Generation of potential bactericidal surfaces from aluminum via anodization

 

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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori: Paniagua, Sergio, Rojas-Gatjens, Esteban, Villalobos, Javier, Montes de Oca-Vásquez, Gabriela, Pereira, Reinaldo, Murillo, Luis Carlos, Jose-Roberto, Vega-Baudrit
Natura: ponencia
Data di pubblicazione:2019
Descrizione:Bactericidal nanostructured surfaces are found in nature, developed through millions of years of evolution. Gecko skin, dragonfly wings and cicada wings possess nanoscale spikes or pillars that are able to have bactericidal action through non-chemical bactericidal methods, via impalement2 or mechanical stress3 (Fig. 1). These mechanisms offer the advantage of being more difficult for bacteria to develop resistance compared to pharmaceutical alternatives.1 An important strategy to control the spread of disease is to maintain surfaces clean to prevent secondary infection. Many high touch areas in operating rooms, factories, kitchens, and bathrooms are made of aluminum (trays, door handles, poles, tables, etc.). An aluminum surface engineered to have nanopillars could be bactericidal by mechanical means, thereby helping with prevention of spread of diseases.
Stato:Repositorio UNA
Istituzione:Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Repositorio UNA
Lingua:Inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:null:11056/28470
Accesso online:http://hdl.handle.net/11056/28470
Keyword:POTENCIAL
BACTERICIDA
SUPERFICIES
ALUMINIO
ANODIZACIÓN
SURFACES
ALUMINUM