Miranda J.
Gallagher
a,
Joseph T.
Buchman
b,
Tian A.
Qiu
b,
Bo
Zhi
b,
Taeyjuana Y.
Lyons
c,
Kaitlin M.
Landy
b,
Zeev
Rosenzweig
c,
Christy L.
Haynes
b and
D. Howard
Fairbrother
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA. E-mail: howardf@jhu.edu
bDepartment of Chemistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA
cDepartment of Chemistry, University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250, USA
First published on 31st May 2018
Next generation displays and lighting applications are increasingly using inorganic quantum dots (QDs) embedded in polymer matrices to impart bright and tunable emission properties. The toxicity of some heavy metals present in commercial QDs (e.g. cadmium) has, however, raised concerns about the potential for QDs embedded in polymer matrices to be released during the manufacture, use, and end-of-life phases of the material. One important potential release scenario that polymer composites can experience in the environment is photochemically induced matrix degradation. This process is not well understood at the molecular level. To study this process, the effect of an artificially accelerated weathering process on QD–polymer nanocomposites has been explored by subjecting CdSe and CdSe/ZnS QDs embedded in poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) to UVC irradiation in aqueous media. Significant matrix degradation of QD–PMMA was observed along with measurable mass loss, yellowing of the nanocomposites, and a loss of QD fluorescence. While ICP-MS identified the release of ions, confocal laser scanning microscopy and dark-field hyperspectral imaging were shown to be effective analytical techniques for revealing that QD-containing polymer fragments were also released into aqueous media due to matrix degradation. Viability experiments, which were conducted with Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, showed a statistically significant decrease in bacterial viability when the bacteria were exposed to highly degraded QD-containing polymer fragments. Results from this study highlight the need to quantify not only the extent of nanoparticle release from a polymer nanocomposite but also to determine the form of the released nanoparticles (e.g. ions or polymer fragments).
Environmental significanceElucidating the long term environmental impact of quantum dot (QD)-enabled consumer products depends upon identifying the nature and toxicity of fragments released as a consequence of photochemical weathering. To address this question, a polymer (PMMA) containing Cd-based QDs was exposed to different periods of artificial accelerated weathering. Nanoparticle-containing fragments, released into solution as the polymer matrix degraded, were detected and analyzed with confocal laser scanning microscopy and dark-field hyperspectral imaging. The toxicity of these released fragments towards Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 increased as weathering advanced. These findings identify analytical techniques suitable for characterizing QDs in polymer-containing fragments and the role that different forms of released nanomaterials (e.g. ions vs. QD-containing fragments) have in terms of biological impact. |
The unique optical properties of QDs are a consequence of the size of the particle being smaller than the Bohr radius of the atom, giving rise to a quantum confinement effect. Accordingly, the emission wavelength of the QDs can be precisely tuned by adjusting the size, shape, and composition of the QD.6 Popular inorganic QDs which contain II–VI elements such as CdS, CdSe, and CdTe7 are often capped with a shell (e.g. ZnS is used as a cap on CdSe QDs), which increases the emission quantum yield by passivating trap sites at the surface while also providing protection against environmental (e.g. photo-oxidative) degradation. CdSe/ZnS core/shell quantum dots display size tunable narrow emission peaks with high emission quantum yield across a broad range of the visible spectrum; as such, they encompass a significant market share of light display technologies.5 In these applications, CdSe/ZnS quantum dots are embedded into a proprietary conductive polymer matrix that makes up the screen of smart displays, such as the Amazon Kindle Fire 7′′ HDX. In other applications, CdSe/ZnS–polymer LEDs, (QLEDs) are used as solid state lighting components, for example, in indoor farming as less heat is produced than from conventional lamps. QLEDs are fabricated by either mixing QDs into the LED structure during processing for electrically induced emission8 or functionalizing an existing LED substrate for optically induced emission,9,10 as used here. As an optically transparent polymer with good chemical stability, poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) is an ideal polymer matrix in which to incorporate QDs for lighting purposes.11 In this study, CdSe and CdSe/ZnS quantum dots were embedded in PMMA to simulate a substrate-functionalized QLED.
