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1.
Langmuir ; 36(43): 12784-12794, 2020 11 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33095986

RESUMEN

Polyelectrolyte complex (PEC) materials show promise in the development of tunable membranes for aqueous and organic solvent separations, as well as in the creation of surface layers for fouling control. In this study, we developed a polyelectrolyte complex (PEC) functionalized by negatively charged carboxymethyl chitosan (CMC-) and positively charged quaternized chitosan (QC+) to tailor its surface properties and antibacterial efficacy. CMC- and QC+ were prepared and characterized using FT-IR and 1H NMR, which confirmed the presence of the carboxymethyl group and trimethylammonium group in CMC- and QC+ with 65.6% and 83.9% substitution, respectively. The CMC- functionalized PEC (CMC-/PEC) and QC+ functionalized PEC materials (QC+/PEC) were evaluated for their stability in water, resistance to organic and inorganic adsorption, and antibacterial action against a model microorganism, Pseudomonas putida. The results showed no release of chitosan derivatives after adsorption, and CMC-/PEC and QC+/PEC exhibited charge-based, selective repulsion of model organic and inorganic substances. Moreover, the functionalized PEC surfaces displayed lower bacterial attachment due to their smoother surfaces as compared to the bare ceramic membrane and their antimicrobial properties. Among the PEC samples, CMC-/PEC had the lowest cell attachment, while QC+/PEC showed the highest attachment due to electrostatic attraction. The ceramic and bare PEC surfaces were negligibly bactericidal, while cell viability decreased to 34.4 ± 10.2% and 30.6 ± 8.2% with the CMC-/PEC and QC+/PEC surfaces, respectively. In the filtration experiments, the unmodified PEC and CMC-/PEC showed lower rates of flux decline due to organic fouling than did the bare ceramic or QC+/PEC due to electrostatic repulsion. Furthermore, PECs as protective layers promoted much higher flux recoveries than simply backwashing the uncoated membranes. This surface tunability, then, enhances the potential of PECs either as fouling resistant materials or as a method to create a sacrificial, protective layer on surfaces that once fouled can be dissolved and re-established.

2.
J Vis Exp ; (155)2020 01 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32065145

RESUMEN

In this study, we present various examples of how thin film preparation for quartz crystal microbalance experiments informs the appropriate modeling of the data and determines which properties of the film can be quantified. The quartz crystal microbalance offers a uniquely sensitive platform for measuring fine changes in mass and/or mechanical properties of an applied film by observing the changes in mechanical resonance of a quartz crystal oscillating at high frequency. The advantages of this approach include its experimental versatility, ability to study changes in properties over a wide range of experimental time lengths, and the use of small sample sizes. We demonstrate that, based on the thickness and shear modulus of the layer deposited on the sensor, we can acquire different information from the material. Here, this concept is specifically exploited to display experimental parameters resulting in mass and viscoelastic calculations of adsorbed collagen on gold and polyelectrolyte complexes during swelling as a function of salt concentration.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Tecnicas de Microbalanza del Cristal de Cuarzo/métodos , Adsorción
3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 5(4): 688-699, 2019 Apr 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31041389

RESUMEN

Quantitatively understanding the self-assembly of amphiphilic macromolecules at liquid-liquid interfaces is a fundamental scientific concern due to its relevance to a broad range of applications including bottom-up nanopatterning, protein encapsulation, oil recovery, drug delivery, and other technologies. Elucidating the mechanisms that drive assembly of amphiphilic macromolecules at liquid-liquid interfaces is challenging due to the combination of hydrophobic, hydrophilic, and Coulomb interactions, which require consideration of the dielectric mismatch, solvation effects, ionic correlations, and entropic factors. Here we investigate the self-assembly of a model block copolymer with various charge fractions at the chloroform-water interface. We analyze the adsorption and conformation of poly(styrene)-block-poly(2-vinylpyridine) (PS-b-P2VP) and of the homopolymer poly(2-vinylpyridine) (P2VP) with varying charge fraction, which is controlled via a quaternization reaction and distributed randomly along the backbone. Interfacial tension measurements show that the polymer adsorption increases only marginally at low charge fractions (<5%) but increases more significantly at higher charge fractions for the copolymer, while the corresponding randomly charged P2VP homopolymer analogues display much more sensitivity to the presence of charged groups. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of the experimental systems reveal that the diblock copolymer (PS-b-P2VP) interfacial activity could be mediated by the formation of a rich set of complex interfacial copolymer aggregates. Circular domains to elongated stripes are observed in the simulations at the water-chloroform interface as the charge fraction increases. These structures are shown to resemble the spherical and cylindrical helicoid structures observed in bulk chloroform as the charge fraction increases. The self-assembly of charge-containing copolymers is found to be driven by the association of the charged component in the hydrophilic block, with the hydrophobic segments extending away from the hydrophilic cores into the chloroform phase.

4.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 11(17): 16018-16026, 2019 May 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30964252

RESUMEN

High-flux filtration membranes constructed through scalable and sustainable methods are desirable for energy-efficient separations. Often, these criteria are difficult to be reconciled with one another. Polymeric membranes can provide high flux but frequently involve organic solvents in processing steps. Solubility of many polymeric membranes in organic media also restricts their implementation in solvent filtration. In the present work, we report a simple and high-throughput aqueous processing approach for polyelectrolyte complex (PEC) membranes with controllable porosity and stability in various aqueous and organic environments. PECs are materials composed of oppositely charged polymer chains that can form solids in aqueous environments, yet which can be dissolved in very specific salt solutions capable of breaking the interpolymer ion pairs. By exploiting the salt-induced dissolution and subsequent reformation of the complex, nano- to microporous films are rapidly synthesized which resemble membranes obtained through conventional solvent-phase inversion techniques. PECs remain stable in organic solvents because of the low dielectric constant of the environment, which enhances electrostatic interactions, making them suitable for a wide range of water and solvent filtration applications. Here, we elucidate how the polymer-phase behavior can be manipulated to exercise morphological control, test membrane performance for water and solvent filtration, and quantify the mechanical stability of PECs in relevant conditions.

