The design of slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces (SLIPS) using nanoporous and chemically reactive polymer multilayers is reported. This approach permits fabrication of slippery anti-fouling coatings on complex surfaces and provides new means to manipulate the mobilities of contacting aqueous fluids. The results expand the range of tools that can be used to manipulate the behaviors of SLIPS and open the door to new applications of this emerging class of soft materials.
Many types of slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces (or ‘SLIPS’) can resist adhesion and colonization by microorganisms. These ‘slippery’ materials thus offer new approaches to prevent fouling on a range of commercial and industrial surfaces, including biomedical devices. However, while SLIPS can prevent fouling on surfaces to which they are applied, they can currently do little to prevent the proliferation of non-adherent (planktonic) organisms, stop them from colonizing other surfaces, or prevent them from engaging in other behaviors that could lead to infection and associated burdens. Here, we report an approach to the design of multi-functional SLIPS that addresses these issues and expands the potential utility of slippery surfaces in antimicrobial contexts. Our approach is based on the incorporation and controlled release of small-molecule antimicrobial agents from the porous matrices used to host infused slippery oil phases. We demonstrate that SLIPS fabricated using nanoporous polymer multilayers can prevent short- and longer-term colonization and biofilm formation by four common fungal and bacterial pathogens (Candida albicans, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, and Staphylococcus aureus), and that the polymer and oil phases comprising these materials can be exploited to load and sustain the release of triclosan, a model hydrophobic and broad-spectrum antimicrobial agent, into surrounding media. This approach both improves the inherent anti-fouling properties of these materials and endows them with the ability to efficiently kill planktonic pathogens. Finally, we show that this approach can be used to fabricate dual-action SLIPS on complex surfaces, including the luminal surfaces of flexible catheter tubes. This strategy has the potential to be general; we anticipate that the materials, strategies, and concepts reported here will enable new approaches to the design of slippery surfaces with improved anti-fouling properties and open the door to new applications of slippery liquid-infused materials that host or promote the release of a variety of other active agents.
An approach to the modification and post-fabrication chemical patterning of amine-reactive superhydrophobic surfaces is reported. The approach is based on the layer-by-layer fabrication of azlactone-containing polymer multilayers, and permits the direct covalent attachment and subsequent patterning of chemical and biological "inks" using a variety of practical and low-cost pattern-transfer methods.
Surfaces with extreme wetting properties are useful for the collection, manipulation, transport, and avoidance of aqueous and organic fluids of commercial and strategic importance. Two major obstacles to the deployment of synthetic non‐wetting materials in practical scenarios are their lack of mechanical durability and their susceptibility to fouling in contaminated or chemically complex media. Here, crosslinked and nanoporous polymer multilayers are reported that overcome these limitations and exhibit robust and tunable “underwater superoleophobicity”, or the ability to almost completely prevent contact with oils and other organic fluids when submerged in water. These entirely organic coatings mimic key chemical and structural features found on the scales of fish and other natural anti‐oil‐fouling surfaces, and are remarkably tolerant to physical, chemical, and environmental insults commonly encountered in natural and synthetic aqueous environments. This approach also permits facile manipulation and patterning of surface chemistry and, thus, tunable spatial control over other important aspects of interfacial behavior, such as underwater oil adhesiveness, that extend and expand the potential utility of synthetic anti‐oil‐fouling surfaces in aqueous, aquatic, and marine environments.
The crushing of superhydrophobic polymer multilayers destroys micro/nanoscale topographic features critical for the maintenance of superhydrophobicity. We demonstrate that these surface features can be recovered, and that superhydrophobicity can be fully restored, by treatment of damaged films with liquid water. These polymer-based films can also sustain other forms of severe abuse without loss of superhydrophobicity. This combination of features addresses several important practical issues associated with the durability of artificial superhydrophobic surfaces.
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