When nanomaterials are used to create new products, it is necessary to evaluate their potential adverse impacts on the environment and human health. Cadmium–containing QDs are toxic to cell lines and organisms at various trophic levels.12–14 The toxic effect is ascribed to the release of Cd2+ ions and the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). For example, apoptosis of human HL-60 cells was caused by Cd2+ ions.15 In saltwater-dwelling P. tricornutum ROS production by CdSe/ZnS is evidenced by the measured increases in superoxide dismutase and catalase expression. Detected with a dichlorofluorescein assay, production of P. tricornutum intracellular ROS increased as the concentration of CdSe/ZnS in solution increased.16 Furthermore, production of ROS superoxide by PEGylated CdSe/ZnS aqueous QDs has been quantitatively measured ex situ with electron paramagnetic resonance,17 while other ROS have been observed when organisms including D. melanogaster, human neuroblastomas, and mice livers are exposed to CdSe/ZnS QDs.18–20 Previous studies have also shown that the presence of a ZnS shell often reduces toxicity, possibly due to a decrease in the photooxidation rate and/or the extent of Cd2+ ion dissolution from the core.14
Nanoparticles, such as QDs, contained in consumer products, can be released at any stage of product life cycle (i.e. during manufacture, use, or end-of-life/disposal). For nanoparticles embedded in polymer composites, four potential mechanisms of release have been identified by T. V. Duncan: i) diffusion, ii) desorption, iii) dissolution, and iv) matrix degradation.21 The first three are passive forms of release which occur in the absence of polymer degradation. An example of passive release from QD–polymer composites was observed in a study designed to model nanoparticle release characteristics from food packaging.22 This potential release scenario was examined in an accelerated leaching approach by exposing nanocomposites composed of CdSe/ZnS QDs embedded in low density polyethylene (LDPE) to acidic and oxidative environments at elevated temperatures (75 °C). Results showed the release of ions into the surrounding media occurs by dissolution of embedded QDs, with ZnS shells dissolving first followed by CdSe cores. The extent of ion release was also found to depend on the size of the QDs, with smaller QDs releasing more ions than larger particles over the same timescale and under the same solution conditions.22 In another passive release case study, a commercial QD-acrylate nanocomposite, QuantumLight™, was degraded by a solvent infiltration mechanism distinct from surface leaching.9 The CdSe/ZnS-containing QuantumLight™ released no nanoparticles and only ions into solution in quantities that were strongly dependent upon the solution conditions. Results from this study found significant cadmium release only occurred in strong acidic conditions, nitric acid (pH 0.16) and gastric acid (pH 1.12), indicating a general resilience to leaching of the polymer nanocomposite through passive release.9
In contrast to passive release, active release from polymer nanocomposites occurs when nanoparticles are released as a result of the polymer matrix itself degrading, during processes such as mechanical abrasion or photodegradation.21 Motivated by the desire to assess changes in product efficacy and the effective lifetime of the product, polymer degradation studies have tended to focus on the effect of degradation upon the material itself with little effort to collect released materials.23 The need to better understand the potential hazards posed by nanoparticles in the environment has, however, provided the motivation for several active release studies in the past few years; these studies focused on identifying the nature and extent of nanoparticles and nanoparticle-containing fragments released from nano-enabled products as a consequence of weathering,24 including TiO2 from an acrylic urethane coating25 and CNTs from polymer nanocomposites.26,27 Active release of QDs from polymer composites has, however, not been previously studied.
In principle, the weathering of a polymer nanocomposite can occur during the use or the end-of-life phase. Although polymer photodegradation can be studied by exposing samples to solar irradiance (e.g. at a hot desert test site),28 natural photodegradation in the environment is typically too slow to be followed experimentally (e.g. timescale of years). Consequently, the most common experimental approach is to use accelerated or artificial weathering conditions. Specific methods and experimental designs vary; for example, polymer samples have been exposed to accelerated weathering using an ASTM G90 Fresnel-reflecting solar concentrator-accelerated weathering machine,29 an Atlas Xenon Weather-Ometer,30,31 or the SPHERE at the NIST Accelerated Weathering Laboratory in Gaithersburg, MD.32 Each method uses an intense light source (e.g. concentrated solar, xenon arc lamp, mercury lamp) that contains a broad spectrum of visible and UV light.
In the present study, the artificial accelerated weathering33 of polymer nanocomposites composed of CdSe and CdSe/ZnSe quantum dots embedded in poly(methyl methacrylate), (C5O2H8)n, has been performed. Previous wavelength-dependent studies have established that PMMA is photodegraded by <320 nm light as a result of polymer chain scission and direct photon absorption by the carbonyl chromophore.34 Given that the fraction of solar flux reaching the Earth's surface below 320 nm is very small, the natural photochemical weathering of PMMA is extremely low, and accelerated PMMA polymer matrix photodegradation using an intense light source is necessary for laboratory studies.35 For this reason, we conducted artificial accelerated weathering of PMMA composites with 254 nm UVC light.
