Dissolution and phosphate-induced transformation of ZnO nanoparticles in synthetic saliva probed by AGNES without previous solid-liquid separation. Comparison with UF-ICP-MS

Author

David, Calin

Galceran i Nogués, Josep

Quattrini, Federico

Puy Llorens, Jaume

Rey-Castro, Carlos

Publication date

2019-02-26

Abstract

The variation over time of free Zn2+ ion concentration in stirred dispersions of ZnO nanoparticles (ZnO NPs) prepared in synthetic saliva at pH 6.80 and 37 degrees C was followed in situ (without solid liquid separation step) with the electroanalytical technique AGNES (Absence of Gradients and Nernstian Equilibrium Stripping). Under these conditions, ZnO NPs are chemically unstable due to their reaction with phosphates. The initial stage of transformation (around 5-10 h) involves the formation of a metastable solid (presumably ZnHPO4), which later evolves into the more stable hopeite phase. The overall decay rate of ZnO NPs is significantly reduced in comparison with phosphate-free background solutions of the same ionic strength and pH. The effective equilibrium solubilities of ZnO (0.29-0.47 mg.L-1), as well as conditional excess-ligand stability constants and fractional distributions of soluble Zn species, were determined in the absence and presence of organic components. The results were compared with the conventional ultrafiltration and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (UF-ICP-MS) methodology. AGNES proves to be advantageous in terms of speed, reproducibility, and access to speciation information. Keywords


This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry MINECOunder Grant No. CTM2016-78798 and European UnionSeventh Framework Programme FP7-NMP.2012.1.3-3 underGrant No. 310584 (NANoREG). FQ gratefully acknowledgesa grant from AGAUR.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Bioavailability; Solubility; Zinc oxide; Ultrafiltration; Oral exposure

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO//CTM2016-78798/ES/

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b06531

Environmental Science & Technology, 2019, vol. 53, num. 7, p. 3823-3831

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/310584

Rights

(c) American Chemical Society, 2019

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