Morphology-dependent antibacterial properties of diamond coatings
Microorganisms promoted corrosion has caused significant loss to marine engineering and the antibacterial coatings have served as a solution that has gained attention. In this study, the chemical vapour deposition technique has been employed to grow three different types of diamond coatings, namely, ultrananocrystalline diamond (UNCD), nanocrystalline diamond (NCD), and microcrystalline diamond (MCD) coatings. The evolution of associated surface morphology and the surface functional groups of the grown coatings have demonstrated antibacterial activity in seawater environments. It is found that different ratio of sp3/sp2 carbon bonds on the diamond coatings influences their surface property (hydrophobic/hydrophilic), which changes the anti-adhesion behaviour of diamond coatings against bacteria. This plays a critical role in determining the antibacterial property of the developed coatings. The results show that the diamond coatings arising from the deposition process kill the bacteria via a combination of the mechanical effects and the functional groups on the surface of UNCD, NCD, and MCD coatings, respectively. These antibacterial coatings are effective to both Gram-negative bacteria (E. coli) and Gram-positive bacteria (B. subtilis) for 1–6 h of incubation time. When the contact duration is prolonged to 6 h or over, the MCD coatings begin to reduce the bacteria colonies drastically and enhance the bacteriostatic rate for both E. coli and B. subtilis.
Funding
European Union’s Horizon 2020 RISE project (No. 734578)
UK Royal Society’s APEX Award (2021)
History
Author affiliation
College of Science & Engineering/EngineeringVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Functional DiamondVolume
2Issue
1Pagination
204 - 214Publisher
Informa UK Limitedissn
2694-1112eissn
2694-1120Copyright date
2023Available date
2024-03-18Publisher DOI
Language
enPublisher version
Deposited by
Professor Haitao YeDeposit date
2024-03-17Rights Retention Statement
- No