Open Access Article
Sreenivasa Reddy
Puniredd
a,
Dominik
Jańczewski
*a,
Dewi Pitrasari
Go
a,
Xiaoying
Zhu
a,
Shifeng
Guo
a,
Serena Lay
Ming Teo
b,
Serina Siew
Chen Lee
b and
G. Julius
Vancso
*cd
aInstitute of Materials Research and Engineering, A*STAR (Agency for Science, Technology and Research), 3 Research Link, 117602, Singapore. E-mail: janczewskid@imre.a-star.edu.sg; Fax: +65 6872 0785; Tel: +65 6874 5443
bTropical Marine Science Institute, National University of Singapore, 18 Kent Ridge Road, 119227, Singapore
cInstitute of Chemical and Engineering Sciences, A*STAR, 1, Pesek Road, Jurong Island, 627833, Singapore. E-mail: g.j.vancso@utwente.nl; Fax: +31 53 4893823; Tel: +31 53 489 2974
dMESA+ Institute for Nanotechnology, Materials Science and Technology of Polymers, University of Twente, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, The Netherlands
First published on 26th September 2014
Polymeric films constructed using the layer-by-layer (LbL) fabrication process were employed as a platform for metal ion immobilization and applied as a marine antifouling coating. The novel Cu2+ ion imprinting process described is based on the use of metal ion templates and LbL multilayer covalent cross-linking. Custom synthesized, peptide mimicking polycations composed of histidine grafted poly(allylamine) (PAH) to bind metal ions, and methyl ester containing polyanions for convenient cross-linking were used in the fabrication process. Two methods of LbL film formation have been investigated using alternate polyelectrolyte deposition namely non-imprinted LbLA, and imprinted LbLB. Both LbL films were cross linked at mild temperature to yield covalent bridging of the layers for improved stability in a sea water environment. A comparative study of the non-imprinted LbLA films and imprinted LbLB films for Cu2+ ion binding capacity, leaching rate and stability of the films was performed. The results reveal that the imprinted films possess enhanced affinity to retain metal ions due to the preorganization of imidazole bearing histidine receptors. As a result the binding capacity of the films for Cu2+ could be improved by seven fold. Antifouling properties of the resulting materials in a marine environment have been demonstrated against the settlement of barnacle larvae, indicating that controlled release of Cu ions was achieved.
Protein complexes with metal ions play an important role in various biological processes.42 A common structural feature of such protein-metal assemblies43 are peptide motifs typically arranged in a special sequence of residues to ensure the strong interactions between the metal ions and donor atoms from the peptide backbones or functional side groups.29,44 These motifs are frequently bearing residues such as histidine (His), since nitrogen of the imidazole moiety is known for its high affinity to metals.45,46 It is used as a metal coordinating component of polymeric systems and it can be grafted on various polymeric backbones mimicking peptide architecture.47–49 Hence in this work we shall describe a system in which this specific coordinating capacity of histidine is utilized.
Marine fouling has been a serious problem for maritime technologies, from ship hull protection to off-shore stationary structures and high value-added underwater sensing and communications.50,51 Marine fouling has been controlled traditionally through the use of antifouling paints with toxic constituents or biocides.52 Before its ban tributyltin (TBT) was the active agent in antifouling paints and used extensively in the maritime sector for over thirty years.53 As an alternative, copper based coatings are ten–twelve folds less harmful than those containing TBT,54,55 however still remain problematic and are criticized for excessive metal pollution. Copper is used as an antifouling agent with a leaching rate in the order of 10-15 μg cm−2 per day. Hence a surface of one square meter can be kept clean of biological growth by annual leaching of approximately 30 grams of copper.56 Those levels are suspected to be toxic to aquatic organisms, through the accumulation in filter feeders, such as mussels, and damage larval stages of aquatic invertebrates and fish species.57 Designing and fabricating new, effective and environmentally friendly coating systems as alternatives to TBT-based antifouling paints poses an important challenge for the scientific community. The ideal antifouling coating with embedded metal ions would prevent marine growth as well as maintain a long performance life whilst fulfilling the expectations of the increasingly strict environmental regulations.
