Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

In this work, we examine the interaction between thin films composed of terminally anchored poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAAm) immersed in water and test surfaces. Understanding this force of interaction can be important when using PNIPAAm surfaces in biotechnological applications such as biological cell cultures. The two novel contributions that are presented here are (1) the use of a recently developed self-consistent field (SCF) theory to predict the force-vs-distance profiles, and (2) the use of a modified polymer scaling theory to estimate the wet film thickness from experimental force-vs-distance profiles. SCF theory was employed to model the equilibrium structure of the uncompressed PNIPAAm chains, and the force between a compressed polymer film and a test surface as a function of wall separation distance. The parameters that were varied include temperature, polymer molecular weight, and surface coverage. The force-vs-distance profiles obtained at low and high temperatures with the SCF theory were in qualitative agreement with the experimentally measured profiles reported in the literature. We also compared the results of our SCF theory to the Alexander de Gennes scaling theory and found agreement at large separation distance. We also propose a method to estimate the wet polymer film thickness from a force-vs-distance profile obtained from an atomic force microscope measurement. The main novelties of this approach are that we employed a density functional theory corrected version of scaling theory proposed by McCoy et al. [McCoy, J. D.; Curro, J. G. J. Chem. Phys. 2005, 122, 164905], and we provide equations to account for various geometries of AFM tips.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/la9002687DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

force-vs-distance profiles
16
scf theory
16
scaling theory
12
polyn-isopropyl acrylamide
8
thin films
8
theory
8
estimate wet
8
film thickness
8
polymer film
8
separation distance
8

Similar Publications

Variable Interfacial Water Nanosized Arrangements Measured by Atomic Force Microscopy.

ACS Omega

August 2022

Laboratorio de Nanoestruturas e Interfaces, Instituto de Fisica, UNICAMP, 13083-859 Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil.

While there seems to be broad agreement that cluster formation does exist near solid surfaces, its presence at the liquid/vapor interface is controversial. We report experimental studies we have carried out on interfacial water attached on hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces. Nanosized steps in the measured force vs distance to the surface curves characterize water cluster profiles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using the surface force balance (SFB), we recorded the changes with time of the adhesion, normal, and shear interactions between a monolayer of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) on mica and a bare mica surface across surfactant-free water. In this asymmetric case, the bare mica acts a stable probe of the interactions between the two surfaces as the CTAB-coated one undergoes changes with time. As previously demonstrated, when a CTAB monolayer on mica is immersed in water, it reorganized to form bilayer patches, exposing the bare mica surface, followed by a gradual release of free surfactants to the bulk.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this work, we examine the interaction between thin films composed of terminally anchored poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAAm) immersed in water and test surfaces. Understanding this force of interaction can be important when using PNIPAAm surfaces in biotechnological applications such as biological cell cultures. The two novel contributions that are presented here are (1) the use of a recently developed self-consistent field (SCF) theory to predict the force-vs-distance profiles, and (2) the use of a modified polymer scaling theory to estimate the wet film thickness from experimental force-vs-distance profiles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Universal and scaling behavior at the proximity of the solid to the deformable air-water interface.

Langmuir

November 2007

State Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Materials and Technologies, and Department of Physics, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou, China.

The scaling descriptions of the deformation of the air-water interface due to van der Waals attractive forces induced by a paraboloid shaped solid as well as of the force vs distance behavior are systematically discussed theoretically and experimentally. It is demonstrated that the force-distance curves at the proximity of the solid to the air-water interface without contact satisfy a simple and universal scaling law, which can be useful to help study various systems involved in the deformable interface. Moreover, an analytical solution to the E-L differential equation governing the deformation of the water surface profile is obtained from the scaling relation, and the two length scales that quantitatively evaluate the lateral and longitudinal deformation of the air-water interface respectively are hence determined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF