Abstract

The use of renewable resources to develop functional materials is increasing in order to meet the sustainability challenges. In an era of inexorable evolution of antimicrobial resistance, there is a substantial increase in demand for the development of efficient antimicrobial thin film coating from renewable resources for public bacterial threats, food, biomedical, and industrial applications. In the present investigation, we have used cardanol, a phenolic compound having unsaturated hydrophobic tail isolated from cashew fruits, and linseed oil, a vegetable oil and an important biobased building block, which are cheap and easy to regenerate. This study reports the synthesis of cardanol based metal complexes having unsaturated hydrophobic unit and acrylated epoxidized linseed oil (AELO) prepared via epoxidation of double bonds followed by acrylation. The double bond present in the metal complexes and AELO is prone to form assembled thin film under atmospheric conditions, without the need of any initiators....

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