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Lingzhi or Reishi mushroom with capsules, organic natural healthy food. Photo courtesy of Vecteezy.com

Oleksandr SmirnovVolodymyr DzhaganMariia KovalenkoOleksandr GudymenkoVeronika DzhaganNazar MazurOksana IsaievaZoia  MaksimenkoSerhiyKondratenkMykola Skoryk and Volodymyr Yukhymchuk

Abstract

Fungi produce and excrete various proteins, enzymes, polysaccharides, and secondary metabolites, which may be used as media for the “green” synthesis of metal and semiconductor nanoparticles (NPs). ZnO NPs with a flower-like morphology were synthesized by an affordable colloidal route, using an aqueous extract of Ganoderma lucidum as a reducing agent and stabilizer. Each individual “flower” has a large effective surface, which is preserved when the particles are close packed into a dense film, which is advantageous for numerous applications. The phonon Raman spectrum and X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern prove the high crystallinity of the NPs, with the distinct pattern of a hexagonal (wurtzite) lattice, negligible residual stress, and a crystallite size of 12–14 nm determined from the XRD. The photoluminescence (PL) spectrum of the as-synthesized ZnO NPs contains a structured defect-related feature in the violet-blue range, while the green PL, common for nanostructures synthesized by “green” routes, is very weak. By applying dimethylsulfoxide as an additional passivating agent, the excitonic (UV) PL band was activated without enhancement of the defect-related features. Ag NP-decorated ZnO flowers were synthesized by subsequent silver reduction by pepper extract. The ZnO/Ag NPs exhibited efficient surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) of a standard dye analyte, rhodamine 6G, ensuring the feasibility of other applications that require close contact of ZnO/Ag to other nanostructures or molecules to realize the energy of the charge transfer.

…Optical absorption spectra were recorded using a StellarNet Silver Nova 25 slit spectrometer

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