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1.
This work explores how long-range non-specific interactions, resulting from small amounts of adsorbed fibrinogen, potentially influence bioadhesion. Such non-specific interactions between protein adsorbed on a biomaterial and approaching cells or bacteria may complement or even dominate ligand–receptor mating. This work considers situations where the biomaterial surface and the approaching model cells (micron-scale silica particles) exhibit strong electrostatic repulsion, as may be the case in diagnostics and lab-on-chip applications. We report that adsorbed fibrinogen levels near 0.5 mg/m2 produce non-specific fouling. For underlying surfaces that are less fundamentally repulsive, smaller amounts of adsorbed fibrinogen would have a similar effect. Additionally, it was observed that particle adhesion engages sharply and only above a threshold loading of fibrinogen on the collector. Also, in the range of ionic strength, I, below about 0.05 M, increases in I reduce the fibrinogen needed for microparticle capture, due to screening of electrostatic repulsions. Surprisingly, however, ionic strengths of 0.15 M reduce fibrinogen adsorption altogether. This observation opposes expectations based on DLVO arguments, pointing to localized electrostatic attractions and hydration effects to drive silica–fibrinogen adhesion. These behaviors are benchmarked against microparticle binding on silica surfaces carrying small amounts of a polycation, to provide insight into the role of electrostatics in fibrinogen-driven non-specific adhesion.  相似文献   

2.
This article demonstrates how the adhesion rates of micrometer-scale particles on a planar surface can be manipulated by nanometer-scale features on the latter. Here, approximately 500-nm-diameter spherical silica particles carrying a substantial and relatively uniform negative charge experienced competing attractions and repulsions as they approached and attempted to adhere to a negative planar silica surface carrying flat 11-nm-diameter patches of concentrated positive charge. The average spacing of these patches profoundly influenced the particle adhesion. For dense positive patch spacing on the planar collector, the particle adhesion was rapid, and the fundamental adhesion kinetics were masked by particle transport to the interface. For patch densities corresponding to a planar surface with net zero charge, particle adhesion was still rapid. Adhesion kinetics were observably reduced for patch spacings exceeding 20 nm and become slower with increased patch spacing. Ultimately, above a critical or threshold average patch spacing of 32 nm, no particle adhesion occurred. The presence of the threshold average patch spacing suggests that more than one positive surface patch was needed for particle capture under the particular conditions of this study. Furthermore, at the threshold, the length scales of the patch spacing and of the interactive surface area between the particle and the surface become similar: The concept of adhesion dominated by the matching of length scales is reminiscent of pattern recognition, even though the patch distribution on the collector is random in this work. Indeed, fluctuations play a critical role in these adhesion dynamics, hence the current behavior cannot be predicted by a mean field approach.  相似文献   

3.
This work explores the use of "patchy" polymer brushes to control protein adsorption rates on engineered surfaces and to bind targeted species from protein mixtures with high selectivity but without invoking molecular recognition. The brushes of interest contain embedded cationic "patches" composed of isolated adsorbed poly(l-lysine) coils (PLL) that are about 10 nm in diameter and are randomly arranged on a silica substrate. Around these patches is a protein-resistant poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) brush that is formed from the adsorption of a PLL-g-PEG graft copolymer on the remaining silica surface. Electrostatic attractions between individual cationic patches and the negative regions of approaching proteins may be energetically insufficient to bind proteins. Furthermore, protein-patch attractions are reduced by steric repulsions between proteins and the PEG brush. We show that protein adsorption, gauged by ultimate short-term coverages and by the initial protein adsorption rate, exhibits an adhesion threshold: pure PEG brushes of the architectures employed here and brushes containing sparse loadings of PLL patches do not adsorb protein. Above a critical PLL patch loading or threshold, protein adsorption proceeds, often dramatically. The PLL patch thresholds are specific to the protein of interest, allowing surfaces to be engineered to adhesively discriminate different proteins within a mixture. The separation achieved is remarkably sharp: one protein adsorbs, but the second is completely rejected from the interface. The surfaces in this study, by virtue of their well-controlled and well-characterized patchy nature, distinguish themselves from multicomponent brushes or brushes used to end-tether peptide sequences and nucleotides.  相似文献   