Three different QD–polymer nanocomposites were studied: CdSe–PMMA, CdSe/ZnS–PMMA, and quantum dot-free PMMA. Polymer nanocomposites were placed in phosphate-buffered 18 MΩ cm water and photodegraded with UVC light in an open system. The released particles were collected in the water and analyzed over time with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), and dark-field microscopy. The effect of irradiation on the polymer nanocomposites was also studied over time with an array of analytical techniques, including scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), attenuated total internal reflection Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), and CLSM. A particular point of emphasis in this study has been the detection and environmental impact of polymer fragments containing QDs.
ICP-MS can identify the nature and/or concentration of dissolved ions released into water during polymer matrix degradation, including ions released from QD–polymer composites.9,21 When combined with centrifugal filtration separation techniques, ICP-MS can also quantify the ratio of released nanoparticles to released ions.9 Single-particle ICP-MS (spICP-MS) can discriminate and quantify ions and nanoparticles. spICP-MS can, however, only discern the presence of nanoparticles with an element-dependent size limitation of 11–20 nm for cadmium, 21–80 nm for zinc, and >200 nm for selenium.36,37 These lower limits are, unfortunately, in excess of the 1.32 and 2.26 nm-diameter quantum dots used in this study and in most commercial products.
In addition to ions and discrete nanoparticles, fragments released during the active photodegradation of polymer nanocomposites are also hypothesized here to contain nanoparticles embedded within polymer fragments. The observation, analysis, and quantification of these species is significantly more challenging than for ions or nanoparticles. Thus, spICP-MS detection of nanoparticles within polymer composites has yet to be reported, as extensive separation techniques would be needed. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was used to locate released CNTs-polymer fragments26 in a four-laboratory study by Wohlleben et al., where CNT-polymer composites were irradiated with a xenon-arc lamp for 2000 h (ISO 4892-2). Although TEM has the requisite sensitivity, can directly image and confirm the presence of nanoparticles, as well as resolve composition (individual CNTs vs. embedded in polymer fragments), it is a vacuum-based technique which often involves extensive sample preparation and has low sampling efficiency.
This work focused on the use of two microscopy techniques to detect the presence of nanoparticle-containing polymer fragments released into aqueous solution. Specifically, CLSM was used to detect the presence of released photoluminescent quantum dots embedded within polymer fragments. Unfortunately, emission-dependent techniques like CLSM cannot be used to detect transformed nanomaterials, such as QDs, which have lost their nascent photoluminescence after photodegradation. This type of released fragment can be discerned, however, using dark-field microscopy, where nanoparticles are detected based on light scattering. In particular, CytoViva® dark-field hyperspectral imaging (HSI) microscopy has been recently implemented to determine the location of NPs in biological tissues,38,39 such as silver nanoparticles within S. oneidensis.4 HSI provides a tool for identifying QDs in complex matrices such as biological tissues38,39 and bacteria4 without relying on photoluminescence. Here, scattering spectra were collected, spectral libraries were constructed, and pixels containing materials of interest (i.e. QDs) were located using the spectral angle mapper (SAM),40,41 an integrated function within the CytoViva® imaging system.
In addition to identifying the nature of the released PMMA, CdSe–PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA fragments, a primary toxicity screen was conducted. For these purposes, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (S. oneidensis) was chosen as a model bacterial system because of the ubiquitous presence of genus Shewanella in different environments, such as soils, sediments, and marine habitats, making it likely to be exposed to released nanocomposite fragments. S. oneidensis has an important environmental role by contributing to geochemical nutrient cycling due to its ability to reduce a wide range of metals.42 For instance, S. oneidensis reduces selenite to Se0 through its use of anaerobic respiration reductases,43 but less is known about its ability to interact with the cadmium and zinc present in QDs. Any impact of the fragments generated during the photodegradation of QD nanocomposite on S. oneidensis therefore, provides information that could be used to assess the more general impact of QD–PMMA fragments on the environment.
