Candle soot-based super-amphiphobic coatings resist protein adsorption
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2016
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Schmüser L, Encinas N, Paven M, Graham DJ, Castner DG, Vollmer D, Butt HJ, Weidner T. Candle soot-based super-amphiphobic coatings resist protein adsorption. Biointerphases. 2016 Sep 26;11(3):031007. doi: 10.1116/1.4959237. PMID: 27460261; PMCID: PMC4967072.
Abstract
Super nonfouling surfaces resist protein adhesion and have a broad field of possible applications in implant technology, drug delivery, blood compatible materials, biosensors, and marine coatings. A promising route toward nonfouling surfaces involves liquid repelling architectures. The authors here show that soot-templated super-amphiphobic (SAP) surfaces prepared from fluorinated candle soot structures are super nonfouling. When exposed to bovine serum albumin or blood serum, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and time of flight secondary ion mass spectrometry analysis showed that less than 2 ng/cm2 of protein was adsorbed onto the SAP surfaces. Since a broad variety of substrate shapes can be coated by soot-templated SAP surfaces, those are a promising route toward biocompatible materials design.