been coated with TiO2. The TiO2 coating can be applied utilizing a sol-gel based method that uniformly coats the fiber material; however, other methods can also be suitably be used. TiO2 is a well-known photo-catalyst that has been extensively tested and shown to effectively decompose a wide range of organic substances under irradiation with solar light, including methylene blue, isothiazolin-3-ones, formaldehyde, acid orange, phenol, coffee/wine stains, and even the chemical warfare agent Soman. The innate photocatalytic effectiveness of TiO2 is very high, even under artificial room lighting a layer of TiO2 possesses sufficient photocatalytic activity to completely mineralize an approximately 1 μm thick hydrocarbon layer every hour, and therefore can be suitable for a surface photocatalytic coating to produce self-cleaning fibers and textile materials.
The gold and silver nanoparticles can be applied via direct reduction of AuCl3 and/or AgNO3 by UV radiation as described herein. Ag/Au—TiO2 coated fibers 10 created through method 100 of the present invention have demonstrated self-cleansing and anti-microbial properties. Silver nanoparticles have been shown to have antibacterial activity and have been shown to reduce the incidence of electron/hole recombination when used in conjunction with TiO2, which should improve photocatalytic activity. Gold nanoparticles have been shown to decrease the bandgap of TiO2 which improves overall photocatalytic activity and allows for the photocatalytic destruction of certain organic under visible-only/UV filtered lighting conditions where a TiO2 coating alone is ineffective. As described herein, method 100 of the present invention is directed to procedures for successfully depositing and growing gold and silver nanoparticles onto a TiO2 coating layer that coats the surface of a textile or fiber material.
Referring to
Referring to
Next, at step 206, a TiO2 nanosol coating solution can be prepared for coating the fiber material. The coating solution can include the preparation of two solutions: solution A and solution B. As shown by step 206A, solution A can be prepared by combining approximately 2% by volume acetic acid and 12% by volume titanium isopropoxide in approximately 86% by volume 2-propanol and mix vigorously for approximately 30 minutes as represented by step 206C. According to one embodiment, solution A can comprise 50 mL of 2-propanol, 1 mL of acetic acid, and 5.91 mL of titanium isopropoxide; however, it is recognized that other percentage-by-volume amounts can suitably be used. As shown by step 206B, solution B can be prepared by combining approximately 6% by volume of concentrated hydrochloric acid and approximately 1.5% ultrapure water in approximately 92.5% of 2-propanol and mix vigorously for approximately 30 minutes as represented by step 206C. According to one embodiment, solution B can comprise 50 mL of 2-propanol, 3 mL concentrated hydrochloric acid, and 0.72 mL of ultrapure water; however, it is recognized that other percentage-by-volume amounts can suitably be used.
Next, at step 208, solutions A and B can be mixed together and combined. According to one embodiment, step 208 includes the procedure of slowly adding solution B into solution A while under vigorous stirring (e.g., 400-800 rpm) solution A until the solutions A and B are thoroughly combined to form the nanosol coating solution.
Next, at step 210, the fiber material can be immersed in the nanosol coating solution for approximately 30 seconds and removed. Depending on the particular application of method 100, the prepared nanosol coating solution can continued to be used for as long as 7 days before it loses its integrity and precipitating out TiO2 and becoming qualitatively opaque instead of transparent. The ability to reuse the prepared nanosol coating solution for an extended period of time and provide cost and efficiency benefits for large-scale productions of Au/Ag—TiO2 coated fiber material 10.
Next, at step 212, the fiber material can be dried. According to one embodiment, the drying process at step 212 can include drying the fiber material for approximately 24 hours at room temperature under normal atmospheric conditions.
Next, at step 214, the fiber material can be calcined in order to remove any residual solvent. According to one embodiment, as shown in
Next, at step 216, the calcined fiber material can be hydrothermally treated to remove excess oxide left behind from the nanosol coating process. According to one embodiment, the process at step 216 can include boiling the fiber material in ultrapure water for a period of approximately 3 hours.
Referring to
Next, at step 304, the TiO2 coated fiber material can be immersed in the precursor solution for a suitable period of time and then removed. According to one embodiment, the preferred time period is approximately 30 seconds.
Next, at step 306, the metallic nanoparticle-TiO2 coated fiber material (i.e., AuCL3—TiO2 coated fiber material or AgNO3—TiO2 coated fiber material) can be allowed to dry for a suitable period of time. According to one embodiment, during step 306, the coated fiber material is left to dry at room temperature under normal atmospheric conditions for approximately 24 hours (however, other temperatures, conditions and time periods can also be suitably used during step 306).
