Surfaces with self‐cleaning properties are desirable for many applications. Conceptually, super liquid‐repellent surfaces are required to be highly porous on the nano‐ or micrometer scale, which inherently makes them mechanically weak. Optimizing the balance of mechanical strength and liquid repellency is a core aspect toward applications. However, quantitative mechanical testing of porous, super liquid‐repellent surfaces is challenging due to their high surface roughness at different length scales and low stress tolerance. For this reason, mechanical testing is often performed qualitatively. Here, the mechanical responses of soot‐templated super liquid‐repellent surfaces are studied qualitatively by pencil and finger scratching and quantitatively by atomic force microscopy, colloidal probe force measurements, and nanoindentation. In particular, colloidal probe force measurements cover the relevant force and length scales. The effective elastic modulus, the plastic work Wplastic and the effective adhesive work Wadhesive are quantified. By combining quantitative information from force measurements with measurements of surface wetting properties, it is shown that mechanical strength can be balanced against low wettability by tuning the reaction parameters.
We have observed the nonthermal relaxation of surface stress in Si induced by electron irradiation at room temperature. An atomically thin disordered layer was introduced by Ar ion bombardment. The surface stress change during ion bombardment and the following electron irradiation of Si(100) was measured by means of an optical microcantilever technique. We have found that the compressive stress in the Si surface due to disorder induced by ion bombardment was completely relaxed by electron irradiation at low energy. The criterion for complete relaxation is found not to be total energy deposition, but the number of irradiated electrons.
We studied the effects of layer thickness and grafting density of poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) (PMPC) thin layers as specific ligands for the highly sensitive binding of C-reactive protein (CRP). PMPC layer thickness was controlled by surface-initiated activators generated by electron transfer for atom transfer radical polymerization (AGET ATRP). PMPC grafting density was controlled by utilizing mixed self-assembled monolayers with different incorporation ratios of the bis[2-(2-bromoisobutyryloxy)undecyl] disulfide ATRP initiator, as modulated by altering the feed molar ratio with (11-mercaptoundecyl)tetra(ethylene glycol). X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and ellipsometry measurements were used to characterize the modified surfaces. PMPC grafting densities were estimated from polymer thickness and the molecular weight obtained from sacrificial initiator during surface-initiated AGET ATRP. The effects of thickness and grafting density of the obtained PMPC layers on CRP binding performance were investigated using surface plasmon resonance employing a 10 mM Tris-HCl running buffer containing 140 mM NaCl and 2 mM CaCl2 (pH 7.4). Furthermore, the non-specific binding properties of the obtained layers were investigated using human serum albumin (HSA) as a reference protein. The PMPC layer which has 4.6 nm of thickness and 1.27 chains per nm(2) of grafting density showed highly sensitive CRP detection (limit of detection: 4.4 ng mL(-1)) with low non-specific HSA adsorption, which was improved 10 times than our previous report of 50 ng mL(-1).
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