In this work we investigate the concept of improving of thin LbL polymeric film affinity to Cu2+ ions by reducing the mobility of metal receptors in the presence of guest molecules. This concept is typically referred to as metal ion imprinting.22 Utilizing the properties of the polymer grafted imidazole bearing histidine receptor, we synthesized a peptide mimicking material with high affinity to copper. Two alternative approaches for the fabrication of metal attracting films were compared. In the first imprinting approach, thin LbL films composed of custom synthesized histidine grafted polyallyamine were cross-linked in the presence of Cu2+ ions to immobilize receptors in a conformation suitable for the metal ion coordination. In the second non-imprinting approach, the films were cross-linked without the presence of ions to provide a reference material. The structure and properties of both films are extensively characterized. Finally, anti-fouling applications of the copper ion selective LbL films are demonstrated.
Cross-linked LbL films with Cu2+ ions preloaded at the fabrication stage were obtained by alternating immersions of the silicon slides prepared as described above, but using polymer solutions PIAMA-Me and PAH-His(Cu). 18 bi-layers (PIAMA-Me and PAH-His(Cu)) were assembled in this way using PAH-His(Cu) as the outermost layer. The process of LbL assembly of PIAMA-Me and PAH-His(Cu) polymers is referred to as imprinted LbLB in this work (Fig. 1).
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| Fig. 3 LbL film formation by different processing methods, (non-imprinted LbLA refers to assembly of PIAMA-Me and PAH-His, and imprinted LbLB refers to assembly of PIAMA-Me and PAH-His(Cu)). Cross linking of the films as employed followed by loading and releasing of copper within the LbL films. Schematic representation of the polymer PIAMA-Me, PAH-His and PAH-His(Cu) are shown in Fig. 2. | ||
μL min−1. PIAMA-Me polymer solutions of (1 mg mL−1 in 0.5 M NaCl) were passed through the chamber at a rate of 250
μL min−1 until the frequency reached equilibrium followed by the injection of 0.5 M NaCl through the chamber at the same rate until the frequency became stable enough to remove any loosely bound molecules. Afterwards PAH-His polymer solutions (1 mg mL−1 in 0.5 M NaCl) were pumped at the same flow rate followed by a NaCl washing step (non-imprinted LbLA). Similarly, in imprinted LbLB films, alternate injections of PIAMA-Me and PAH-His(Cu) polymer solutions in 0.5 M NaCl were delivered at a flow rate of 250
μL min−1 until the frequency became stable, followed by 0.5 M NaCl salt injection after every polymer layer was deposited. The procedure was repeated until the required number of bi-layers was reached. Finally, the layers were rinsed with DI water at a flow rate of 250
μL min−1 to remove any possible excess of salt. Each layer deposition was carried out for 30 min to 1 h to achieve saturated adsorption. The frequency change of the quartz crystals was monitored throughout the adsorption process. The crystals were removed from the QCM instrument and dried with nitrogen. Cross linking of the LbLA and LbLB films grown on QCM chips were performed at 80°C for 12 h under vacuum.
Cross-linked non-imprinted LbLA films built on QCM chips were immersed in 15 mM of Cu(NO3)2 solutions for 1 h and washed with 1M HCl, similar to the silicon wafers. Cross-linked films prepared by the imprinted LbLB method on QCM were washed with 1 M of HCl for 5 min and dried. For copper loading experiments, non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films on QCM chips, after washing with HCl as described above, were loaded into the chamber of the QCM instrument. Subsequently, the LbL films were stabilized in a flow of water at a rate of 250
μL min−1 until the frequency reached equilibrium. Then the sequence of different concentrations of Cu(NO3)2 stock solutions (0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 1, 2, 4, 8, 15, 25, 35 and 45 mM) were injected. For each concentration 250
μL of the Cu(NO3)2 solutions were injected and the frequency was allowed to reach equilibrium followed by injection of 1 mL of DI water through the chamber at the rate of 250
μL min−1. The injection of water was intended to remove any loosely bound Cu2+. This procedure was repeated for all concentrations. The frequency change of the quartz crystal was monitored throughout the loading of copper ions. Finally, the crystals were removed from the QCM instrument and dried with nitrogen. Cu2+ ions loaded from non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films on QCM chips were washed with 1 M of HCl for 5 min and copious amounts of DI water to remove copper ions, followed by dry blowing with nitrogen. The above procedure was repeated several times to load and unload the Cu2+ ions using the QCM process on non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films. The mass deposited on the crystal (Δm) was calculated using the Sauerbrey equation.60
![]() | (1) |
For a 5, 15, 25, 35, 45 MHz quartz crystal, n = 1, 3, 5, 7; where C = 17.7 ng s−1 cm−2, n = overtone number and Δf = frequency change.
