April 12, 2013
Journal Article

Ex Situ Formation of Metal Selenide Quantum Dots Using Bacterially Derived Selenide Precursors

Abstract

Luminescent quantum dots were synthesized using bacterially derived selenide (SeII-) as the precursor. Biogenic SeII- was produced by the reduction of Se-IV by Veillonella atypica and compared directly against borohydride-reduced Se-IV for the production of glutathione-stabilized CdSe and beta-mercaptoethanol-stabilized ZnSe nanoparticles by aqueous synthesis. Biological SeII- formed smaller, narrower size distributed QDs under the same conditions. The growth kinetics of biologically sourced CdSe phases were slower. The proteins isolated from filter sterilized biogenic SeII- included a methylmalonyl-CoA decarboxylase previously characterized in the closely related Veillonella parvula. XAS analysis of the glutathione-capped CdSe at the S K-edge suggested that sulfur from the glutathione was structurally incorporated within the CdSe. A novel synchrotron based XAS technique was also developed to follow the nucleation of biological and inorganic selenide phases, and showed that biogenic SeII- is more stable and more resistant to beam-induced oxidative damage than its inorganic counterpart. The bacterial production of quantum dot precursors offers an alternative, 'green' synthesis technique that negates the requirement of expensive, toxic chemicals and suggests a possible link to the exploitation of selenium contaminated waste streams.

Revised: July 22, 2013 | Published: April 12, 2013

Citation

Fellowes J.W., R. Pattrick, J. Lloyd, J.M. Charnock, J.M. Charnock, V.S. Coker, and J. Mosselmans, et al. 2013. Ex Situ Formation of Metal Selenide Quantum Dots Using Bacterially Derived Selenide Precursors. Nanotechnology 24, no. 14:145603. PNNL-SA-95730. doi:10.1088/0957-4484/24/14/145603