5 research outputs found

    Recent Developments and Practical Feasibility of Polymer-Based Antifouling Coatings

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    While nature has optimized its antifouling strategies over millions of years, synthetic antifouling coatings have not yet reached technological maturity. For an antifouling coating to become technically feasible, it should fulfill many requirements: high effectiveness, long-term stability, durability, ecofriendliness, large-scale applicability, and more. It is therefore not surprising that the search for the perfect antifouling coating has been going on for decades. With the discovery of metal-based antifouling paints in the 1970s, fouling was thought to be a problem of the past, yet its untargeted toxicity led to serious ecological concern, and its use became prohibited. As a response, research shifted focus toward a biocompatible alternative: polymer-based antifouling coatings. This has resulted in numerous advanced and innovative antifouling strategies, including fouling-resistant, fouling-release, and fouling-degrading coatings. Here, these novel and exciting discoveries are highlighted while simultaneously assessing their antifouling performance and practical feasibility

    Scalable Fabrication of Reversible Antifouling Block Copolymer Coatings via Adsorption Strategies

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    Fouling remains a widespread challenge as its nonspecific and uncontrollable character limits the performance of materials and devices in numerous applications. Although many promising antifouling coatings have been developed to reduce or even prevent this undesirable adhesion process, most of them suffer from serious limitations, specifically in scalability. Whereas scalability can be particularly problematic for covalently bound antifouling polymer coatings, replacement by physisorbed systems remains complicated as it often results in less effective, low-density films. In this work, we introduce a two-step adsorption strategy to fabricate high-density block copolymer-based antifouling coatings on hydrophobic surfaces, which exhibit superior properties compared to one-step adsorbed coatings. The obtained hybrid coating manages to effectively suppress the attachment of both lysozyme and bovine serum albumin, which can be explained by its dense and homogeneous surface structure as well as the desired polymer conformation. In addition, the intrinsic reversibility of the adhered complex coacervate core micelles allows for the successful triggered release and regeneration of the hybrid coating, resulting in full recovery of its antifouling properties. The simplicity and reversibility make this a unique and promising antifouling strategy for large-scale underwater applications

    Toward Effective and Adsorption-Based Antifouling Zipper Brushes:Effect of pH, Salt, and Polymer Design

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    The undesired spontaneous deposition and accumulation of matter on surfaces, better known as fouling, is a problematic and often inevitable process plaguing a variety of industries. This detrimental process can be reduced or even prevented by coating surfaces with a dense layer of end-grafted polymer: a polymer brush. Producing such polymer brushes via adsorption presents a very attractive technique, as large surfaces can be coated in a quick and simple manner. Recently, we introduced a simple and scalable two-step adsorption strategy to fabricate block copolymer-based antifouling coatings on hydrophobic surfaces. This two-step approach involved the initial adsorption of hydrophobic-charged diblock copolymer micelles acting as a primer, followed by the complexation of oppositely charged-antifouling diblock copolymers to form the antifouling brush coating. Here, we significantly improve this adsorption-based zipper brush via systematic tuning of various parameters, including pH, salt concentration, and polymer design. This study reveals several key outcomes. First of all, increasing the hydrophobic/hydrophilic block ratio of the anchoring polymeric micelles (i.e., decreasing the hydrophilic corona) promotes adsorption to the surface, resulting in the most densely packed, uniform, and hydrophilic primer layers. Second, around a neutral pH and at a low salt concentration (1 mM), complexation of the weak polyelectrolyte (PE) blocks results in brushes with the best antifouling efficacy. Moreover, by tuning the ratio between these PE blocks, the brush density can be increased, which is also directly correlated to the antifouling performance. Finally, switching to different antifouling blocks can increase the internal density or strengthen the bound hydration layer of the brush, leading to an additional enhancement of the antifouling properties (>99% lysozyme, 87% bovine serum albumin)

    CCDC 1839002: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination

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    Related Article: Machteld E. Kamminga, Maria Azhar, Julian Zeisner, Anna M. C. Maan, Bernd Büchner, Vladislav Kataev, Jacob Baas, Graeme R. Blake, Maxim Mostovoy, Thomas T. M. Palstra|2018|Phys. Rev. Mater.|2|064405|doi:10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.2.064405,An entry from the Cambridge Structural Database, the world’s repository for small molecule crystal structures. The entry contains experimental data from a crystal diffraction study. The deposited dataset for this entry is freely available from the CCDC and typically includes 3D coordinates, cell parameters, space group, experimental conditions and quality measures.
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