4.
This work examines how the binding strength of surface-immobilized "stickers" (representative of receptors or, in nonbiological systems, chemical heterogeneities) influences the adhesion between surfaces that are otherwise repulsive. The study focuses on a series of surfaces designed with fixed average adhesive energy per unit area and demonstrates quantitatively how a redistribution of the adhesive functionality into progressively larger clusters (stronger stickers) increases the probability of adhesive events. The work employs an electrostatic model system: relatively uniform, negative 1 μm silica spheres flow gently over negative silica flats. The flats contain small amounts of randomly positioned nanoscale cationic patches. The silica-silica interaction is repulsive; however, the cationic patches (present at sufficiently low levels that the overall surface charge remains substantially negative) produce local attractions. In this study, the attractions are relatively weak so that multiple patches engage to capture flowing particles. Experiments reveal an adhesion signature characteristic of a renormalized random distribution when the sticker strength is increased at an overall fixed binding strength per unit area of surface. The form of the particle capture curves are in good quantitative agreement with a simple model that assumes only a fixed adhesion energy needed for particle capture. Aside from the quantitative details that provide a simple formalism for anticipating particle adhesion, this work demonstrates how increasing the heterogeneities in the surface functionality can cause a system to go from being nonadhesive to becoming strongly adhesive. Indeed, systems containing small amounts of discretized adhesive functionality are always more adhesive than systems in which the same functionality is distributed uniformly over the surface (the mean field scenario).  相似文献   

5.
The dynamic adhesion behavior of micrometer-scale silica particles is investigated numerically for a low Reynolds number shear flow over a planar collecting wall with randomly distributed electrostatic heterogeneity at the 10-nanometer scale. The hydrodynamic forces and torques on a particle are coupled to spatially varying colloidal interactions between the particle and wall. Contact and frictional forces are included in the force and torque balances to capture particle skipping, rolling, and arrest. These dynamic adhesion signatures are consistent with experimental results and are reminiscent of motion signatures observed in cell adhesion under flowing conditions, although for the synthetic system the particle–wall interactions are controlled by colloidal forces rather than physical bonds between cells and a functionalized surface. As the fraction of the surface (Θ) covered by the cationic patches is increased from zero, particle behavior sequentially transitions from no contact with the surface to skipping, rolling, and arrest, with the threshold patch density for adhesion (Θcrit) always greater than zero and in quantitative agreement with experimental results. The ionic strength of the flowing solution determines the extent of the electrostatic interactions and can be used to tune selectively the dynamic adhesion behavior by modulating two competing effects. The extent of electrostatic interactions in the plane of the wall, or electrostatic zone of influence, governs the importance of spatial fluctuations in the cationic patch density and thus determines if flowing particles contact the wall. The distance these interactions extend into solution normal to the wall determines the strength of the particle–wall attraction, which governs the transition from skipping and rolling to arrest. The influence of Θ, particle size, Debye length, and shear rate is quantified through the construction of adhesion regime diagrams, which delineate the regions in parameter space that give rise to different dynamic adhesion signatures and illustrate selective adhesion based on particle size or curvature. The results of this study are suggestive of novel ways to control particle–wall interactions using randomly distributed surface heterogeneity.  相似文献   

