Biosurfactant Mediated Synthesis of Nanoparticles and their Applications

Although chemical surfactants show promising application values, they could be toxic tothe environment. Natural surfactants are otherwise known as “biosurfactants” are of microbial origin, composed mostly of sugar and fatty acid moieties. Biosurfactants, in comparison to chemical surfactants, have h...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMicrobial Surfactants Vol. 1; pp. 287 - 314
Main Authors El-Baz, A F, Kassas, R A El, Yousseria M, Shetaia, Enshasy, H A El
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published United Kingdom CRC Press 2021
Taylor & Francis Group
Edition1
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Summary:Although chemical surfactants show promising application values, they could be toxic tothe environment. Natural surfactants are otherwise known as “biosurfactants” are of microbial origin, composed mostly of sugar and fatty acid moieties. Biosurfactants, in comparison to chemical surfactants, have higher biodegradability, lower ecotoxicity, excellent biological activities, and low carbon footprints. Accordingly, microbial surfactants are potential replacements for chemical- or oleo-based surfactants. Recently, biosurfactants have been shown to be promising candidates for rapid “green” synthesis and nanoparticles stabilizing. Biosurfactants have also been found to reduce aggregates formation due to its electrostatic forces of attraction which facilitate a uniform morphology. It is for this reason that biosurfactant-mediated synthesis is superior to bacterial- or fungal-mediated nanoparticle synthesis. In this chapter current research on the use of biosurfactants in the biosynthesis of a few metallic nanoparticles and their possible importance will be discussed.
ISBN:9780367521189
0367521199
9780367521196
0367521180
DOI:10.1201/9781003056638-14