Probing the interactions between air bubbles and (bio)interfaces at the nanoscale using FluidFM technology
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Date
2021-12-15
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Journal Article
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Abstract
Understanding the molecular mechanisms underlying bubble-(bio)surfaces interactions is currently a challenge that if overcame, would allow to understand and control the various processes in which they are involved. Atomic force microscopy is a useful technique to measure such interactions, but it is limited by the large size and instability of the bubbles that it can use, attached either on cantilevers or on surfaces. We here present new developments where microsized and stable bubbles are produced using FluidFM technology, which combines AFM and microfluidics. The air bubbles produced were used to probe the interactions with hydrophobic samples, showing that bubbles in water behave like hydrophobic surfaces. They thus could be used to measure the hydrophobic properties of microorganisms’ surfaces, but in this case the interactions are also influenced by electrostatic forces. Finally a strategy was developed to functionalize their surface, thereby modulating their interactions with microorganism interfaces. This new method provides a valuable tool to understand bubble-(bio)surfaces interactions but also to engineer them. © 2021 Elsevier Inc.
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published
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Volume
604
Pages / Article No.
785 - 797
Publisher
Elsevier
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Subject
Air bubbles; Interactions; Fluidic force microscopy; Atomic force microscopy; Hydrophobicity; Microorganisms