The SILAR method was then used to add the ZnS shell to the CdSe QD cores.44 A fraction of the QD cores was purified and dissolved at 100 °C in a mixture of 1-octadecene, oleylamine, trioctyl phosphate (TOP), and dodecylphosphonic acid in a three-neck round-bottom flask. The mixture was degassed under vacuum to remove water and oxygen and then backfilled with nitrogen gas. The solution was then heated to 160 °C under reflux conditions, and a Zn precursor solution (0.05 M zinc formate in oleylamine) was slowly added to the solution using a syringe pump. Subsequently, a sulfur precursor (0.25 M hexamethyldisilathiane in TOP) was slowly added to the solution, also using a syringe pump. The reaction mixture was kept under these conditions for 30 min to allow the formation and annealing of the ZnS monolayer. The temperature was increased to 170 °C, and the process was repeated to add a second and then a third monolayer shell. The temperature was increased by 10 °C for each added monolayer shell. The resulting QDs were capped with trioctylphosphine oxide (TOPO) and suspended in hexanes.
The core and core/shell QDs were purified and resuspended in chloroform to determine the molarity using absorbance measurements and established molar extinction coefficients.46 The size of the spherical QDs was calculated using absorption and emission data as well and determined to be 1.32 nm (FWHM = 32 nm) for CdSe and 2.26 nm (FWHM = 39 nm) for CdSe/ZnS. Absorption data are graphed in Fig. 1(A) and were collected with a Thermo Scientific Evolution™ 201 UV-Vis spectrophotometer and a PTI QuantaMaster™ 400.
Polymer composites were degraded in a 16 lamp Rayonet Photochemical Reactor© with RPR-2537A lamps of 254 nm UVC light (Southern New England Ultraviolet Company, Branford, CT). The photon flux was determined by actinometry to be 2.31 × 1021 quanta s−1 m−2 with a power density of 1.81 kW m−2, where peak solar radiation is defined as 1 kW m−2.47 Dark samples were wrapped in aluminum foil and placed in a 30 °C water bath. Samples were irradiated for 210.5 h, 336 h and 504 h, hereafter called 1.25, two and three weeks, respectively. For each irradiation time, system control, PMMA, and QD–PMMA samples were started at the same time. After photolysis, the glass slides with the QD-polymer nanocomposites were removed from the reaction vessels and air-dried for at least 24 h prior to analysis.
The solution in the reaction vessel was partitioned for analysis as follows: 2 mL for pH determination, 7 mL for 0.45 μm syringe filtration (Millipore), nitric acidification (TraceSELECT™, Honeywell Fluka™), and subsequent ICP-MS analysis in an acid-washed 15 mL conical, while the remaining aseptically transferred 3 mL was used for microscopy and bacterial viability studies.
Imaging of aqueous solutions containing photodegraded fragments generated by irradiating PMMA, CdSe–PMMA, and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA composites were acquired using high S/N ratio, dark-field Cytoviva® hyperspectral imaging (HSI). In these experiments, sample solutions were drop-cast (∼3–4 μL) onto a glass slide, which was then sealed with a cover slip and clear nail polish. Slides were examined at 100× magnification with an oil immersion lens under an Olympus BX-41 microscope. Scattering spectra were acquired with a Cytoviva® spectrophotometer and integrated CCD camera in both the visible and near-infrared range (400–1000 nm). Spectral analysis of the HSI spectra was performed by the Environment for Visualization software (ENVI 4.4 version). Spectral libraries of CdSe in chloroform, CdSe/ZnS in chloroform, and degraded PMMA fragments were collected and then used by the SAM to identify QD-containing fragments released during photodegradation (Fig. S2 in the ESI†).48 To determine if photoemissive fragments were released on a time scale shorter than 1.25 weeks, CdSe/ZnS–PMMA and PMMA fragments, which were released after one day of photodegradation in a separate experiment, were analyzed by CLSM in the Zeiss LSM 510 with the same sample preparation as for HSI.
The culture was further diluted to 1 × 104 CFUs per mL, prior to exposure to 5-fold dilute supernatants from QD–PMMA nanocomposite degradation samples, or with Cd2+ at various concentrations (1, 5, 10, 50, 100, 200, 500 ppb). 80 μL of bacteria were exposed to 80 μL of the diluted supernatants or Cd2+ solutions for 60 min, and then six 10 μL aliquots were dropped onto an agar plate for colony counting evaluation.
