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Date: 07 September 2008
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Antimicrobial properties of nanotubes  

Topic Name: Antimicrobial properties of nanotubes

Category: Nanobiotechnology

Research persons: MENACHEM ELIMELECH

Location: Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States

Details

Antimicrobial properties of nanotubes

One knew the electronic properties of the nanotubes like their potential for the realization of a space elevator. Researchers of Connecticut have just discovered their antimicrobial properties
. More than ever, the carbon nanotubes are presented in the form of one of the major technological stakes of XXIieme century.
It is an unforeseen discovery which Menachem Elimelech, professor and flesh of chemical and environmental engineering at the University of Yale, has just carried out with his/her colleagues and which they analyze in an article of the Langmuir newspaper of American Chemical Society (ACS).
They were charged to study the possible toxicity of the carbon nanotubes in the aquatic environments and more generally their possible impact on the food chain. Indeed, the technology of the nanotubes doubtless will invade in the more or less short term our world and in fact, the risks which they make weigh on the environment and the life of every the day must carefully be evaluated. It is necessary to know, for example, which with their shape of cylinder of the thousands of times finer than a hair and especially their size, they can easily be absorbed by a human cell.
The researchers concentrated initially on a particular class of nanotubes made of only one layer of carbon atoms, Individual-walled the carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs).
A simple test was carried out. The researchers locked up bacteria known well, the E. coil, in an incubator with of SWCNTs and this during approximately one hour. With their surprise, the bacteria were killed but only in the case of a direct contact with the nanotubes, which makes think of the researchers that the damage caused by perforation of the membranes by the nanotubes which responsible for died for E.coli. In order to eliminate the possibility of a toxic action from metals present in the nanotubes, one took care well, during their synthesis, to obtain particularly pure products.
Currently, the team of professor Menachem Elimelech extends her research to other types of nanotubes, and especially, with other bacteria in order to more, in particular on the exact mechanism responsible for this bactericidal effect.
The applications could be important, not only to carry out implants delivering of the drugs on the long term, but especially within the framework of research on new antibiotics, whereas the number of those currently available does not cease decreasing because of the increased resistance of the pathogenic germs.

About The Researcher:
MENACHEM ELIMELECH
Roberto C. Goizueta Professor of Environmental and
Chemical Engineering
Ph.D. 1989, Johns Hopkins University
E-mail: menachem.elimelech@yale.edu
Phone: 1 (203) 432-2789
Fax: 1 (203) 432-2881
Office: Mason Laboratory 313A
Professor Elimelech is the Chair of the Department of Chemical Engineering and the Director of the Environmental Engineering Program
Prof. Elimelech is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
Illustrations of other Research
Prof. Elimelech's Research Group
Clarke Prize for Water Science and Technology
Journal publications with PDF files
Biographical data

Related Notes & Research for more research-
Anti-Microbes
Nanotechnology uncertainty
Nanotubes form an antimicrobial magic carpet
Magnetically assembled carbon nanotube tipped pipettes
Functionalized silicon membranes for selective bio-organism capture
Functionalized Silicon .Membranes for Selective Bio-Organisms Capture
The bactericidal effect of silver nanoparticles
bactericidal effect
 

In The Images:

MENACHEM ELIMELECH & In top, observations under the electron microscope of E.coli without SWCNTs in an incubator at the end of one hour, bellow the same experiment but with of SWCNTs. The number of micro-organisms strongly fell (Credit: Menachem Elimelech).


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