Antibacterial activity of chitosan nano-composites and carbon nanotubes: A review

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Elsevier B.V.

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Bacteriological contamination of water sources is a major challenge that has a detrimental impact on both the environment and human health. This imposes the search for the most efficient disinfectant. Despite their antibacterial efficiency, traditional methods can often form disinfection byproducts through their reaction with organic and inorganic compounds. Substitutes for conventional bacterial inactivation methods should not produce harmful byproducts and must also be cost effective. Nanotechnology is an attractive option that is suited for surface reactions as nanostructures offer large surface to volume ratios. Technologies using chitosan-modified nanocomposites and carbon nanotubes have proven to offer promising alternatives for bacterial inactivation. To enhance their antibacterial efficiency, such technologies have been modified chemically and physically and have as well been associated with other treatment techniques. However, despite their high bacterial disinfection efficacy and lack of treatment byproducts, the vagueness in bacterial inactivation mechanisms and complexity in materials preparation have often obscured their wide scale application. The aim of this manuscript is to review the recent advances in bacterial disinfection using nanomaterials, in the form of chitosan and carbon nanotubes. The rapid rate of research and the notable progress in this area dictate the frequent compilation and dissemination of recent introductions to this field. Existing gaps in the literature are thus also highlighted and reported discrepancies are pinpointed so that roadmaps for future studies may be figured. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.

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Carbon nanotubes (cnts), Chitosan, Microorganisms, Nanoparticles, Anti-bacterial agents, Disinfectants, Disinfection, Nanocomposites, Nanotubes, carbon, Bacteria (microorganisms), Bacteria, Byproducts, Cost effectiveness, Efficiency, Inorganic compounds, Surface reactions, Yarn, Carbon nanotube, Chitosan derivative, Nanocomposite, Antiinfective agent, Disinfectant agent, Anti-bacterial activity, Bacterial inactivation, Bacterial inactivation mechanisms, Cost effective, Disinfection by-product, Disinfection efficacy, Materials preparations, Treatment techniques, Bacterium, Chitin, Microorganism, Nanoparticle, Antibacterial activity, Bacterial count, Bacterial strain, Controlled study, Enterococcus faecalis, Escherichia coli, Molecular weight, Nanotechnology, Nonhuman, Physical chemistry, Priority journal, Review, Thermostability, Waste water management, Procedures, Carbon nanotubes

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