Next, at step 308, the metallic precursor solution-TiO2 coated fiber material is exposed to
UV radiation for a suitable period of time as shown in
Referring to
As shown in
Staining with Congo red was also performed to evaluate the photocatalytic performance with a different, less easily broken-down stain. In general, the extinction of Congo red can be seen to proceed more slowly than methylene blue, with the rate of extinction of Congo red stained on pristine fiber material being roughly half that of methylene blue stained on pristine fiber material. The improvement in the rate of stain extinction of the Ag/Au—TiO2 coated fiber materials over the pristine fiber material was also less pronounced when Congo red was tested, with a 1 mM Ag/Au—TiO2 coated fiber material sample demonstrating the best performance in this case with a 65% improvement in the rate of stain removal when compared to the pristine fiber material. Congo red taking longer to degrade is expected as it has been found to take roughly twice as long as methylene blue to photocatalytically degrade, however the decrease in the photocatalytic effect of the Ag/Au—TiO2 coated fiber materials is notable. This effect can be partially accounted for by the fact that Congo red, while having its main absorption peak at 496 nm, also has two absorption peaks in the UV region at 236 and 338 nm. Because of this, it is likely that some of the incident photocatalytically useful UV and near UV radiation was absorbed by the Congo red stain itself rather than interacting with the Ag/Au—TiO2 coating layer, decreasing the apparent efficiency of the catalytic coating. Compounds such as Congo red which absorb high-energy incident radiation are a good example of why Au/Ag nanoparticle-based photosensitizers are important for photocatalytic applications; by decreasing the bandgap of TiO2 and increasing the wavelength range in which photons can be harnessed for photocatalysis, compounds which inherently absorb high-energy incident photons can still be degraded. This is likely the reason that the majority of the nanoparticle coated samples displayed better performance than the fiber material coated with TiO2 only when stained with Congo red.
Additionally, the Au—TiO2 coated fiber materials displayed markedly better photocatalytic activity than the Ag—TiO2 coated fiber materials when stained with Congo red (S7), and the reason for this could be explained by the higher wavelength of the gold nanoparticle peak relative to the silver peak, and thus the decreased overlap with the Congo red peaks. This strongly suggests that electron transfer is taking place between the gold nanoparticles and the TiO2 coating, and that the gold nanoparticles are acting as photosensitizers. A complicating factor in interpreting the kinetic data directly is the non-first order rate of stain extinction observed for the samples not impregnated with nanoparticles, which was also observed in previous works. This complicates direct comparison of the kinetic constants with one another however qualitatively it can still be seen that the rate of stain extinction is improved for the metallic nanoparticle impregnated samples (See
The fiber materials' stability of photocatalytic activity over time, and confirmation that the cellulose was not being photocatalytically destroyed was provided by FTIR analysis of the Au—TiO2 coated fiber materials at regular intervals after UV exposure (See
Referring to
Testing of the anti-microbial properties of the Ag/Au—TiO2 coated fiber materials demonstrated that the prepared fiber samples were resistant to gram negative E. coli microbial contamination as evidenced by the zone of inhibition that was present around the fibers after inoculation and incubation of the plates (See
Furthermore the toxic compounds produced by bacteria can themselves be certainly decomposed by the catalytic action of TiO2. However, this localized effect is insufficient if the fiber is to be deployed as clothing material, as the entirety of the fiber should be kept free from microbes, not just the outermost exposed surface, thus the relatively large zone of exclusion provided by the incorporation of gold and silver nanoparticles is desirable. One proven mechanism of bactericidal action for both gold and silver nanoparticles includes the disruption of cysteine/disulfide bonds in the proteins on the exterior of bacterial cell walls leading to decreased cell wall integrity, direct inhibition of ATP production, ribosomal activity, and DNA degradation.
