skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Amphiphilic Polymer Thin Films with Enhanced Resistance to Biofilm Formation at the Solid–Liquid–Air Interface
Abstract Biofouling at the solid–liquid–air interface poses a serious threat to public health and environmental sustainability. Despite the variety of antifouling materials developed, few have proven to resist fouling at the three‐phase contact line. In fact, antifouling at the liquid–solid interface and the air–solid interface call for opposite surface properties—hydrophilic for the former and hydrophobic for the latter. By devising a new design strategy, one that maximizes the mismatch of surface energies of comonomers for dynamic chain reorientation at the three‐phase contact line, an antifouling amphiphilic copolymer is obtained. The novel amphiphilic copolymer reduces the formation of biofilms byPseudomonas aeruginosaand outperforms a zwitterionic polymer, the current leading antifouling chemistry. The copolymer is synthesized using initiated chemical vapor deposition (iCVD), which leads to molecular‐level heterogeneities composed of zwitterionic and fluorinated moieties by avoiding undesirable surface tension effects. Atomic force microscopy, x‐ray diffractometry, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy confirm the copolymer's amphiphilicity and lack of microphase separation. Scanning electron microscopy provides visual confirmation of the diminished biofilm growth. The versatile iCVD technique is amenable to a range of substrates and enables the application of this new material to food processing, healthcare, and underwater performance.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1719875
PAR ID:
10453680
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Advanced Materials Interfaces
Volume:
8
Issue:
5
ISSN:
2196-7350
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. We propose a novel solid-fluid coupling method to capture the subtle hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions between liquid, solid, and air at their multi-phase junctions. The key component of our approach is a Lagrangian model that tackles the coupling, evolution, and equilibrium of dynamic contact lines evolving on the interface between surface-tension fluid and deformable objects. This contact-line model captures an ensemble of small-scale geometric and physical processes, including dynamic waterfront tracking, local momentum transfer and force balance, and interfacial tension calculation. On top of this contact-line model, we further developed a mesh-based level set method to evolve the three-phase T-junction on a deformable solid surface. Our dynamic contact-line model, in conjunction with its monolithic coupling system, unifies the simulation of various hydrophobic and hydrophilic solid-fluid-interaction phenomena and enables a broad range of challenging small-scale elastocapillary phenomena that were previously difficult or impractical to solve, such as the elastocapillary origami and self-assembly, dynamic contact angles of drops, capillary adhesion, as well as wetting and splashing on vibrating surfaces. 
    more » « less
  2. Due to the emergence of wide-spread infectious diseases, there is a heightened need for antimicrobial and/or antifouling coatings that can be used to prevent infection and transmission in a variety of applications, ranging from healthcare devices to public facilities. While antimicrobial coatings kill pathogenic bacteria upon contact with the surface, the antimicrobial function alone often lacks long-term effectiveness due to the accumulation of dead cells and their debris on the surface, thus reducing the performance of the coating over time. Therefore, it is desirable to develop coatings with the dual functions of antimicrobial efficacy and fouling resistance, in which antifouling coatings provide the added benefit of preventing the adhesion of dead cells and debris. Leveraging the outstanding antifouling properties of zwitterionic coatings, we synthesized copolymers with this antimicrobial-antifouling dual function by immobilizing lysozyme, a common antimicrobial enzyme, to the surface of a pyridinium-based zwitterionic copolymer. Specifically, poly(4-vinylpyridine- co -pentaflurophenyl methacrylate- co -divinyl benzene) [P(4VP-PFPMA-DVB)] thin films were synthesized by an all-dry vapor deposition technique, initiated Chemical Vapor Deposition, and derivatized using 1,3-propane sultone to obtain sulfobetaine moieties. Lysozyme, known to hydrolyze polysaccharides in the cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria, was immobilized by forming amide bonds with the copolymer coating via nucleophilic substitution of the pentafluorophenyl group. The antifouling and antibacterial performance of the novel lysozyme-zwitterionic coating was tested against Gram-positive Bacillus subtilis and Gram-negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa . A reduction in surface adhesion of 87% was achieved for P. aeruginosa , and of 75% for B. subtilis , when compared to a common poly(vinyl chloride) surface. The lysozyme-zwitterionic coating also deactivated 67% of surface-attached Gram-positive bacteria, B. subtilis . This novel dual-function material can produce anti -infection surfaces for medical devices and surgical tools, personal care products, and surfaces in public facilities. 