5.
ACS Macro Lett ; 8(2): 117-122, 2019 Feb 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35619418

RESUMEN

Guanidinium is one of nature's strongest denaturants and is also a motif that appears in several interfacial contexts such as the RGD sequence involved in cell adhesion, cell penetrating peptides, and antimicrobial molecules. It is important to quantify the origin of guanidinium's ion-specific interactions so that its unique behavior may be exploited in synthetic applications. The present work demonstrates that guanidinium ions can both break and form strongly associating ion complexes in a context-dependent way. These insights into guanidinium's behavior are elucidated using polyelectrolyte complexes (PECs), where interpolymer ion pairs between oppositely charged polymers play an important role in determining material stability. Different polycation-polyanion combinations can span a large range of association affinities, where more strongly associating complexes can remain insoluble in concentrated salt solutions and in extreme pH conditions. This high stability is desirable in several application contexts for PECs, but also renders them challenging to process and, therefore, to study since they cannot be dissolved into polymer solutions. Here we demonstrate that guanidinium salts are very effective in dissolving the poly(styrenesulfonate)/poly(allylamine) (PSS:PAH) complex, which has one of the highest reported polycation-polyanion association affinities. We also demonstrate the importance of charge identity in complexation phenomena by functionalizing guanidinium directly into poly(allylamine), resulting in a complex that remains stable under highly denaturing conditions. The model system of PSS:PAH is used to glean insights into guanidinium's denaturing activity, as well as to broadly comment on the nature of ion-specific interactions in charged macromolecules.

6.
Anal Chem ; 90(6): 4079-4088, 2018 03 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29473414

RESUMEN

In the inertial limit, the resonance frequency of the quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) is related to the coupled mass on the quartz sensor through the Sauerbrey expression that relates the mass to the change in resonance frequency. However, when the thickness of the film is sufficiently large, the relationship becomes more complicated and both the frequency and damping of the crystal resonance must be considered. In this regime, a rheological model of the material must be used to accurately extract the adhered film's thickness, shear modulus, and viscoelastic phase angle from the data. In the present work we examine the suitability of two viscoelastic models, a simple Voigt model ( Physica Scripta 1999, 59, 391-396) and a more realistic power-law model ( Langmuir 2015, 31, 4008-4017), to extract the rheological properties of a thermoresponsive hydrogel film. By changing temperature and initial dry film thickness of the gel, the operation of QCM was traversed from the Sauerbrey limit, where viscous losses do not impact the frequency, through the regime where the QCM response is sensitive to viscoelastic properties. The density-shear modulus and the viscoelastic phase angle from the two models are in good agreement when the shear wavelength ratio, d/λ n, is in the range of 0.05-0.20, where d is the film thickness and λ n is the wavelength of the mechanical shear wave at the nth harmonic. We further provide a framework for estimating the physical properties of soft materials in the megahertz regime by using the physical behavior of polyelectrolyte complexes. This provides the user with an approximate range of allowable film thicknesses for accurate viscoelastic analysis with either model, thus enabling better use of the QCM-D in soft materials research.

7.
Langmuir ; 33(8): 1834-1844, 2017 02 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28142239

RESUMEN

Polyelectrolyte complex (PEC) films made from oppositely charged polymer chains have applications as drug-delivery vehicles, separation membranes, and biocompatible coatings. Conventional layer-by-layer techniques for polyelectrolyte coatings are low-throughput and multistep processes that are quite slow for building films on the order of micrometers. In this work, PEC films are electrochemically deposited using a rapid one-pot method, yielding thick (1 µm) films within short experimental time scales (5 min). This rapid electrodeposition is achieved by exploiting the reduction of hydrogen peroxide at mild electrode potentials that avoid water electrolysis yet trigger the pH-responsive self-assembly of a PEC film composed of poly(acrylic) acid and poly(allylamine) HCl. In situ rheology using an electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance quantified the shear modulus-density product of the deposited layer to be on the order of 107 Pa g/cm3 at a frequency of 15 MHz, with a viscoelastic phase angle of approximately 50°. This electrodeposition scheme furthers the development of PEC coatings for more high-throughput applications, where a fast and efficient single-step approach would be desirable for obtaining coatings.

8.
Langmuir ; 32(31): 7747-56, 2016 08 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27419476

RESUMEN

The electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) was used to investigate the deposition of poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) with molybdate anions under anodic conditions. The PAH-molybdate complex was used as a model system to understand possible deposition criteria which may be relevant to the formation of proteinaceous films on CoCrMo hip implants. Data indicate that PAH deposition will occur above ∼0.60 V vs SCE if molybdate anions are present in the electrolyte above a critical concentration, and if the polymer concentration remains below a critical value. Numerical modeling and dynamic light scattering (DLS) studies were performed to understand the conditions that enable deposition to occur at these potentials. The results indicate that PAH-molybdate complexes form most efficiently when the polyvalent positive charge and polyvalent negative charge in the system are in an optimum range with respect to each other.

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