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Promoting Silk Fibroin Adhesion to Stainless Steel Surfaces by Interface Tailoring

journal contribution
posted on 2023-02-16, 04:05 authored by NS Emonson, JD Randall, Ben AllardyceBen Allardyce, MK Stanfield, B Dharmasiri, Filip Stojcevski, Luke HendersonLuke Henderson
Bonding dissimilar materials has been a persistent challenge for decades. This paper presents a method to modify a stainless steel surface (316 L), routinely used in medical applications to enable the significant adhesion of a biopolymer (silk fibroin). The metallic surface was first covalently grafting with polyacrylamide, to enable a hydrogen bonding compatible surface. The polymerisation was initiated via the irreversible electrochemical reduction of a 4-nitrobenzene diazonium salt (20 mM), in the presence of an acrylamide monomer (1 M) at progressively faster scan rates (0.01 V/s to 1 V/s). Examination of the modified samples by FT-IR was consistent with successful surface modification, via observations of the acrylamide carbonyl (1600–1650 cm−1) was observed, with more intense peaks correlating to slower scan rates. Similar observations were made with respect to increasing surface polarity, assessed by water contact angle. Reductions of >60° were observed for the grafted surfaces, relative to the unmodified control materials, indicating a surface able to undergo significant hydrogen bonding. The adhesion of silk to the metallic surface was quantified using a lap shear test, effectively using silk fibroin as an adhesive. Adhesion improvements of 5–7-fold, from 4.1 MPa to 29.3 MPa per gram of silk fibroin, were observed for the treated samples, highlighting the beneficial effect of this surface treatment. The methods developed in this work can be transferred to any metallic (or conductive) surface and can be tailored to complement any desired interface.

History

Journal

ChemPlusChem

Volume

88

Article number

e202200335

Location

Germany

ISSN

2192-6506

eISSN

2192-6506

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH