Antimicrobial Nanostructured Coatings: A Gas Phase Deposition and Magnetron Sputtering Perspective

2020 
Antimicrobial coatings are a promising strategy to counteract the spreading of multi-drug-resistant pathogens through cross-contamination of surfaces. Coatings with nanostructured characteristics can exploit the different antimicrobial mechanisms of nanomaterials provided the composition, the morphology and the mechanical properties of the film can be tuned by the specific synthesis methods. This review addresses the synthesis of antibacterial nanostructured coatings with a focus on physical synthesis methods. After a short description of the bacteria–NP interaction mechanism, leading to the killing of cells, paradigmatic examples of coatings, obtained by magnetron sputtering and supersonic cluster beam deposition, are discussed, with an emphasis on the possibility of combining different elements into the coating to widen the bactericidal spectrum.
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