Nanoscale contact mechanics of biocompatible polyzwitterionic brushes

Zhenyu Zhang, Andrew J. Morse, S. P. Armes, A. L. Lewis, Mark Geoghegan, Graham J. Leggett

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Friction force microscopy has been used to demonstrate that biocompatible, lubricious poly(2-(methacryloyloxy)ethylphosphorylcholine) (PMPC) brushes exhibit different frictional properties depending on the medium (methanol, ethanol, 2-propanol, and water; the latter also with different quantities of added salt). The chemical functionalization of the probe (amine-, carboxylic acid-, and methyl-terminated probes were used) is not as important as the medium in determining the contact mechanics. For solvents such as methanol, where the adhesion between AFM probe and PMPC brushes is negligible, a linear friction?load relationship is observed. In contrast, the friction?load plot is nonlinear in ethanol or water, media in which stronger adhesion is measured. For ethanol, the data indicate Johnson?Kendall?Roberts (JKR) mechanics, whereas the Derjaguin?Muller?Toporov (DMT) model provided a good fit for the data acquired in water. Contact mechanics on zwitterionic PMPC brushes immersed in aqueous solutions of varying ionic strength followed the same trend, with high adhesion energies being correlated with a nonlinear friction?load relationship. These results can be rationalized by treating the friction force as the sum of a load-dependent term, attributed to molecular plowing, and an area-dependent shear term. In a good solvent for PMPC such as methanol, the shear term is negligible and the sliding interaction is dominated by molecular plowing. However, the adhesion energy is significantly larger in water and ethanol and the shear term is no longer negligible.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10684-10692
Number of pages9
JournalLangmuir
Volume29
Issue number34
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jul 2013

Keywords

  • friction
  • biocompatible
  • polymer brushes
  • contact mechanics
  • Chemical engineering
  • Process Chemistry and Technology

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