6.
This note documents the crossover from a regime where shear flow hinders microparticle adhesion on collecting surfaces to that where increased flow aids particle capture. Flow generally works against adhesion and successfully hinders particle capture when the net physicochemical attractions between the particles and collector are weak compared with hydrodynamic forces on the particle. Conversely, with strong attractions between particles and collector, flow aids particle capture by increasing the mass transport of particles to the interfacial region. Here, local hydrodynamics still generally oppose adhesion but are insufficient to pull particles off of the surface. Thus, flow actually increases the particle capture rate through the increased transport to the surface. These behaviors are demonstrated using 1 mum silica spheres flowing over electrostatically heterogeneous (length scales near 10 nm) collecting surfaces at shear rates from 22 to 795 s(-1). The net surface charge on the collector is varied systematically from strongly negative (pure silica) to strongly positive (a saturated polycationic overlayer), demonstrating the interplay between physicochemical and hydrodynamic contributions. These results clearly apply to situations where heterogeneous particle-surface interactions are electrostatic in nature; however, qualitatively similar behavior was previously reported for the effect receptor density on bacterial adhesion.  相似文献   

7.
Patchy particles possessing heterogeneous surface composition show great promise as self-organizing building blocks for new classes of hierarchical functional structures. A major hurdle is the scalable synthesis of stable patches on nanosized core particles with arbitrarily defined patch number and coverage. So far, few methods have been reported which could be expected to meet these challenges. Recently, we described the heterogeneous nucleation and growth of silver patches on silica nanospheres via a template free colloidal route. The patches produced, although tunable in size and number and showing interesting plasmon resonant properties, were rather unstable and degraded rapidly during attempts to process them further. In the present work, therefore, we set out to explore if related approaches can be employed to produce patchy particles involving gold, which is known to be more stable. The differences between typical patch precursors Ag(+) and [AuCl(x)(OH)(4-x)](-) and their respective interactions with amorphous silica make this a significant challenge. We show that preformed small silver patches in addition to the presence of a reducing agent are necessary for the formation of gold patches conformal to the silica nanosphere surface. Systematic study of the process parameters and their influence on the patchy particle morphology as well as in-depth analytical transmission electron microscopy investigation of the patch composition reveal that patches spread over the silica surface via a cycle of galvanic dissolution and redeposition of silver. The resulting gold patchy particles remain stable during subsequent storage or washing and display tunable plasmon resonances within the visible and near-IR spectrum.  相似文献   

8.
Patchy polymer brushes contain nanoscale (5-15 nm) adhesive elements, such as polymer coils or nanoparticles, embedded at their base at random positions on the surface. The competition between the brush's steric (protein resistant) repulsions and the attractions from the discrete adhesive elements provides a precise means to control bioadhesion. This differs from the classical approach, where functionality is placed on the brush's periphery. The current study demonstrates the impact of poly(etheylene glycol) (PEG) brush architecture and ionic strength on fibrinogen adsorption on brushes containing embedded poly-l-lysine (PLL, 20K MW) coils or "patches". The consistent appearance of a fibrinogen adsorption threshold, a minimum loading of patches on the surface, below which protein adsorption does not occur, suggests multivalent protein capture: Adsorbing proteins simultaneously engage several patches. The surface composition (patch loading) at the threshold is extremely sensitive to the brush height and ionic strength, varying up to a factor of 5 in the surface loading of the PLL patches (~50% of the range of possible surfaces). Variations in ionic strength have a similar effect, with the smallest thresholds seen for the largest Debye lengths. While trends with brush height were the clearest and most dominant, consideration of the PEG loading within the brush or its persistence length did not reveal a critical brush parameter for the onset of adsorption. The lack of straightforward correlation on brush physics was likely a result of multivalent binding, (producing an additional dependence on patch loading), and might be resolved for univalent adsorption onto more strongly binding patches. While studies with similar brushes placed uniformly on a surface revealed that the PEG loading within the brush is the best indicator of protein resistance, the current results suggest that brush height is more important for patchy brushes. Likely the interactions producing brush extension normal to the interface act similarly to drive lateral tether extension to obstruct patches.  相似文献   

