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Sticky Surfaces Turn Slippery With the Flip of a Molecular
Light Switch
Changing a surface from sticky to slippery
could now be as easy as flipping a molecular light switch.
Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have
created an “optically switchable” material
that alters its surface characteristics when exposed
to ultraviolet (UV) light. The new material could have
a wide variety of applications, from a protein filter
for biological mixtures to a tiny valve on a “lab-on-a-chip.”
Synthetic polymer membranes are used in a variety of
applications based on the science of “bioseparation”
— filtering specific proteins from complex liquid
mixtures of biological molecules. But proteins often
stick to these membranes, clogging up their pores and
severely limiting their performance, according to Georges
Belfort, the Russell Sage Professor of Chemical Engineering
at Rensselaer.
“We asked ourselves, can one use light to help
the proteins hop on and hop off? We have shown that
when one changes light, the proteins don’t stick
as well,” Belfort says.
Operators need an inexpensive way to clean these membranes
while they are still in place, rather than periodically
removing them from the application environment, Belfort
says. But currently the only cleaning options involve
expensive chemicals or labor-intensive procedures that
result in significant process downtime.
To make the new materials, Belfort and his coworkers
attached spiropyran molecules to a widely used industrial
polymer, poly(ether sulfone). Spiropyrans are a group
of light-switchable organic molecules that exist in
a colorless, “closed” form under visible
light, but switch to a reddish-purple, “open”
form when exposed to UV light. This change leads to
an alteration of the new material’s polarity,
or the chemical structure of its atoms.
In switching from non-polar to polar, the material becomes
less attractive to proteins that might stick to its
surface, according to Belfort. Exposing the material
to UV light is like flipping a molecular switch, causing
sticky proteins to detach from the surface and wash
away in the liquid, the researchers report.
Not only is the switching mechanism uncomplicated, but
so is the patented procedure required to graft spiropyran
molecules to poly(ether sulfone). “We used a relatively
simple two-step process that could be easily incorporated
into a commercial manufacturing process,” Belfort
says. “The relative ease of this grafting and
switching process suggests many industrial opportunities.”
In addition to bioseparations, Belfort envisions a number
of potential applications for the materials, ranging
from new membranes for treating polluted water to the
targeted release of drugs in the body.
For example, in recent years researchers have developed
“lab-on-a-chip” technology for automating
laboratory processes on extremely small scales. Belfort
notes that the new material could be employed as a surface
valve that can be opened and closed by applying light,
offering the ability to control liquid flow in a chip’s
ultra-tiny channels.
And in sensors designed to detect biological agents,
the ability to control the polarity of the membrane
could help reduce the attachment of unwanted proteins,
providing more accurate readings, according to Belfort.
Visit www.rpi.edu

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