Free radical generation has also been proposed to be an active bactericidal mechanism for silver nanoparticles. The reaction between silver nanoparticles and the membrane structures of both gram positive and gram negative are not fully understood, however the formation of “pits” in the out membranes due to the presence of silver nanoparticles, leading to increased membrane permittivity and ultimately cell death have been observed. However there remains a strong argument for the free radicals generated by silver nanoparticles to be the main causal mechanism behind the antimicrobial effects, as the inclusion of an antioxidant in one study was found to eliminate the anti-microbial action of silver nanoparticles. Furthermore it has been suggested that the evolution of silver ions produced from the silver nanoparticles via their oxidation by the holes produced on the TiO2 layer may be another mechanism by which the TTiO2/Ag nanoparticle hybrid surface exhibits antimicrobial activity, as a similar mechanism has been observed with TTiO2/copper hybrid surfaces. Our results suggest that some combination of the above outlined plays an active role in improving the antimicrobial activity of the nanoparticle coated fiber samples, and further elucidation of the mechanism behind the observed antimicrobial properties could be had testing the nanoparticle coated fibers in the presence of an antioxidant. The gold and silver nanoparticle coated fiber materials showed similar antibacterial activity.
In some embodiments, the method provides for treating a textile fiber material with a sol-gel based method, as outlined above, so as to facilitate the deposit of a semiconducting thin film (TiO2) on at least one surface of the textile material. In this manner, metallic (Ag/Au) nanoparticles, for example silver, gold or both silver and gold, metallic nanoparticles are grown directly on the oxide surface via the photocatalytic reduction method outlined above. This treatment method provides for the creation of a photocatalytically active fiber material, that is scalable using techniques carried out at normal atmospheric pressure (about 1 atmospheric pressure), and require only that the material be capable of withstanding 95° C. temperatures for a short period of time. Another important feature of the method 100 is the use of the nanoparticles to allow the absorption and photocatalytic utilization of near-UV and visible incident photons which improves photocatalytic activity by allowing for the useful harnessing of more incident light. The metallic nanoparticles impart an antimicrobial feature to the surface of a material, for example the surface of a fiber material, another unique feature imparted to the surfaces and fiber materials provided as part of the invention.
The present invention allows for the treatment of fibrous and non-fibrous textile materials and the production of a hybrid semiconductor/metallic nanoparticle based photocatalytic (self-cleaning), antimicrobial, and UV radiation protective system on the textile surface. The treatment technique allows the textile material to be treated without the use of either vacuum or pressurized conditions, and the textile material is required only to withstand dry annealing at 95° C. and hydrothermal treatment in boiling water, both mild conditions compared to more exotic treatment methodologies.
Example 1—Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), Gloves, Gowns, Masks, Surgical and Facility DrapingThe present example demonstrates the utility of the present invention for providing personal protective equipment (PPE), fabricated with the herein described functionalized textile materials. Personal protective equipment (PPE) refers to protective clothing, helmets, gloves, face shields, goggles, facemasks and/or respirators or other equipment designed to protect the wearer from injury or the spread of infection or illness. In particular applications, the infection and/or illnesses may comprise infections or illnesses caused by bacteria, viruses (including corona virus), fungus and other related infectious agents.
PPE is commonly used in health care settings such as hospitals, doctor's offices and clinical labs. When used properly, PPE acts as a barrier between infectious materials such as viral and bacterial contaminants and your skin, mouth, nose, or eyes (mucous membranes). The barrier has the potential to block transmission of contaminants from blood, body fluids, or respiratory secretions. PPE may also protect patients who are at high risk for contracting infections through a surgical procedure or who have a medical condition, such as, an immunodeficiency, from being exposed to substances or potentially infectious material brought in by visitors and healthcare workers. When used properly and with other infection control practices such as hand-washing, using alcohol-based hand sanitizers, and covering coughs and sneezes, it minimizes the spread of infection from one person to another. Effective use of PPE includes properly removing and disposing of contaminated PPE to prevent exposing both the wearer and other people to infection.
When an infection outbreak affects a broad population in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is responsible for making specific recommendations for infection control measures in different circumstances and settings.
The health and medical protective devices and garments prepared with the textiles described herein prevent the passage of virus and virus particles, as well as other infectious and potentially harmful materials and fumes, to a subject. The treated textiles described herein have particular application as medically protective garments and devices. By way of example, such garments and devises comprise surgical masks, personal protective masks, dressing gowns, surgical drapes, face masks, surgical medical devices, sneeze guards, medical and clinical setting room dividers, and the like.
An embodiment of the present invention may include a medical mask such as a disposable anesthesia face mask, ventilation mask, sleep apnea mask or respiratory mask (a “medical mask”). The mask may include a cup-like shell or receptacle member terminating at a peripheral edge with a circumferential flange, and an annular donut-shaped hollow cushion or seal member affixed or otherwise permanently attached to the flange. The seal member may be inflatable.