9.
An Eulerian model (convection-diffusion-migration equation) is presented to study colloid deposition behavior on Janus and patchy spherical collectors using Happel cell geometry. The model aims to capture the effect of the collector surface charge heterogeneity on the particle deposition rate. Two separate cases of surface charge distribution are presented. In the first case, the surface heterogeneity is modeled as half the collector favoring deposition and the other half hindering it (Janus collectors). For the second case, the surface heterogeneity is modeled as alternate stripes of attractive and repulsive regions on the collector (patchy collectors). The model also considers fluid flow approaching the collector at different angles in addition to the standard gravity assisted and gravity hindered flow conditions to analyze the effect of the collector orientation on the deposition. It was observed that particles tend to deposit at the edges of the favorable stripes and the extent of this preferential accumulation varies along the tangential position of the collector due to the nonuniform nature of the collector. The predicted deposition behavior is compared to the patchwise heterogeneity model. The study brings to fore how recent developments in synthesis of chemically heterogeneous particles and beads can be used for improved particle capture in porous media and for designing filter beds with enhanced life.  相似文献   

10.
This experimental study explores the capture and manipulation of micrometer-scale particles by single surface-immobilized nanoparticles. The nanoparticles, approximately 10 nm in diameter, are cationic and therefore attract the micrometer-scale silica particles in an analyte suspension. The supporting surface on which the nanoparticles reside is negative (also silica) and repulsive toward approaching microparticles. In the limit where there are as few as 9 nanoparticles per square micrometer of collector, it becomes possible to capture and hold micrometer-scale silica particles with single nanoparticles. The strong nanoparticle-microparticle attractions, their nanometer-scale protrusion forward of the supporting surface, and their controlled density on the supporting surface facilitate microparticle-surface contact occurring through a single nanoelement. This behavior differs from most particle-particle, cell-cell, or particle (or cell)-surface interactions that involve multiple ligand-receptor bonds or much larger contact areas. Despite the limited contact of microparticles with surface-immobilized nanoparticles, microparticles resist shear forces of 9 pN or more but can be released through an increase in the ionic strength. The ability of nanoparticles to reversibly trap and hold much larger targets has implications in materials self-assembly, cell capture, and sorting applications, whereas the single point of contact affords precision in particle manipulation.  相似文献   

11.
Direct measurements of the interaction forces between a spherical silica particle and a small air bubble have been conducted in aqueous electrolyte solutions by using an atomic force microscope (AFM). The silica particle was hydrophobized with a silanating reagent, and the interaction forces were measured by using several particles with different surface hydrophobicities. In the measured force curves, a repulsive force was observed at large separation distances as the particle moved towards the bubble. The origin of the repulsive force was attributed to an electrostatic double-layer force because both the particle and bubble were negatively charged. After the repulsive force, an extremely long-range attractive force acted between the surfaces. These results indicate that the intervening thin water film between the particle and bubble rapidly collapsed, resulting in the particle penetrating the bubble.

The instability of the thin water film between the surfaces suggests the existence of an additional attractive force. By comparing the repulsive forces of the obtained force curves with the DLVO theory, the rupture thickness was estimated. The hydrophobicity of the particle did not significantly change the rupture thickness, whereas the pH of the solution is considered to be a critical factor.  相似文献   


12.
Interaction forces between pre-adsorbed layers of branched poly(ethylene imine) (PEI) of different molecular mass were studied with the colloidal probe technique, which is based on atomic force microscopy (AFM). During approach, the long-ranged forces between the surfaces are repulsive due to overlap of diffuse layers down to distances of a few nanometers, whereby regulation of the surface charge is observed. The ionic strength dependence of the observed diffuse layer potentials can be rationalized with a surface charge of 2.3 mC/m2. The forces remain repulsive down to contact, likely due to electro-steric interactions between the PEI layers. These electro-steric forces have a range of a few nanometers and appear to be superposed to the force originating from the overlap of diffuse layers. During retraction of the surfaces, erratic attractive forces are observed due to molecular adhesion events (i.e., bridging adhesion). The frequency of the molecular adhesion events increases with increasing the ionic strength. The force response of the PEI segments is dominated by rubber-like extension profiles. Strong adhesion forces are observed for low molecular mass PEI at short distances directly after separation, while for high molecular mass weaker adhesion forces at larger distances are more common. The work of adhesion was estimated by integrating the retraction force profiles, and it was found to increase with the ionic strength.  相似文献   

