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Extracellular biosynthesis of magnetite using fungi

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 02:35 authored by A Bharde, D Rautaray, Vipul BansalVipul Bansal, Absar Ahmad, I Sarkar, I Yusuf, M Sanyal, Murali Sastry
The development of synthetic processes for oxide nanomaterials is an issue of considerable topical interest. While a number of chemical methods are available and are extensively used, the collaborations are often energy intensive and employ toxic chemicals. On the other hand, the synthesis of inorganic materials by biological systems is characterized by processes that occur at close to ambient temperatures and pressures, and at neutral pH (examples include magnetotactic bacteria, diatoms, and S-layer bacteria). Here we show that nanoparticulate magnetite may be produced at room temperature extracellularly by challenging the fungi, Fusarium oxysporum and Verticillium sp., with mixtures of ferric and ferrous salts. Extracellular hydrolysis of the anionic iron complexes by cationic proteins secreted by the fungi results in the room-temperature synthesis of crystalline magnetite particles that exhibit a signature of a ferrimagnetic transition with a negligible amount of spontaneous magnetization at low temperature.

History

Journal

Small

Volume

2

Issue

1

Start page

135

End page

141

Total pages

7

Publisher

Wiley - VCH Verlag

Place published

Weinhiem, Germany

Language

English

Copyright

© 2006 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH and Co. KGaA, D-69451 Weinheim

Former Identifier

2006010316

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-04-19

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