21 research outputs found
Effect of Grafted Oligopeptides on Friction
Frictional
and normal forces in aqueous solution at 25 °C
were measured between a glass particle and oligopeptide films grafted
from a glass plate. Homopeptide molecules consisting of 11 monomers
of either glutamine, leucine, glutamic acid, lysine, or phenylalanine
and one heteropolymer were each “grafted from” an oxidized
silicon wafer using microwave-assisted solid-phase peptide synthesis.
The peptide films were characterized using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
and secondary ion mass spectrometry. Frictional force measurements
showed that the oligopeptides increased the magnitude of friction
compared to that on a bare hydrophilic silicon wafer but that the
friction was a strong function of the nature of the monomer unit.
Overall we find that the friction is lower for more hydrophilic films.
For example, the most hydrophobic monomer, leucine, exhibited the
highest friction whereas the hydrophilic monomer, polyglutamic acid,
exhibited the lowest friction at zero load. When the two surfaces
had opposite charges, there was a strong attraction, adhesion, and
high friction between the surfaces. Friction for all polymers was
lower in phosphate-buffered saline than in pure water, which was attributed
to lubrication via hydrated salt ions