13.
A combined theoretical and experimental study of the adhesion of alumina particles and polystyrene latex spheres to silicon dioxide surfaces was performed. A boundary element technique was used to model electrostatic interactions between micron-scale particles and planar surfaces when the particles and surfaces were in contact. This method allows quantitative evaluation of the effects of particle geometry and surface roughness on the electrostatic interaction. The electrostatic interactions are combined with a previously developed model for van der Waals forces in particle adhesion. The combined model accounts for the effects of particle and substrate geometry, surface roughness and asperity deformation on the adhesion force. Predictions from the combined model are compared with experimental measurements made with an atomic force microscope. Measurements are made in aqueous solutions of varying ionic strength and solution pH. While van der Waals forces are generally dominant when particles are in contact with surfaces, results obtained here indicate that electrostatic interactions contribute to the overall adhesion force in certain cases. Specifically, alumina particles with complex geometries were found to adhere to surfaces due to both electrostatic and van der Waals interactions, while polystyrene latex spheres were not affected by electrostatic forces when in contact with various surfaces.  相似文献   

14.
The humidity present in ambient atmosphere affects the adhesion of small particles by causing capillary bridge formation between the particle and the surface. Even in moderate relative humidities this, usually attractive, force can have a significant effect on adhesion behaviour of micro and sub-micro particles. We have directly measured the pull-off forces of initially adhered oxide particles on oxide surfaces with atomic force microscope in controlled atmosphere with adjustable humidity. We demonstrate the effect of the surface roughness resulting in two different regions of capillary formation and the particle shape having a strong effect on the humidity dependency of adhesion. The experimental results are explained by theoretical framework.  相似文献   

15.
The flotation efficiency of silica particles using the ionic surfactants, sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDbS) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CPB), have been investigated. Results from adsorption, electrophoretic mobility, dispersion stability and direct interaction force measurements are used to develop an understanding of the role of ionic surfactants in particulate flotation. Adsorption and mobility data indicate that SDbS adsorbs at the silica/solution interface, though without improving the flotation efficiency. CPB was found to adsorb on the silica particles as a result of electrostatic interaction; initially to neutralize the surface charge and destabilize the suspension, and at higher surfactant concentrations, to reverse the particle charge and re-stabilize the suspension. Direct force measurements in the presence of CPB confirm that the electrostatic interactions between approaching surfaces are neutralized at low CPB concentrations. Additionally, evidence for a strong adhesive interaction after contact is seen. At higher concentrations, the surfaces begin to recharge, and the adhesive interaction decreases in magnitude. The flotation efficiency was found to correlate well with the measured particle interactions, and to be a function of the particulate electrophoretic mobility.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction forces between poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm)-grafted surfaces and colloidal particles in an aqueous solution were investigated using an atomic force microscope. Measurements were conducted between smooth silicon wafers on which PNIPAAm was terminally grafted and silica particles hydrophobized with a silanating reagent in an aqueous electrolyte solution under controlled temperature. Below the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAAm, there were large repulsive forces between the surfaces, both on approach and separation of the surfaces. On the other hand, above LCST, attractive forces were observed both in approaching and in separating force curves. When surface hydrophobicity of the particles increased, the maximum attractive force tended to increase. The changes of hydration state of the grafted PNIPAAm chains depending on temperature are considered to greatly alter the interaction force properties. The role of the intermolecular interaction between the PNIPAAm chains and the hydrophobic particles in the interaction forces is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Dynamic particle adhesion from flow over collecting surfaces with nanoscale heterogeneity occurs in important natural systems and current technologies. Accurate modeling and prediction of the dynamics of particles interacting with such surfaces will facilitate their use in applications for sensing, separating, and sorting colloidal-scale objects. In this paper, the interaction of micrometer-scale particles with electrostatically heterogeneous surfaces is analyzed. The deposited polymeric patches that provide the charge heterogeneity in experiments are modeled as 11-nm disks randomly distributed on a planar surface. A novel technique based on surface discretization is introduced to facilitate computation of the colloidal interactions between a particle and the heterogeneous surface based on expressions for parallel plates. Combining these interactions with hydrodynamic forces and torques on a particle in a low Reynolds number shear flow allows particle dynamics to be computed for varying net surface coverage. Spatial fluctuations in the local surface density of the deposited patches are shown responsible for the dynamic adhesion phenomena observed experimentally, including particle capture on a net-repulsive surface.  相似文献   

