Locally Addressable Electrochemical Patterning Technique (LAEPT) applied to poly(L-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) adlayers on titanium and silicon oxide surfaces
- 23 June 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Biotechnology & Bioengineering
- Vol. 91 (3) , 285-295
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.20395
Abstract
The protein-resistant polycationic graft polymer, poly(L-lysine)-g-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG), was uniformly adsorbed onto a homogenous titanium surface and subsequently subjected to a direct current (dc) voltage. Under the influence of an ascending cathodic and anodic potential, there was a steady and gradual loss of PLL-g-PEG from the conductive titanium surface while no desorption was observed on the insulating silicon oxide substrates. We have implemented this difference in the electrochemical response of PLL-g-PEG on conductive titanium and insulating silicon oxide regions as a biosensing platform for the controlled surface functionalization of the titanium areas while maintaining a protein-resistant background on the silicon oxide regions. A silicon-based substrate was micropatterned into alternating stripes of conductive titanium and insulating silicon oxide with subsequent PLL-g-PEG adsorption onto its surfaces. The surface modified substrate was then subjected to +1800 mV (referenced to the silver electrode). It was observed that the potentiostatic action removed the PLL-g-PEG from the titanium stripes without inducing any polyelectrolyte loss from the silicon oxide regions. Time-of-flight secondary ions mass spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy qualitatively confirmed the PLL-g-PEG retention on the silicon oxide stripes and its absence on the titanium region. This method, known as “Locally Addressable Electrochemical Patterning Technique” (LAEPT), offers great prospects for biomedical and biosensing applications. In an attempt to elucidate the desorption mechanism of PLL-g-PEG in the presence of an electric field on titanium surface, we have conducted electrochemical impedance spectroscopy experiments on bare titanium substrates. The results showed that electrochemical transformations occurred within the titanium oxide layer; its impedance and polarization resistance were found to decrease steadily upon both cathodic and anodic polarization resulting in the polyelectrolyte desorption from the titanium surface.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biosensing under an applied voltage using optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopyBiosensors and Bioelectronics, 2003
- Electrochemical optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (EC‐OWLS): A pilot study using evanescent‐field optical sensing under voltage control to monitor polycationic polymer adsorption onto indium tin oxide (ITO)‐coated waveguide chipsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 2003
- Direct observation of hydration of TiO2 on Ti using electrochemical AFM: freely corroding versus potentiostatically heldSurface Science, 2001
- Changes in electrochemical properties of the anodic oxide film formed on titanium during potential sweepCorrosion Science, 2001
- Influence of the space-charge region on electrochemical impedance measurements on passive oxide films on titaniumElectrochimica Acta, 2000
- Active microelectronic chip devices which utilize controlled electrophoretic fields for multiplex DNA hybridization and other genomic applicationsElectrophoresis, 1999
- Curve-fitting in XPS using extrinsic and intrinsic background structureJournal of Electron Spectroscopy and Related Phenomena, 1999
- Bandgap enlargement in anodic oxide films on titaniumSurface Science, 1997
- Factors that influence the stability of self-assembled organothiols on gold under electrochemical conditionsAnalytica Chimica Acta, 1995
- Stability and open circuit breakdown of the passive oxide film on titaniumElectrochimica Acta, 1988