Biogenesis of Metal Nanoparticles
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Abstract
Nanotechnology can best be considered as a description of activities at the level
of atoms and molecules that have applications in the real world. A nanometer is a
billionth of a meter, that is, about 1/80,000 of the diameter of a human hair, or 10
times the diameter of a hydrogen atom. The field of nanotechnology has
generated great enthusiasm in recent years because of its expected impact on
various fields of sciences. For the advancement of nanotechnology, development
of reliable procedures for the synthesis of nanoparticles of controlled size and
chemical composition is imperative.
Many chemical routes are known to use toxic chemicals for the synthesis of the
nanoparticles. The need-of-the-hour, however is to evolve procedures for
nanoparticles synthesis through environmentally benign routes. Researchers in
this field, therefore, have been eagerly looking at biological systems as alternative
ecofriendly systems.
The present work was carried out to examine the formation of gold nanoparticles
by the fungi viz. Cladosporium resinae, Aspergillus niger and Paecilomyces
variotii.
The work culminated into the following results:
XRD analysis confirming the presence of elemental gold in the biomass of test
fungi.
Light scattering (Nanosight™ technology) analysis confirming the formation of
nano-sized particles extracellularly.