The agar plate was first prepared by drying for 30 min in a 30 °C incubator before being irradiated with UV light for 15 min to ensure sterility. After the bacteria-containing drops were fully absorbed into the agar, the plates were incubated overnight (for ∼20 h) at 30 °C. The viability after each exposure was reported as a ratio to the dark samples. Where the three material replicates showed consistent Cd release, as revealed by analysis with ICP-MS; data from these colony counting experiments were combined and subjected to two-way ANOVA to check for statistical significance of the photodegraded samples compared to the dark samples.
CLSM was used to explore the dispersion of the core/shell QDs within the PMMA matrix. A representative top down and side view image of the dispersion of CdSe/ZnS nanoparticles throughout the polymer matrix within a 142.86 μm × 142.86 μm Z-stack of 64 μm is displayed in Fig. 2. The CLSM images were constructed from 80 top down images, acquired with a 0.08 μm step size, stacked on top of each other. Analysis of Fig. 2 revealed the presence of quantum dot agglomerates distributed throughout the polymer matrix. To characterize the size of the QD agglomerates, all emission signals from one high-resolution surface slice of the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA (see Fig. S3 in the ESI†) were classified by the size and spatial distribution of QDs. In ImageJ, this image was globally thresholded and then analyzed with a particle size transform indicating that the 2574 QD agglomerates contained within the 1517 μm2 area had an average agglomerate size of 0.6 ± 0.6 μm2.50
Polymer thickness was determined with a Leica DMi8A microscope by subtracting the Z-height measured when the top of the sample was in focus from the Z-height measured when the mounting slide was in focus. In this way, thicknesses of samples used in dark control studies were determined to be 114 ± 15 μm (N = 9) for CdSe/ZnS–PMMA, 104 ± 15 μm (N = 9) for CdSe–PMMA, and 110 ± 20 μm (N = 9) for PMMA samples.
XPS analysis of the CdSe/ZnS nanoparticles and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites revealed the presence of Cd(II) species, evidenced by Cd 3d5/2 peaks at 404.8 and 404.9 eV, respectively (Fig. S4 in the ESI†). XPS also reveals the presence of S, Se, and Zn before and after solution blending at values close to previous literature assignments for CdSe and ZnS.51,52 After eight months storage at 5 °C in air in the dark, the CdSe/ZnS QDs had oxidized as determined by the S 2p3/2 peak at 168.3 eV, consistent with the formation of sulfate species. In contrast, the CdSe/ZnS QDs embedded in PMMA and stored in dark ambient conditions for eight months did not exhibit a shift in the S 2p3/2 peak, indicating that the PMMA prevented oxygen diffusion (Fig. S4 in the ESI†).51 In addition to the elements expected for the CdSe/ZnS QDs, and PMMA (oxygen and carbon), residual chlorine from the solvent, chloroform, was detected in the XPS, due to the strong acid–base interaction of acidic chloroform with the basic polymer, PMMA.53 A small amount of phosphorous was also detected, at a P 2p binding energy of 133–134 eV, in starting materials, dark controls and degraded polymers, likely due to the use of a phosphate buffer or TOPO ligand (Fig. S5–S6 in the ESI†) TOPO has a P 2p binding energy of 133 eV54 and sodium phosphate and hydrogen phosphate have an average P 2p binding energy of 133.1 ± 0.2 eV (N = 6).55 Similar results were seen for CdSe–PMMA (Fig. S6 in the ESI†).
ATR-FTIR analysis of PMMA and QD–PMMA polymer nanocomposites revealed that the inclusion of QDs did not change the chemical bonding in the PMMA (Fig. S7–S9 in the ESI†).
Fig. 3 (A) SEM, (B) bright-field, and (C) dark-field images of the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposite surface before (top) and after (bottom) three weeks of UVC irradiation. |
The mass loss observed from PMMA, CdSe/ZnS–PMMA, and CdSe–PMMA samples after different periods of photolysis is reported in Fig. S10 in the ESI.† Although there is some variability, the mass losses among all three types of samples were within at least three standard deviations of each other, with most of the mass loss occurring between 1.25 and two weeks. Mass loss data indicate neither the rate nor the extent of photodegradation was changed by the presence of QDs in the PMMA.