    more » « less
  3. Altering soil wettability by inclusion of hydrophobicity could be an effective way to restrict evaporation from soil, thereby conserving water resources. In this study, 4-μL sessile water droplets were evaporated from an artificial soil millipore comprised of three glass (i.e. hydrophilic) and Teflon (i.e. hydrophobic) 2.38-mm-diameter beads. The distance between the beads were kept constant (i.e. center-to-center spacing of 3.1 mm). Experiments were conducted in an environmental chamber at an air temperature of 20°C and 30% and 75% relative humidity (RH). Evaporation rates were faster (i.e. ∼19 minutes and ∼49 minutes at 30% and 75% RH) from hydrophilic pores than the Teflon one (i.e. ∼24 minutes and ∼52 minutes at 30% and 75% RH) due in part to greater air-water contact area. Rupture of liquid droplets during evaporation was analyzed and predictions were made on rupture based on contact line pinning and depinning, projected surface area just before rupture, and pressure difference across liquid-vapor interface. It was observed that, in hydrophilic pore, the liquid droplet was pinned on one bead and the contact line on the other beads continuously decreased by deforming the liquid-vapor interface, though all three gas-liquid-solid contact lines decreased at a marginal rate in hydrophobic pore. For hydrophilic and hydrophobic pores, approximately 1.7 mm2 and 1.8–2 mm2 projected area of the droplet was predicted at 30% and 75% RH just before rupture occurs. Associated pressure difference responsible for rupture was estimated based on the deformation of curvature of liquid-vapor interface. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Amphiphilic copolymers (AP) represent a class of novel antibiofouling materials whose chemistry and composition can be tuned to optimize their performance. However, the enormous chemistry‐composition design space associated with AP makes their performance optimization laborious; it is not experimentally feasible to assess and validate all possible AP compositions even with the use of rapid screening methodologies. To address this constraint, a robust model development paradigm is reported, yielding a versatile machine learning approach that accurately predicts biofilm formation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa on a library of AP. The model excels in extracting underlying patterns in a “pooled” dataset from various experimental sources, thereby expanding the design space accessible to the model to a much larger selection of AP chemistries and compositions. The model is used to screen virtual libraries of AP for identification of best‐performing candidates for experimental validation. Initiated chemical vapor deposition is used for the precision synthesis of the model‐selected AP chemistries and compositions for validation at solid–liquid interface (often used in conventional antifouling studies) as well as the air–liquid–solid triple interface. Despite the vastly different growth conditions, the model successfully identifies the best‐performing AP for biofilm inhibition at the triple interface. 
    more » « less
  5. Contact lines at a three-phase boundary (solid, liquid and air) play an essential role in the dynamics of the free surface of liquids in surface-tension-dominated fluids. While previous studies on the contact line effect have mainly focused on frequency and damping of standing wave modes in capillary dynamics, our study focuses on the contact line effect on capillary-gravity wave scattering from barriers. Models have predicted the contact line effects on capillary-gravity wave scattering from a barrier in ideal fluid configurations, but the lack of experimental data has hindered the progress. This research presents an experimental study that utilizes an acoustic approach to measure variations of the scattering with the barrier depth, barrier width, and surface wave frequency. Our study provides both evidence and quantitative measurements of the contact line effect on capillary-gravity wave scattering in realistic fluid configurations. 
    more » « less