18.
An atomic force microscope (AFM) has been used to quantify the adhesion of living cells Saccharomyces cerevisiae on three different silica surfaces with defined roughness. The effects of support roughness on the adhesion forces of a smooth silica particle were studied in addition. A living single cell was immobilized at the apex of a tipless AFM cantilever using a key-lock mechanism. Adhesion was quantified from the force-distance data measured on a smooth silica substrate and two substrates coated with hydrophilic monodisperse silica particles with 110 and 240 nm in diameter to study the effect of roughness on particle adhesion. The AFM technique gives unique insight into the primary colonization event of biofilm formation. The new knowledge helps substantially to design surface coatings relevant for biotechnology, medicine and dentistry.  相似文献   

19.
We present the phase diagrams for neutral patchy colloidal particles whose surface is decorated by different number of identical patches, where each patch serves as an associating site. The hard-core Lennard-Jones (LJ) potential and associating interaction are incorpo-rated into the free energies of patchy particles in phases of the fluid (F), random close packing (RCP), and face-centered-cubic (FCC) crystal. A rich phase structure of patchy particles with F-F, F-RCP, and F-FCC transitions can be observed. Meanwhile, the sol-gel transition (SGT) characterizing the connectivity of patchy particles is also investigated. It is shown that, depending on the number of patches and associating energy, the F-F transition might be metastable or stable with respect to the F-RCP and F-FCC transitions. Meanwhile, the critical temperatures, critical densities, triple points, and SGT can be significantly regulated by these factors.  相似文献   

20.
This paper describes the creation of hybrid surfaces containing cationic nanoparticles and biocompatible PEG (polyethylene glycol) brushes that manipulate bacterial adhesion for potential diagnostic and implant applications. Here, ~10 nm cationically functionalized gold nanoparticles are immobilized randomly on negative silica surfaces at tightly controlled surface loadings, and the remaining areas are functionalized with a hydrated PEG brush, using a graft copolymer of poly-l-lysine and PEG (PLL-PEG), containing 2000 molecular weight PEG chains and roughly 30% functionalization of the PLL. The cationic nanoparticles attract the negative surfaces of suspended Staphylococcus aureus bacteria while the PEG brush exerts a steric repulsion. With the nanoparticle and PEG brush heights on the same lengthscale, variations in ionic strength are demonstrated to profoundly influence the capture of S. aureus on these surfaces. For bacteria captured from gentle flow, a crossover from multivalent to univalent binding is demonstrated as the Debye length is increased from 1 to 4 nm. In the univalent regime, 1 um diameter spherical bacteria are captured and held by single nanoparticles. In the multivalent regime, there is an adhesion threshold in the surface density of nanoparticles needed for bacterial capture. The paper also documents an interesting effect concerning the relaxations in the PLL-PEG brush itself. For brushy surfaces containing no nanoparticles, bacterial adhesion persists on newly formed brushes, but is nearly eliminated after these brushes relax, at constant mass in buffer for 12h. Thus brushy relaxations increase biocompatibility.  相似文献   

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