Antibacterial durability testing

Study focuses on photocatalytic ZnO-based surface coatings.

Researchers have tested the antibacterial durability of photocatalytic ZnO-based surface coatings.
Researchers have tested the antibacterial durability of photocatalytic ZnO-based surface coatings. Source: Axel Kock – stock.adobe.com

A new study is focused on antibacterial durability testing of surface coatings based on acrylic matrix-embedded UVA-activated ZnO. Such coatings on stainless steel were treated by dry rubbing, wet rubbing, and abrasive treatment to simulate wearing during everyday touching, cleaning, and aggressive scrubbing.

Abrasive treatment caused clear topological changes to the surfaces, flattened the surface at the micrometer scale, and released a significant amount of surface material, which was partly acrylic matrix and partly the embedded ZnO. The highest release of Zn, the most prominent photocatalytic activity under UVA and the greatest antibacterial effect, was observed for abrasively treated surfaces. Although a small amount of surface material was released from surfaces after dry and wet rubbing, no significant increase in Zn release or photocatalytic activity was detected. On the contrary, antibacterial activity after those treatments decreased in comparison with untreated surfaces, likely due to partial surface masking by the released acrylic matrix.

In summary, the results indicate that antimicrobial ZnO material immobilised in acrylic matrix creates stable surface coatings that may lose some of their efficacy during daily use and cleaning procedures, but activity of which will be retained during a more aggressive abrasion procedure.

Source of the Study: Journal of Coatings Technology and Research, published 19 January 2024

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