In XPS analysis of 1.25 week-, two week-, and three week-irradiated CdSe/ZnS–PMMA composites, the presence of carbon and oxygen were revealed, but none of the elements associated with QDs, even after 90 min of Ar+ sputtering, were apparent. In contrast, Cd, Zn, and S were detected by XPS in the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA composites immersed in water in the dark for 1.25 weeks. Although the Cd signal level was lower than that observed in the as-prepared CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites, the Cd signal increased upon Ar+ sputtering. This initial low Cd signal level was ascribed to the deposition of a thin layer of adventitious carbon on the surface as a result of samples having been immersed in buffered water and subsequently air dried prior to XPS analysis. For samples that had been immersed in water for three weeks, no Cd or Zn signals were observed, presumably due to the presence of a thicker adventitious carbon layer than for the 1.25 week sample. It should be noted that the absence of any detectable Cd release from these dark control samples, see the ICP-MS data, also supports the idea that the decrease in Cd signal observed by XPS is not due to the dissolution of QDs in the near surface region.
The CdSe/ZnS-PMMA, CdSe-PMMA, and PMMA ATR-FTIR spectra were compared to corresponding spectra after 1.25, two, and three weeks of photodegradation (Fig. S7–S9 in the ESI†). A broad –OH stretch appeared at 3500 cm−1 for all three genres of composites. Characteristic PMMA vibrational modes, such as the C-H (sp3, stretch) at 2985 cm−1, were lost. The CO stretch at 1721 cm−1 and C–O stretch at 1236 cm−1 lost intensity and broadened.57 Finally, C–O–C band reduction occurred at 1190 cm−1.58
Following photodegradation, the PL spectra of CdSe-PMMA and CdSe/ZnS-PMMA samples were found to be similar, with a broad peak centered at ∼500 nm. The signal of the broad peak increased in intensity as the duration of photodegradation increased, from 1.25-weeks to two-weeks. The presence of this broad feature was also detected in the degraded PMMA samples. Notably, for the photodegraded CdSe/ZnS-PMMA samples, the emission peak at 575 nm no longer appeared, indicating no emissive QDs were left on the surface (Fig. 4(A)).
The three-week irradiated and dark control CdSe/ZnS-PMMA samples were imaged in Lambda mode with the CLSM wavelength-dependent detector, where emission was detected every 10 nm. Two representative CLSM images acquired at 584 nm and 530 nm are shown in Fig. 4; the full 10 image spectrum is provided in Fig. S12 in the ESI.† After three weeks in the dark, the CdSe/ZnS-PMMA sample exhibited discrete features at 584 nm as seen in Fig. 4(B), close to the expected emission λmax = 594 nm and indicative of the presence of embedded QDs. In contrast, no emission was detected at 530 nm. After three weeks of photodegradation, however, there was no evidence of any emission at 584 nm. In contrast, at 530 nm, diffuse emission was now detected in the photodegraded CdSe/ZnS-PMMA and PMMA samples (Fig. 4(A) and (C), respectively) due to fluorescence associated with photodegraded PMMA.
Significant polymer matrix photodegradation and production of photofragments was caused by UVC irradiation, demonstrated by the mass loss data (Fig. S10 in the ESI†) as well as the SEM and light microscopy images (Fig. 3). A high degree of photodegradation was also evidenced by the mass loss data with this experimental approach. Micrometer-sized holes in the surface of the material are clearly shown in the SEM image (Fig. 3(D)) which could be a possible source for the 5 μm fragments detected with CLSM (Fig. 6). Furthermore, cleavage of the ester group and subsequent cross-linking of the remaining polymer35,56 is indicated by a yellowing of PMMA (Fig. 3(E and F) and S1 in the ESI†). In addition to these structural modifications, UVC irradiation led to a loss of spectral features usually seen in the fingerprint region below 1500 cm−1 according to the ATR-FTIR data (Fig. S7–S9 in the ESI†). The use of 254 nm UVC light in water as an accelerated weathering technique for simulating matrix degradation is supported by the similarity in the changes in the ATR-FTIR observed in this study and PMMA degraded at 260 nm, 280 nm, and 300 nm in vacuum;35 specifically the reduction of the C–O–C band intensity at 1190 cm−1. Based on previous studies, matrix degradation can be assumed to occur principally as a consequence of absorption by the carbonyl group in the PMMA, leading to chain scission.34 The emission properties of the photodegraded PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites are also transformed according to the PL data in Fig. 4(A), where emission below 575 nm was measurably increased due to photodegradation of the PMMA. A similar increase was not observed in the dark control (Fig. 4(B)). In the CLSM images shown in Fig. 4(A and C), this polymer degradation was manifested as an increase in diffuse emission at 530 nm. Future research is merited to compare this photodegradation system with past results. Acrylate monomer, CH3OH, and HCOOCH3 were the photoproducts produced by UVC PMMA film degradation (UHV, 25 °C), as detected by solvent dissolution and GC-MS. Chain scission was determined to be the main photoprocess, with a quantum yield of 0.05 as determined by HPLC.57 The degraded polymers in the present study were utilized for surface analysis, however, photoproducts and chain scission can be quantified by complete dissolution of the solid polymer into solvent followed by GC-MS and HPLC respectively. The decrease in pH was most likely due to the release of carbon dioxide, which occurs during Norrish type I main chain scission reactions. Due to the resistance of PMMA to acid degradation (<20% hydrochloric, <10% acetic and carbonic acids at 30 °C),60 any passive acid-based leaching of cadmium ions from the polymer is theorized to be minimal compared to the active release from polymer matrix photodegradation.