:
1 v/v of Tetraselmis suecica (CSIRO Strain number CS-187) and Chaetoceros muelleri (CSIRO Strain number CS-176) at a density of ∼5 × 105 mL−1, and reared at 27 °C in 2.7% salinity, 0.2 μm filtered seawater (FSW). Under these conditions, the nauplii metamorphosed into cyprids in 5 days. The cyprids were aged for 2 days at 4–6 °C prior to use in settlement assays.
O of the anhydride polymer (PIAMA) disappears and a new peak at 1730 cm−1, attributed to the C
O of the ester bond, becomes visible. In addition, a peak at 1580 cm−1 can be associated to a newly formed COO− (Fig. S1A in the ESI†).62 The methanolysis reaction of PIAMA was further verified by the comparison of the 1H NMR spectra of PIAMA-Me and purified polyanhydride as shown in Fig. S2 (ESI†). The presence of a peak at 3.66 ppm in the polymer PIAMA-Me spectrum, belonging to the protons of methyl ester, confirms successful conversion. The methyl ester peak (3.66 ppm) integrated area, and the dimethyl group protons of the main chain (peaks between 0.5–1.36 ppm) allow us to estimate the degree of substitution with the methyl esters groups to obtain the value of 70% (Scheme 1).
The polycation (PAH-His) was synthesized by the grafting of L-histidine side groups on the polyallylamine backbone. Following this approach, peptide mimicking polymer bearing histidine moieties for metal ion complexation and primary amine groups used in the LbL assembly was synthesized (Scheme 2). The successful polymer synthesis was confirmed by the appearance of peaks at 620 cm−1 and 1260 cm−1, which are assigned to OCN bending and amide C–N stretching and N–H bending frequencies respectively. The ester peak visible at 1750 cm−1 in pure histidine, and it’s absence in the PAH-His spectrum (see ESI Fig. S1B†) as well as the presence of the peaks at 1260 cm−1 (amide C–N stretching) and at 1570 cm−1 (amide carbonyl) in the PAH-His polymer spectrum, confirm successful chemical transformation.63 The PAH-His structure and histidine substitution degree were examined and quantitatively evaluated by 1H-NMR as shown in Fig. S3 (ESI†). The reaction completion is confirmed by the disappearance of the methyl ester peak at 3.67 ppm and the presence of new peaks at 4.05, 7.10 and 7.85 ppm, which can be associated to the methine and imidazole protons in the His moiety, respectively. The backbone substitution degree is determined to 20% owing to the clearly visible signal of imidazole protons (7 and 8 ppm) and the aliphatic backbone proton peaks between 1 and 2 ppm. This allowed us to estimate the indices of the repeating units, describing the composition of polymer PAH-His, to 130 and 500 for PAH-substituted and non-substituted groups respectively (Scheme 2).
:
2 metal to ligand ratio. After the saturation, the intensity of the signal at 620 nm decreases with a clear shoulder increase at longer wavelengths. Upon further metal addition a new signal near 820 nm appears which can be assigned to free Cu2+ ions.44,65 All of the UV absorption spectra were fitted by three peaks representing the concentration of three different species present in the solution using the asymmetric modification of the Gaussian function.66,67 The peak at 620 nm is attributed to the formation of a 1
:
2 copper complex with PAH-His, the peak around 770 nm corresponds to the formation of a 1
:
1 copper complex with PAH-His and a peak at 820 nm is linked to free copper ions (Fig. 1B and S4†).44 Examples of the fitting procedure are provided in the ESI.†
The integrated absorption values for the three signals are provided in Fig. 1C. The changes observed in the signal intensity variations were subsequently used to establish the binding constants of this system. Titration curves were fitted by assuming that 1
:
1 and 1
:
2 equilibriums are present68 as described by the equations 2–5.
