Dissolution Kinetics and Solubility of ZnO Nanoparticles Followed by AGNES

Author

David, Calin

Galceran i Nogués, Josep

Rey-Castro, Carlos

Puy Llorens, Jaume

Companys Ferran, Encarnació

Salvador, José

Monné Esquerda, Josep

Wallace, Rachel

Vakourov, Alex

Publication date

2012

Abstract

There is a current debate on whether the toxicity of engineered ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) can be traced back to their nanoscale properties or rather to the simple fact of their relatively high solubility and consequent release of Zn2+ ions. In this work, the emerging electroanalytical technique AGNES (Absence of Gradients and Nernstian Equilibrium Stripping), which is specially designed to determine free metal ion concentration, is shown to be able to measure the Zn2+ concentration resulting from dissolution of ZnO nanoparticles dispersed in aqueous salt solutions. Three NP samples from different sources (having average primary particle diameters of 6, 20, and 71 nm) were tested and compared with bulk ZnO material. The enhanced solubility of the nanoparticles with decreasing primary radius allows for an estimation of the surface energy of 0.32 J/m2 . AGNES also allows the study of the kinetics of Zn2+ release as a response to a change in the solution parameters (e.g., pH, ZnO concentration). A physicochemical model has been developed to account for the observed kinetic behavior. With this model, only one kinetic parameter is required to describe the time dependence of the free Zn2+ concentration in solution. Good agreement with this prediction is obtained when, starting from an equilibrated NP dispersion, the pH of the medium is lowered. Also, the independence of this parameter from pH, as expected from the model, is obtained at least in the pH range 7−9. When dissolution is studied by dispersing ZnO nanoparticles in the medium, the kinetic parameter initially decreases with time. This decrease can be interpreted as resulting from the increase of the radius of the clusters due to the agglomeration/ aggregation phenomena (independently confirmed). For the larger assayed NPs (i.e., 20 and 71 nm), a sufficiently large pH increase leads to a metastable solubility state, suggesting formation of a hydroxide interfacial layer.


Research leading to these results received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007- 2013) under grant agreement no. 229244 (ENNSATOX), from the Spanish Ministry of Education and Innovation (Projects CTQ2009-07831 and CTM2009-14612), and from the “Comissionat per a Universitats i Recerca del Departament d’Innovacio, Universitats i Empresa de la Generalitat de Catalunya”.

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Química analítica; Ions metàl·lics; Zinc -- Toxicologia; Metalls pesants -- Toxicologia

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

MCINN/PN2008-2011/CTM2009-14612-C02-01

MCINN/PN2008-2011/CTQ2009-07831

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1021/jp301671b

Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2012, vol. 116, núm. 21, p. 11758-11767

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/229244

Rights

(c) American Chemical Society, 2012

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