Interestingly, although the rate and extent of polymer mass loss was independent of the presence of QDs, see Fig. S10 in the ESI,† the measured [Cd]ttl in the supernatant was consistently higher for the CdSe–PMMA nanocomposites, as compared to the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA composites, although the nominal [Cd]ttl in both types of composites was the same (Fig. 5). This difference may be a consequence of the greater ease with which Cd ions are released from CdSe QDs as compared to CdSe/ZnS QDs, coupled with the likelihood of a greater efficiency for Cd detection by ICP-MS from Cd ions as compared to Cd contained in either intact QDs or in polymer fragments.
In addition to matrix degradation, the bright-field images shown in Fig. S1 in the ESI,† as well as the CLSM images shown in Fig. 4 and S12 in the ESI,† imply the absence of any emissive QDs after the composites are irradiated for 1.25 weeks. This assertion is supported by the similarity in the PL spectra of irradiated CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites and irradiated PMMA (compare PL spectra in the left-hand side of Fig. 4(A and C)). In the CLSM data, (compare the right-hand side of Fig. 4(A and C)), the diffuse emission at 530 nm observed in photodegraded CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites is observed in photodegraded PMMA, but the initial 594 nm QD emission in non-photodegraded CdSe/ZnS–PMMA is absent after three weeks of photodegradation.
Fragments were released due to active polymer matrix photodegradation, as demonstrated by microscopy (Fig. 6 and 7 and S13–S18 in the ESI†), which occurs in all three sample types: PMMA, CdSe–PMMA, and CdS/ZnS–PMMA. Moreover, for CdSe–PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA, nanoparticles are contained within released polymer fragments in addition to ions detected in ICP-MS. In contrast, only ions or ions attributed to discrete QDs were detected in previous passive release studies involving QD–polymer composites.9,21,22 Although the QDs introduced into the PMMA are initially coated with TOPO and insoluble in water, as a result of the polymer degradation process some of these nanoparticles become embedded in polymer fragments which appear to be mobile in aqueous media, and will therefore likely transport in aqueous environments. This assertion is based on our experimental observations that in both the dark-field and Cytoviva microscopes, the QD-containing fragments were mobile.61
The species released in passive release studies, Cd ions and discrete QDs,9,22 have the potential to be toxic to a variety of different organisms. In contrast, this study focused on identifying the nature and toxicity of QD-containing fragments that will be released during active polymer nanocomposite degradation processes such as weathering. During the initial stages of matrix degradation, the release of polymer fragments containing emissive QDs was identified with CLSM (Fig. 6). Although CdSe/ZnS QDs are efficiently photobleached by 1.25, two, and three weeks of UVC photolysis, polymer degradation occurs in parallel, evidenced by the significant observed mass losses (Fig. S10 in the ESI†). Consequently, during the initial stages of polymer photodegradation, some optically-intact QD-containing fragments are released into solution, and it is these fragments that are detected by CLSM in Fig. 6. As the photodegradation process proceeds, however, QDs in the solid substrate polymer matrix, or in solution as released polymer fragments, will become photobleached. Consistent with this argument, QDs embedded in PMMA substrates and fragments were rapidly photobleached.
