4 research outputs found
Surface Molecular Imprinted Layer-by-Layer Film Attached to a Porous Membrane for Selective Filtration
Surface Molecular Imprinting in Layer-by-Layer films on Silica Particles
An improvement to molecular imprinting in polymers, where
bulk
systems often suffer from slow dynamics of release and uptake, is
the formation of thin films with imprinting sites that are more rapid
to access by guest molecules. Based on our previous development of
surface molecular imprinting layer-by-layer (LbL) films (SMILbL),
the present paper presents selective imprinted sites in a surface
film on dispersed silica particles, thus designing a SMILbL system
with maximized active area and in addition allowing studies with bulk
techniques. The multilayer is designed to include the template during
the LbL buildup and to form a cross-linked network upon UV-irradiation
for enhanced stability. A theophylline moiety is grafted to poly(acrylic
acid) as the template, while a UV-sensitive diazo polycation cross-links
the polymers after irradiation. Electrophoretic measurements prove
the successful buildup of the multilayers by an alternating sign of
the zeta potential. Template release is achieved by cleavage of the
grafted template. The released amount of template is quantified in
solution by <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectra and is in good agreement with
the prediction from surface coverage calculations. Rebinding studies
of template to the now empty imprinted binding sites show a high affinity
for a theophylline derivative with a rebound amount on the order of
the original template content. In contrast to theophylline, caffeine
with a very similar chemical structureonly differing in one
functional groupshows very different binding properties due
to a thiol moiety in the binding site. Thus, a particle system with
very selective molecular imprinting sites is demonstrated
