4.8 Article

Liquid Crystal-Infused Porous Polymer Surfaces: A Slippery Soft Material Platform for the Naked-Eye Detection and Discrimination of Amphiphilic Species

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 13, 期 28, 页码 33652-33663

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c08170

关键词

liquid crystals; slippery surfaces; SLIPS; surfactants; bacteria; sensing

资金

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Madison Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) [DMR-1720415]
  3. NIH [R35 GM131817]
  4. NSF through the UW MRSEC [DMR-1720415]
  5. UW-Madison NIH Chemistry-Biology Interface Training Program [T32 GM008505]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We present the design and characterization of liquid crystal-infused porous polymer membranes for detecting and reporting on amphiphiles in aqueous solutions. These LC-infused surfaces exhibit slippery behaviors, allowing for facile naked-eye detection and discrimination of amphiphiles based on sliding times of aqueous droplets, offering new applications for antifouling materials in environmental sensing and beyond.
We report the design and characterization of liquid crystal (LC)-infused porous polymer membranes that can detect and report on the presence of natural and synthetic amphiphiles in aqueous solution. We demonstrate that thermotropic LCs can be infused into nanoporous polymer membranes to yield LC-infused surfaces that exhibit slippery behaviors in contact with a range of aqueous fluids. In contrast to conventional liquid-infused surfaces (LIS) or slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces (SLIPS) prepared using isotropic oils, aqueous solutions slide over the surfaces of these LC-infused materials at speeds that depend strongly upon the composition of the fluid, including the presence, concentration, or structure of a dissolved surfactant. In general, the sliding times of aqueous droplets on these LC-infused surfaces increase significantly (e.g., from times on the order of seconds to times on the order of minutes) with increasing amphiphile concentration, allowing sliding times to be used to estimate the concentration of the amphiphile. Additional experiments revealed other intrinsic and extrinsic variables or parameters that can be used to further manipulate droplet sliding times and discriminate among amphiphiles of similar structure. Our results are consistent with a physical picture that involves reversible changes in the interfacial orientation of anisotropic LCs mediated by the interfacial adsorption of amphiphiles. These materials thus permit facile naked-eye detection and discrimination of amphiphiles in aqueous samples using equipment no more sophisticated than a stopwatch. We demonstrate the potential utility of these LC-infused surfaces for the unaided, naked-eye detection and monitoring of amphiphilic biotoxins in small droplets of fluid extracted directly from cultures of two common bacterial pathogens (Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus). The ability to translate molecular interactions at aqueous/LC interfaces into large and readily observed changes in the sliding times of small aqueous droplets on surfaces could open the door to new applications for antifouling, liquid-infused materials in the context of environmental sensing and other fundamental and applied areas.

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