Surface chemical and mechanical properties of plasma-polymerized N-isopropylacrylamide

Citation

Cheng, X. H.; Canavan, H. E.; Stein, M. J.; Hull, J. R.; Kweskin, S. J.; Wagner, M. S.; Somorjai, G. A.; Castner, D. G.; & Ratner, B. D. (2005). Surface chemical and mechanical properties of plasma-polymerized N-isopropylacrylamide. Langmuir, 21(17), 7833-7841.

Abstract

Surface-immobilized poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (pNIPAM) is currently used for a wide variety of biosensor and biomaterial applications. A thorough characterization of the surface properties of pNIPAM thin films will benefit those applications. In this work, we present analysis of a plasma-polymerized NIPAM (ppNIPAM) coating by multiple surface analytical techniques, including time-of-flight secondary-ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS), contact angle measurement, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and sum frequency generation (SFG) vibrational spectroscopy. ToF-SIMS data show that the plasma-deposited NIPAM polymer on the substrate is cross-linked with a good retention of the monomer integrity. Contact angle results confirm the thermoresponsive nature of the film as observed by a change of surface wettability as a function of temperature. Topographic and force-distance curve measurements by AFM further demonstrate that the grafted film shrinks or swells depending on the temperature of the aqueous environment. A clear transition of the elastic modulus is observed at 31-32 degrees C. The change of the surface wettability and mechanical properties vs temperature are attributed to different conformations taken by the polymer, which is reflected on the outmost surface as distinct side chain groups orienting outward at different temperatures as measured by SFG. The results suggest that a ppNIPAM thin film on a substrate experiences similar mechanical and chemical changes to pNIPAM bulk polymers in solution. The SFG result provides evidence supporting the current theory of the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior of pNIPAM.

Keyword(s)

electron-microscopy
film chemistry
generation vibrational spectroscopy
micromechanical properties
poly(n-isopropylacrylamide) gels
responsive polymer
scanning force microscopy
structural-characterization
thermoresponsive polymer
volume-phase-transition

Notes

957QU
Times Cited:96
Cited References Count:74

Reference Type

Journal Article

Secondary Title

Langmuir

Author(s)

Cheng, X. H.
Canavan, H. E.
Stein, M. J.
Hull, J. R.
Kweskin, S. J.
Wagner, M. S.
Somorjai, G. A.
Castner, D. G.
Ratner, B. D.

Year Published

2005

Date Published

1755302400

Volume Number

21

Issue Number

17

Pages

7833-7841

DOI

Doi 10.1021/La050417o