The shell or shell member may preferably be transparent to permit viewing therethrough. The shell member may be shaped suitably to define a nose reception portion, a mouth reception portion, and a chin reception portion. The shell member may include a first passageway extending from the shell member from in a direction opposite to the flange for coupling to a breathing circuit, and a second passageway that may extend in a direction opposite to the flange for output. Embodiments of an anesthesia or ventilation mask may be connect the output passageway to a flexible tube which, in turn, is adapted to be connected to a monitoring machine, such as to a CO2 monitoring machine or capnograph.
In some embodiments, the face mask nasal portion may have a first width, the face mask mouth portion may have a second width greater than the first width, and the face mask chin portion may have a third width greater than the second width, giving the face mask shell a characteristic pear-shaped configuration. The nasal, mouth and chin portions may be continuous and form the cup-like extent of the shell or receptacle component.
Embodiments may include a headband. The mask may have lateral projections on the flange or two sides of the shell for accommodating a suitable elastic head strap that may adjustably be coupled to the projections to thereby retaining the strap to the mask. The tension in the elastic headband when attached may provide a stable suspension system securely maintaining the mask assembly in place before or during surgery and enabling anesthesia personnel to attend to other tasks using both hands free. This also applies if the mask and band are used for sleep apnea or during a breathing treatment.
Embodiments of a mask may be adapted to be fitted to the user's face with the chin portion of the face being received in a cavity near the bottom of the mask. T-shaped posts that hold the headband may be located on the flange member upwardly near the nose portion of the mask assembly. The lateral projections hold the strap to form a loop that holds the mask in place on the user's face.
An embodiment of a face mask may be made from the textile materials described herein, and will have the ability to prevent the passage of small agents, such as virus , virus particles and bacteria, through the textile, thus shielding the wearer from exposure to such agents through the mouth and nose.
Embodiments of masks may include a general environmental usage mask, an anesthesia mask, ventilation mask, sleep apnea mask, and/or a respiratory therapy mask. Embodiments of masks may be disposable, or reusable, and may have a strap or straps to hold the mask in place when desired. Embodiments may be of sufficient size to cover a subjects nose and mouth, and if desired, chin area. Embodiments may have a pneumatic sealing cushion, to promote comfort in the subject wearing the mask, as well as to prevent leakage of air or gases from and to the subject once the mask is positioned on the subject. Particular embodiments may include gas input ports or output ports, and may optionally further include a layer of the treated textile material covering the ports, so as to preclude and filer gases as they are released to a wearer through the ports, such as during oxygen administration, for example.
Example 2—Treatment of a PPE Device to include a Metal Nanoparticle Enhanced Semiconductor FilmThe present example demonstrates that the present process and treatment may be provided onto the surface of an existing article of personal protective equipment, such as a mask.
Conventional commercially available face masks made of a tight-weave cotton, were treated according to the methods described herein to include a thin, 1 mM, Ag—TiO2 film or an Au—TiO2 film. These treated cotton masks were then examined for stability of the deposited thin film.
The results demonstrated that the methods used provided for the successful deposition of a thin semi-conductive layer and growth of a uniform layer of metal nanostructured particles to the surface.
As demonstrated in the following examples, cotton materials/textiles treated as described herein were also observed to be stable and resistant to degradation and/or deterioration from multiple machine washings with fabric detergents, did not demonstrate delamination of the films, and were resistant to significant fiber degradation upon exposure to high temperatures (up to 90° C. for 3 or more hours). The present surface treatments are therefore amendable to conventional autoclave conditions.
Example 3—Stability and Reusable Personal Protective EquipmentThe present example demonstrates that the articles treated to include the functionalized surfaces are stable, may be washed using conventional methods, such as in a conventional washing machine with detergents, and may also be sterilized after use with white or ultraviolet light.
After use of a mask, for example, that has been treated to include the herein described thin film semiconductor layer and noble metal nanoparticle materials, the mask may be placed in an area where white light (e.g., daylight) is available to the surface. The semi-conductive nature of the film permits the surface to neutralize and/or destroy microbes that may have become exposed to the surface of the material, such as to destroy virus or bacteria. This decontaminating action may also be provided upon exposure of the material textile to ultraviolet light. This presents yet another advantage of the present materials and products as protective garments and equipment, as ultraviolet light is not required to decontaminate the surface, and may be accomplished by providing simple white light.
