John Thurston
College of Idaho
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Publication
Featured researches published by John Thurston.
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2017
John Thurston; Necia M. Hunter; Lacey Wayment; Kenneth A. Cornell
In this manuscript, we describe the fabrication of photoactive biocidal or sporicidal films from urea-derived graphitic carbon nitride (u-g-C3N4). Co-deposited films of u-g-C3N4 and Escherichia coli O157:H7 (IC50=14.1±0.2mJ) or Staphylococcus aureus (methicillin resistant IC50=33.5±0.2mJ, methicillin sensitive IC50=42.7±0.5mJ) demonstrated significantly enhanced bactericidal behavior upon administration of visible radiation (400nm≤λ≤426nm). In all cases, complete eradication of the microbial sample was realized upon administration of 100mJ of visible radiation, while no antimicrobial activity was observed for non-irradiated samples. In contrast, Bacillus anthracis endospores were more resistant to u-g-C3N4 mediated killing with only a ca. 25% reduction in spore viability when treated with a 200mJ dose of visible radiation. Characterization of u-g-C3N4 reveals that the improved activity results from enhancements of both the surface area and reduction potential of the materials conduction band edge, coupled with fast injection of charge carriers into localized states and a decline in radiative recombination events. The results of this study demonstrate that g-C3N4-based materials offer a viable scaffold for the development of new, visible light driven technologies for controlling potentially pathogenic microorganisms.
RSC Advances | 2016
John Thurston; Necia M. Hunter; Kenneth A. Cornell
Photoactive films derived from nanostructured samples of metal-free, intermediate band gap semiconductor graphitic carbon nitride (ns-g-C3N4) have been synthesized and characterized for their particle properties and antimicrobial activity. Physical characterization reveals that these materials are composed of discrete nanoparticles whose dimensions range from 200 nm to 700 nm. Investigation of the photochemical reactivity of ns-g-C3N4 using coumarin-3-carboxylic acid (3-CCA) indicates that this material produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) under visible radiation. When irradiated with 0.31J visible light, ns-g-C3N4-based materials reduced the viability of both gram-negative Escherichia coli O157:H7 and gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus by approximately 50%. Nearly complete inactivation of both strains of microorganisms was achieved upon administration of a 0.62J dose of visible radiation. Importantly, no biocidal activity was observed for non-irradiated samples, indicating that the g-C3N4-derived films are not inherently toxic in the absence of visible light. The results of this study suggest that materials and, by extention, films and coatings derived from g-C3N4 may present a novel route for controlling pathogenic microorganisms on surfaces in the environment, and could be useful in reducing incidents of hospital-acquired infections.
Archive | 2018
Julie Wagner; Lacey Wayment; Mary Campbell; Tyler Smith; John Thurston; Danny Xu; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2018
Merlin Bope Miongolo; Lacey Wayment; John Thurston; Danny Xu; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2018
Tyler Smith; Lj McKenzie; Dallin Harper; Lacey Wayment; John Thurston; Danny Xu; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2018
Elena Paz; Meagan Boll; John Thurston; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2018
Matthew Becar; Lacey Wayment; John Thurston; Danny Xu; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2018
Andrew Clifford; Lacey Wayment; Will Callahan; Bradley Henderson; Trevor Lujan; John Thurston
Archive | 2017
Frank Gigray; Neicia Hunter; Kynna Bertagnolli; John Thurston; Ken Cornell (Mentor)
Archive | 2017
Miranda Y. Tang; Necia M. Hunter; Patrick H. Erstad; John Thurston; Ken Cornell (Mentor)