Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8842765 | Fungal Biology | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Rice husks (RHs) are plant waste materials abundant in phytoliths silica bodies. These were used as starting material for fungal-mediated biotransformation leading to the synthesis of a high-value added product. A strain of Aspergillus parasiticus was capable of transforming the amorphous silica conglomerates into structured nanoparticles (NPs) in the process of RHs biotransformation. Silica NPs were produced extracellularly and their size ranged from 3 to 400 nm depending on the biotransformation conditions and the post-biotransformation supernatant processing. To characterize the NP's structure and dimension, SEM, STEM, EDX and FTIR technics were applied. These demonstrated and confirmed that pyramid (400 nm), cubical (85 nm) and spherical (3 nm and 24 ± 8 nm) forms of silica NPs were obtained.
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Authors
Aleksandra Zielonka, Ewa Å»ymaÅczyk-Duda, MaÅgorzata BrzeziÅska-Rodak, Maciej Duda, Jakub Grzesiak, Magdalena Klimek-Ochab,