BSMV as a Biotemplate for Palladium Nanomaterial Synthesis
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Abstract
The vast unexplored
virus biodiversity makes the application of
virus templates to nanomaterial synthesis especially promising. Here,
a new biotemplate, Barley stripe mosaic virus (BSMV) was successfully
used to synthesize organic-metal nanorods of similarly high quality
to those produced with Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). The mineralization
behavior was characterized in terms of the reduction and adsorption
of precursor and nanocrystal formation processes. The BSMV surface-mediated
reduction of Pd<sup>(2+)</sup> proceeded via first-order kinetics
in both Pd<sup>(2+)</sup> and BSMV. The adsorption equilibrium relationship
of PdCl<sub>3</sub>H<sub>2</sub>O<sup>–</sup> on the BSMV surface
was described by a multistep Langmuir isotherm suggesting alternative
adsorbate–adsorbent interactions when compared to those on
TMV. It was deduced that the first local isotherm is governed by electrostatically
driven adsorption, which is then followed by sorption driven by covalent
affinity of metal precursor molecules for amino acid residues. Furthermore,
the total adsorption capacity of palladium species on BSMV is more
than double of that on TMV. Finally, study of the BSMV-Pd particles
by combining USAXS and SAXS enabled the characterization of all length
scales in the synthesized nanomaterials. Results confirm the presence
of core–shell cylindrical particles with 1–2 nm grains.
The nanorods were uniform and monodisperse, with controllable diameters
and therefore, of similar quality to those synthesized with TMV. Overall,
BSMV has been confirmed as a viable alternate biotemplate with unique
biomineralization behavior. With these results, the biotemplate toolbox
has been expanded for the synthesis of new materials and comparative
study of biomineralization processes