| M + PAH-His ⇔ M(PAH-His) | (2) |
![]() | (3) |
| M(PAH-His) + PAH-His ⇔ M(PAH-His)2 | (4) |
![]() | (5) |
The absorbance signals presented in Fig. 1C clearly support the co-existence of the 1
:
1 and 1
:
2 stoichiometry of the Cu2+ and PAH-His complex. The fitting of the data provides binding constant values of K1 = 8.43 × 103 M−1 (log K1 = 3.93) and K2 = 2.63 × 104 M−1 (log K2 = 4.42). Based on the above observations it appears that the 1
:
2 metal–PAH-His coordination dominates the 1
:
1 interactions. The results are consistent with a large stability constant observed for other histidine grafted polymers.44,47
The two methods used essentially differ in the cross-linking step. Non-imprinted LbLA films are cross-linked without the metal template present and as such, the mobility of the receptors is reduced, maintaining random arrangement not influenced by the presence of copper. In contrast, for the imprinted LBLB system, the film is loaded with Cu2+ ions at the stage of fabrication, so the subsequent cross-linking process is intended to “freeze” histidine receptors in the given conformation around the guest molecules (Fig. 3). By using these approaches, two types of structures with similar chemical composition but different arrangement of metal receptors can be obtained. Film cross-linking evidence was acquired using FTIR and XPS methods. The disappearance of the ester peak (1730 cm−1) in the non-imprinted LbLA film and the evolution of a new peak at 1590 cm−1 (amide C–N stretch) indicate amide bond formation (Fig. 4) and successful covalent attachment between the layers.62
The XPS spectra (Fig. S5 in the ESI†) further confirmed the cross-linking of the LbL films in addition to the FTIR analysis. Fig. S5A and B† are the N1s core-level spectra for non-cross linked and cross-linked LbLA films, respectively, which are fitted into primary amine, amide, imide and protonated amine components with binding energy (B.E.) values of 398.9 eV, 399.9 eV, 400.8 and 401.8 eV.69 In the spectra of cross-linked non-imprinted LbLA films, the peak component for the free and protonated amines are small. The increase of the amide peak intensity demonstrates that the free amine is reacting with the ester. A similar trend is also observed for the imprinted LbLB films (Fig. S5C and D†). The thickness of the cross linked LbL films were measured by ellipsometry and by the AFM scratch method as shown in Fig. 5. For the non-imprinted LbLA, the thickness growth of the films is linear up to 8 bi-layers and exponential afterwards, following the trends reported in the literature (Fig. 5A).70 Similarly, for the imprinted LbLB we observed linear growth up to 14 bi-layers and exponential increase afterwards. The thickness of the non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films were also measured independently using the AFM scratch method. The obtained thickness values correlate well with the ellipsometry measurements as shown in Fig. 5A and B. To achieve a good comparison among the structures studied, films of similar thicknesses and comparable masses of the polymers deposited were used. This corresponds to 7 bi-layers and 10 bi-layers for non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LBLB, respectively.
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| Fig. 5 Thickness data of non-imprinted LbLA (A) and imprinted LbLB (B) films from ellipsometry and the AFM scratch test. | ||
The morphology of the LbL films was studied using AFM (Fig. S6 in the ESI†). The AFM images in Fig. S6† show clear variations of the film surface depending on the fabrication method applied. Fig. S6A† shows cluster/coil-like features on the non-cross linked LbLA film, and no significant changes in the morphology upon application of the cross-linking procedure (Fig. S6B†). Rather different morphology is observed for LbLB films. The LbLB film is fairly smooth (Fig. S6D†) when compared to LbLA (Fig. S6B†). The surface roughness Rq (the quadratic mean value of roughness, obtained over a 5 × 5 μm2 surface area) for an LbLA film without cross-linking exhibited a value of Rq = 16 ± 0.5 nm (Fig. S6A†) compared to Rq = 13 ± 0.5 nm (Fig. S6B†) for the cross-linked film. Similarly, for the imprinted LbLB films, the roughness values of the non-cross linked film (Rq = 10 ± 1 nm from Fig. S6C†) decreased to 8 ± 1 nm (Fig. S6D†) after cross-linking. The results are consistent with previous reports showing that the surface roughness values are reduced with an increased cross-linking density.58,70
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| Fig. 6 Frequency changes monitored by QCM-D for (A) non-imprinted LbLA (7 bi-layers) and (B) imprinted LbLB (10 bi-layers) films. | ||
Successful LbL deposition is known to be facilitated by the overcompensation of charges, which in turn promotes the binding of the subsequent polyelectrolytes.10 Earlier studies suggest that for electrostatically driven LbL deposition both the substrate and the polyelectrolyte species must be sufficiently charged. If the charge is insufficient, the adsorbed layers may be partially removed upon adsorption on the next polyelectrolyte layer.72 Similar behavior is observed here when the LbL films were assembled by LBLA with PIAMA-Me and PAH-His polymers. It is also suggested that the reason for such behavior is the formation of free polyelectrolyte complexes in the solution, which are entropically favored in this case compared to a multilayer on the surface.73,74 Similar complexes may occur when PAH-His is interacting with PIAMA-Me.