QD-containing fragments were released into solution intact throughout weeks of accelerated artificial weathering. Individual QDs would not be detected through the methods used, as the diffraction-limited resolution of CLSM is ∼200 nm. Cadmium-containing species, <0.45 μm in size, were detected with ICP-MS. More cadmium was released for the CdSe–PMMA than for the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA due to the lack of a protective ZnS passivation shell that exposed the core to oxidation. If the QDs had fully dissolved into their ions, then there would have been no dark-field scattering signature in the HSI. In the present study, CdSe QDs, which had lost their emission by exposure to oxygen,44,45,62,63 could only be identified through their unique HSI spectral signature (Fig. S16–S18 in the ESI†). This is also true for CdSe/ZnS–PMMA fragments after one day of photodegradation. The success of the HSI microscopy in identifying QD-containing fragments generated from CdSe–PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA suggests that this technique could be applied to other nanoparticle fragments generated from composite materials. A unique scattering spectrum can be generated by each type of nanoparticle, which can then be used as a fingerprint in the training dataset. In this way, the SAM function of the CytoViva® imaging system could locate either individual particles or agglomerates in complex environments via fast optical and spectroscopic identification.38,39 Specifically, HSI is shown to be capable of discriminating between pixels containing PMMA only and those containing CdSe/ZnS QDs (see Fig. 7) based on relatively small differences in the spectral response of these two materials. An internal consistency check on the viability of this approach is also provided by the absence of any CdSe/ZnS-containing fragments being detected in fragments generated by the photodegradation of PMMA (Fig. S13†), which is a consequence of the different spectral signatures in the material library (Fig. S2†).
The quantification of the size and concentration of photodegraded water-soluble microplastics is a developing field. This study was focused on the detection of quantum dots within released polymer nanocomposites; however, further research is needed to quantify the concentration of these released fragments. As the concentrations of fragments in released solutions and 10× diluted released solutions were below the detection limit of the DLS and UV-vis, microscopy was utilized to identify released material in the form of microplastics. A review of quantification methods in marine debris studies found 6 of 68 papers utilized a pre-massed 1–1.6 μm filter to capture and mass the >1 μm fragments in marine samples, which would be the best method to quantify the concentration of 5 μm PMMA fragments like those found here.64
The viability of S. oneidensis was studied when exposed to released photofragments which are a combination of released polymer composite fragment colloids, photobleached QDs, and aqueous species such as cadmium, selenite, zinc, and sulfate ions. In terms of toxicity, cadmium ions are generally considered to be the most important species in quantum dot toxicity with bacteria,62,65 however, in our studies the viability reduction seen in S. oneidensis after exposure to photodegraded nanocomposites occurs in the absence of any change to the [Cd]ttl and therefore is not entirely due to Cd2+ ions. Specifically, Fig. 8 shows a statistically significant toxicity of CdSe–PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA nanocomposites photodegraded for two and three weeks (Fig. 8(B and C)) and three weeks (Fig. 8(C)), respectively. In contrast, no evidence of toxicity towards S. oneidensis was shown for the degraded PMMA samples for the duration of the experiments. S. oneidensis has been shown to be insensitive to zinc and selenite, the most abundant form of dissolved selenium,62 at the concentration relevant in this study.66,67 Hence, the main species responsible for the increased toxicity is postulated to be the released QD-containing fragments. The increase in toxicity of the released fragments as a function of UVC exposure, despite the absence of a change in the [Cd]ttl, is interpreted to indicate that weathering changed the toxicity of the QD-containing polymer fragments. As the nanocomposites are continually exposed to UVC light, we speculate the size of the fragments decreased, exposing more QDs to the fragment surface. Uptake of either 1.32 or 2.26 nm QDs or 5 μm QD-containing fragments (see Fig. 6) would, most likely, not occur with S. oneidensis, as proven with TEM for similarly-sized gold nanomaterials.49,68 4 nm-diameter nanoparticles, however, can associate with the outer bacterial membrane of S. oneidensis, as observed by TEM in Buchman et al.68 Similarly, QD-containing polymer fragments could attach to the outer surface of S. oneidensis. These smaller fragments, with more QDs at the surface, could be a source for high local concentration of QDs and/or Cd2+ at the bacterial membrane as they degraded.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Photographs of the CdSe/ZnS–PMMA composites in the reaction vessel before and after degradation, library for HSI SAM, QD agglomeration area calculation of CdSe/ZnS–PMMA solid, a table of solution pH, XPS of the starting materials and degraded nanocomposites, solid ATR-FTIR of nanocomposites before and after degradation, time dependent mass loss, PL difference spectra of PMMA from CdSe/ZnS–PMMA, full spectrum wavelength dependent CLSM of CdSe/ZnS–PMMA and PMMA, and HSI of fragments released from photodegradation of PMMA, CdSe–PMMA and CdSe/ZnS–PMMA. See DOI: 10.1039/c8en00249e |
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