Cooperativity of Catechols and Amines in High-Performance Dry/Wet Adhesives.
Brylee David Buada TiuPeyman DelparastanMax R NeyMatthias GerstPhillip B MessersmithPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
The outstanding adhesive performance of mussel byssal threads has inspired materials scientists over the past few decades. Exploiting the amino-catechol synergy, polymeric pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSAs) have now been synthesized by copolymerizing traditional PSA monomers, butyl acrylate and acrylic acid, with mussel-inspired lysine- and aromatic-rich monomers. The consequences of decoupling amino and catechol moieties from each other were compared (that is, incorporated as separate monomers) against a monomer architecture in which the catechol and amine were coupled together in a fixed orientation in the monomer side chain. Adhesion assays were used to probe performance at the molecular, microscopic, and macroscopic levels by a combination of AFM-assisted force spectroscopy, peel and static shear adhesion. Coupling of catechols and amines in the same monomer side chain produced optimal cooperative effects in improving the macroscopic adhesion performance.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- molecularly imprinted
- biofilm formation
- prostate cancer
- cell migration
- drug delivery
- atomic force microscopy
- living cells
- amino acid
- high resolution
- high throughput
- high speed
- cell adhesion
- mass spectrometry
- cancer therapy
- staphylococcus aureus
- solid phase extraction
- cystic fibrosis
- simultaneous determination