Thickness values found from the QCM data for the cross-linked 7 bi-layer non-imprinted LbLA and the 10 bi-layer imprinted LbLB films are 35 ± 5 nm. The total mass of the PAH-His layers in the non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films are 15.9, and 9.3, μg cm−2, respectively.
Film–metal affinity experiments were carried out by passing Cu2+ solutions of different concentrations over the thin film until an equilibrium state was reached (Fig. S7 in the ESI†). The adsorption isotherms obtained in this way display a typical profile of saturation with increased concentration of guest molecules (Fig. 7A). The amount of absorbed mass was calculated from the Sauerbrey equation as stated in the experimental section. The equilibrium adsorbed amount of metal for imprinted LbLB films is 11.25 μg cm−2, whereas for non-imprinted LbLA only 4.95 μg cm−2 could be immobilized. These observations clearly demonstrate the higher adsorption capacity of the LbLB compared to the non-imprinted LbLA and support the hypothesis of enhanced affinity of the polymeric film to the metal upon imprinting of the receptor structure during the fabrication process.
QCM equilibrium adsorption experiments were conducted to investigate the binding behavior and binding constants for both LbLA and LbLB (Table 1). The saturation isotherms of these films are displayed in Fig. 7A. With the concentration of the copper solution increased, the adsorption capacity of both films first increases sharply then the increase slows down until saturation is reached.
| Process | Method | Binding constant | logK |
|---|---|---|---|
| PAH-His (solution) | UV-Visible | K 1 = 8.43 x 103, K2 = 2.63 x 104 | K 1 = 3.93, K2 = 4.42 |
| Non-imprinted - LbLA | QCM (from Langmuir isotherm) | K 1 = 1.04 x 103 | K 1 = 3.02 |
| Imprinted - LbLB | QCM (from Langmuir isotherm) | K 1 = 7.24 x 103 | K 1 = 3.86 |
A typical method for assessing guest affinity for thin films is based on the application of the simple Langmuir adsorption isotherm model (Fig. 7B). Using this approach we assume a homogeneous distribution of binding sites with equal energy across the film and that the guest diffusion through the thin film is fast and is not the limiting step.36,41,75 Learning from initial experiments in solution we also know that both films are interacting with metal ions utilizing predominantly receptors composed of two histidine groups per binding site. In the case of the film affinity this simplifies binding to a 1
:
1 type of interaction but with stoichiometry of two histidine moieties per Cu2+. The data obtained in this way (Table 1) displays substantially higher binding affinity of Cu2+ for the imprinted LbLB film (logK = 3.9) compared to the non-imprinted LbLA (logK = 3.0).
The Cu2+ template-defined organization of PAH-His receptors was protected in the cross-linking process of the LbLB film fabrication. After the template extraction, imprinted LbLB structures remained in place to furnish a spatial configuration of the histidine ligands for the Cu2+ coordination. In contrast, enhanced metal binding cavities derived from spatial arrangements of functional groups, and corresponding to Cu2+, were absent in the LbLA film due to the lack of metal template in the preparation process. As such LbLA displays randomly immobilized histidine receptors with lower affinity to copper ions compared to LbLB.
Rebinding capacities of the LbLA and LbLB films were calculated using QCM collected data after washing the films with 1M HCl. Both films showed Cu rebinding levels of 90% and 95% respectively (see the saturation isotherms in the ESI Fig. S8†). A comparison of LbLA and LbLB for affinity toward the Cu2+ ion was also investigated using XPS (Fig. 8). The intensities of the Cu2p3/2 peak at 933 eV and the Cu2p1/2 peak at 953 eV were used for monitoring the trapped copper inside the LbL films.15 Copper can be detected for both types of imprinted LbLA and non-imprinted LbLB films, and it can be removed by washing with 1M of HCl for 5 min. The cycle can be repeated several times and these results indicate that both films possess stable affinity toward copper ions.