Table 1 Washing Machine Trial—Stability of Treated SurfacePPE (face masks) having a treated functionalized surface were washed 35 cycles with detergent.
After the series of 35 wash cycles, it was observed that the functionalized surfaces of these materials maintained at least 85% of their original functionalized textile properties, and no significant fiber degradation was observed.
The constructions described above and illustrated in the drawings are presented by way of example only and are not intended to limit the concepts and principles of the present invention. Thus, there has been shown and described several embodiments of a novel invention. As is evident from the foregoing description, certain aspects of the present invention are not limited by the particular details of the examples illustrated herein, and it is therefore contemplated that other modifications and applications, or equivalents thereof, will occur to those skilled in the art. The terms “having” and “including” and similar terms as used in the foregoing specification are used in the sense of “optional” or “may include” and not as “required”. Many changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications of the present construction will, however, become apparent to those skilled in the art after considering the specification and the accompanying drawings. All such changes, modifications, variations and other uses and applications which do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention are deemed to be covered by the invention which is limited only by the claims which follow.
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Claims
1. A method for providing an antimicrobial metallic nanoparticle, semiconductor-coated surface on a textile material comprising:
- providing a semiconducting layer on at least one surface of the textile material to provide a treated semi-conductor—coated textile material surface; and
- providing a uniform coating of metallic nanoparticles onto said textile material surface so as to provide a textile material comprising an antimicrobial metallic nanoparticle, semiconductor-coated surface.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the semiconducting layer comprises a thin TiO2 film.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the TiO2 film is provided to the surface with a sol-gel procedure.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the metallic nanoparticles comprise gold nanoparticles.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the metallic nanoparticles comprise silver nanoparticles.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein providing the metallic nanoparticles onto the textile material surface further comprises:
- preparing a solution of metallic nanoparticle precursor solution;
- immersing said semiconductor-coated textile material into said precursor solution to provide a precursor solution treated textile material;
- drying said precursor solution treated textile material; and
- exposing said dried precursor solution treated textile material to ultraviolet radiation for a selected time duration sufficient to provide deposition of metallic nanoparticles on at least one surface of the treated textile material.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein said precursor solution comprises gold chloride (AuCl3).
8. The method of claim 6, wherein said precursor solution comprises silver nitrate (AgNO3).
9. The method of claim 6, wherein said semiconductor-coated textile material is immersed in said precursor solution for approximately 30 seconds.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein the metallic nanoparticle semiconductor coated surface comprises an anti-viral semiconductor coated fiber material.
11. The method of claim 6 wherein the precursor solution treated semiconductor coated fiber material is dried at room temperature under normal atmospheric conditions for approximately 24 hours.
12. The method of claim 6, wherein said dried precursor solution treated textile material is exposed to about 254 nm ultraviolet radiation for approximately 30 minutes.
13. The method of claim 6, wherein said dried precursor solution treated textile material is exposed to about 254 nm UV radiation for approximately 15 minutes.
14. A material comprising at least one surface comprising a metallic nanoparticle, semiconductor-coated textile surface, wherein said textile surface is anti-microbial and self-cleaning.
15. The material of claim 14 wherein the metallic nanoparticles comprise gold nanoparticles, silver nanoparticles, or a combination thereof.
16. The material of claim 14 wherein the textile surface is a cotton textile surface.
17. A metallic nanoparticle and semi-conductor fiber material comprising:
- a textile material having at least one surface comprising a nanostructured titanium dioxide film and nanostructured metallic nanoparticles.
18. The metallic nanoparticle and semi-conductor film material of claim 17, wherein the metallic nanoparticles comprises gold, silver or combination of gold and silver nanoparticles.
19. The metallic nanoparticle and semi-conductor coated film material of claim 17 wherein said material inhibits microbial penetration.
20. A face mask comprising the metallic nanoparticle and semi-conductor fiber material of claim 17, said face mask being conformed to fit securely over a subject's mouth and nose.
21. The face mask of claim 21 comprising a surgical mask.
22. A garment comprising the metallic nanoparticle and semi-conductor fiber material of claim 17.
23. The garment of claim 22 comprising a surgical garment.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 8, 2020
Publication Date: Oct 8, 2020
Inventors: Mohammed Jasim Uddin (Edinburg, TX), Jared Jaksik (San Antonio, TX), H. Justin Moore (Collinsville, CT)
Application Number: 16/843,789