Fungus-mediated biosynthesis of silica and titania particles
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 03:14authored byVipul BansalVipul Bansal, D Rautaray, A Bharde, K Ahire, A Sanyal, Absar Ahmad, Murali Sastry
The synthesis of inorganic materials by biological systems is characterized by processes that occur
at close to ambient temperatures, pressures and neutral pH. This is exemplified by biosilicification
in marine organisms such as diatoms while laboratory-based synthesis of silica involves extreme
temperature and pH conditions. We show here that silica and titania particles may be produced
by challenging the fungus Fusarium oxysporum with aqueous anionic complexes SiF6 2²¯ and TiF6²¯ respectively. Extra-cellular protein-mediated hydrolysis of the anionic complexes results in
the facile room temperature synthesis of crystalline titania particles while calcination at 300 °C is
required for crystallization of silica.