Abstract

Marine biological pollution restricts the sustainable development of marine economy. Cu2O stands as a predominant antifouling agent for developing marine resources engineering. However, the problems of easy aggregation, rapid failure, and explosive release of copper ions limit the practical application of Cu2O. In this work, a novel copper-functionalized two-dimensional zeolitic imidazolate framework-7 nanocomposites ZIF-7@Cu2O was successfully fabricated by in-situ growth methodology. The emergence of ZIF-7@Cu2O nanocomposites solves the above problems in the use of Cu2O. Due to the huge specific surface area of the 2D ZIF-7 nanosheets and the electrostatic interactions, the cubic Cu2O, with a diameter of 250 nm, can be uniformly and firmly anchored on the surface of 2D ZIF-7 nanosheets, thus effectively avoiding the rapid dissolution of cuprous oxide and reducing the release rate of copper ions. Antibacterial experiments demonstrate that, in comparison to ZIF-7, Cu2O, and ZIF-7/Cu2O (physical mixture of ZIF-7 and Cu2O), ZIF-7@Cu2O exhibits superior antibacterial properties with 99.99 % against E. coli and the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 32 μg/mL. Furthermore, the reactive oxygen species (ROS) assay confirms ZIF-7@Cu2O could promote the generation of ROS. Antibiofilm formation results reveal that ZIF-7@Cu2O nanocomposites are effective in preventing biofilm formation of E. coli and P. aeruginosa at a low concentration (50 μg/mL). Finally, ZIF-7@Cu2O nanocomposites are employed as fillers to prepare ZIF-7@Cu2O/EP composite coating, the bactericidal kinetics and bacterial adherence on the coating surface are investigated. We believe this work could provide novel insights into the rational design of 2D ZIF-based material in the field of antifouling.

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