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| Fig. 8 Cu 2p XPS spectra of the LbL film before and after loading of copper in the (A) non-imprinted LbLA films and (B) imprinted LbLB films. | ||
The study of the leaching behavior for the metal-bearing films is an important way to obtain valuable information about the chemical properties of the metals in stabilized products and their potential environmental risks in antifouling applications. A better understanding of the leaching rate of the metals trapped inside the LbL films exposed to different environmental conditions is helpful for practical applications. To compare the copper stabilization effect the non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films were subjected to a prolonged 90 day leaching experiments (Fig. 9) in an artificial sea water environment.
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| Fig. 9 Cu 2p XPS spectra of the non-imprinted LbLA (A) and imprinted LbLB films (B) against sea salts. | ||
XPS results provide another confirmation of the enhanced affinity of the imprinted LbLB film toward Cu2+ ions. Substantially lower amounts of copper ions leach out of the LbLB film after six weeks of exposure to artificial sea water as compared with the LbLA film. The leaching rate of copper from non-imprinted LbLA is thus obviously faster and all the copper is leached out from the film within a week as shown in the XPS spectra (Fig. 9A). In addition, we have also monitored the N1s XPS spectra of both types of films. The corresponding results (Fig. S9A and B†) showed similar spectra indicating that the films are stable in the sea water environment for a prolonged period of time. Thickness values for both films showed the same values even after 45 days in sea salt solution with minor 5–10% loss after 90 days (measured by ellipsometry). From the above results we can state that the cross-linking between the ester groups from the polyanion and amine groups from the polycation, plays a vital role in improving chemical stability of the films under seawater conditions. Moreover, the presented method can be also used to design surfaces with a customized leaching rate of metal ions in addition to an enhancement of copper binding within the imprinted film.
Slightly elevated mortality was observed for naupli incubated for 24 hours on surfaces coated with copper loaded LbL films fabricated with both of the discussed methods compared to the control sample. The lethal concentration (LC50) reported for barnacles nauplii is 0.71 μg mL−1.77 The leached Cu concentration in the model experiment, when the LbLA sample was immersed in 300 μL of water, was established at 60 μg mL−1. Thus the amount of copper released from our materials in a typical biological experiment is well below the toxicity threshold. There was no settlement of the cyprids on non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films with copper (Fig. 10). These results indicate that Cu2+ released from the surface is reaching required fouling preventive concentrations. As the assay is conducted in a static droplet, the concentration of copper present in the seawater droplet is the cumulative value achieved over the 24 hour leaching period.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 10 Cyprid settlement and toxicity of imprinted and non-imprinted LbL films with copper loading. Each value is the mean of 8 replicate measurements. The error bars here are standard deviations. | ||
The statistical comparisons were performed using GraphPad Prism 5 (GraphPad Software Inc.). Cyprid mortality and settlement test data were analyzed using a Kruskal–Wallis test and Dunn's post test to evaluate the performance of the LbL films with copper loading. There is no significant difference between the cyprid mortality on imprinted LbLA and non-imprinted LbLB films and control samples (Kruskal–Wallis test, p = 0.1133 and Dunn's post test, p > 0.05).78 Therefore we can conclude that there is no toxicity difference among those surfaces. However, there was no cyprid settlement for non-imprinted LbLA and imprinted LbLB films. The results suggest that the amount of copper slowly released into solution from the surface was low but sufficient to deter settlement.
Finally, the films are promising antifouling materials showing noticeable performance against barnacles. We believe that the presented approach may lead to a generic platform for marine antifouling materials with very low net release rate of biocides. Particularly it may help to reduce the amount of copper currently used in commercial antifouling products. By further improvement of metal ion binding one can imagine that this technology can be directly used to obtain paints with very high metal affinity. For example, absorbing copper in places with a high concentration like harbors or polluted river mouths and then slowly releasing it in an open sea could be envisaged. The fabrication approach presented can also benefit metal extraction processes used for example by the water purification or natural resources recovery industries. The phenomenon described here for copper ions could be extended for other metals like Fe, Zn, Co and Ni and their possible applications could be further explored in heavy metal separations, antifungal layers, protein binding, catalysis and fluorescence sensing.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: FTIR, NMR spectra of synthesized polymers, XPS spectra and AFM images of non-cross linked and cross linked LBLA and LBLB films, UV-Visible absorption spectra of copper complexation with PAH-His, QCM data of LBLA and LBLB films and stability of the films are provided in the electronic supplementary information. See DOI: 10.1039/c4sc02367f |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015 |