Dissolution and Microstructural
Transformation of
ZnO Nanoparticles under the Influence of Phosphate
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Abstract
The toxicity and fate of nanoparticles (NPs) have been
reported
to be highly dependent on the chemistry of the medium, and the effects
of phosphate have tended to be ignored despite the wide existence
of phosphate contamination in aqueous environments. In the present
study the influence of phosphate on the dissolution and microstructural
transformation of ZnO NPs was investigated. Phosphate at a low concentration
rapidly and substantially reduced the release of Zn<sup>2+</sup> into
aqueous solution. Synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy and X-ray
diffraction analysis reveal that interaction between ZnO NPs and phosphate
induced the transformation of ZnO into zinc phosphate. Transmission
electronic microscopy observation shows that the morphology of the
particles changed from structurally uniform nanosized spherical to
anomalous and porous material containing mixed amorphous and crystalline
phases of ZnO and zinc phosphate in the presence of phosphate. To
our knowledge, this is the first study in which the detailed process
of phosphate-induced speciation and microstructural transformation
of ZnO NPs has been analyzed. In view of the wide existence of phosphate
contamination in water and its strong metal-complexation capability,
phosphate-induced transformations may play an important role in the
behaviors, fate, and toxicity of many other metal-based nanomaterials
in the environment