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Query: UMLS:C0267964 (
PAA
)
2,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The formation of polyelectrolyte complexes (PECs) from oppositely charged linear polyelectrolytes (PELs) was studied using static light scattering at various salt concentrations. The PELs used were poly(allylamine hydro chloride) (
PAH
) and the two polyanions poly(acrylic acid) (
PAA
) and poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA). Physical characteristics such as the radii of gyration, molecular weights, and water contents of the PECs were determined at various molar mixing ratios. Despite relatively small differences in chemical structure between
PAA
and PMAA, fairly large differences were detected in these physical characteristics. Generally, PECs comprising PMAA were larger and contained more water. Moreover, by using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, transmission microscopy and atomic force microscopy, shape and structure of the prepared PECs were investigated both in solution and after drying. The PECs were found to be spherical in solution and the shape was retained after freeze-drying. PECs adsorbed on silica surfaces and dried in air at room-temperature still showed a three-dimensional structure. However, the relatively low aspect ratios indicated that the PECs collapsed significantly due to interactions with the silica during adsorption and drying. At intermediate ionic strengths (1-10 mM), stagnation point adsorption reflectometry (SPAR) showed that the adsorption of low charged cationic
PAH
-
PAA
PECs on silica surfaces increased if the pH value was increased from pH 5.5 to 7.5.
...
PMID:New insights into the structure of polyelectrolyte complexes. 1749 66
Layer-by-layer assembly is presented as a deposition technique for the incorporation of ultrathin gate dielectric layers into thin-film transistors utilizing a highly doped organic active layer. This deposition technique enables the fabrication of device structures with a controllable gate dielectric thickness. In particular, devices with a dielectric layer comprised of poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/poly(acrylic acid) (
PAH
/
PAA
) bilayer films were fabricated to examine the properties of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) as the transistor active layer. The transistor Ion/off ratio and switching speed are shown to be controlled by the gate bias, which is dependent upon the voltage applied and the number of bilayers deposited for the gate dielectric. The devices operate in the depletion mode as a result of dedoping of the active layer with the application of a positive gate bias. The depletion and recovery rate are highly dependent on the level of hydration in the film and the environment under which the device is operated. These observations are consistent with an electrochemical dedoping of the conducting polymer during operation.
...
PMID:Fabrication of organic thin-film transistors using layer-by-layer assembly. 1751 94
We report on the influence of polyanion molecular weight on the growth and structure of multilayered thin films fabricated from poly(allylamine) (
PAH
) and well-defined, end-labeled poly(acrylic acid) (
PAA
) synthesized by atom transfer radical polymerization. We observed striking differences in the growth of
PAH
/
PAA
films fabricated using well-defined
PAA
compared to films fabricated using higher molecular weight, commercially available
PAA
. Past studies demonstrate that the thicknesses of
PAH
/
PAA
films increase as linear functions of the number of
PAH
and
PAA
layers deposited over a broad range of pH (e.g., from pH 2.5 to 4.5). We observed the thicknesses of films fabricated using solutions of
PAH
and
PAA
adjusted to pH 7.5 and 3.5, respectively, to increase in a nonlinear manner. Films fabricated using well-defined, low molecular weight samples of
PAA
under these conditions increased in thickness exponentially. Experiments using samples of
PAA
having substantially non-overlapping molecular weight distributions demonstrated a clear relationship between the molecular weight of
PAA
and rates of film growth. We also used confocal microscopy, in combination with fluorescently end-labeled samples of
PAA
, to characterize the location of
PAA
in these assemblies. The results of these experiments, when combined, support the general conclusion that
PAA
is able to penetrate or diffuse into these films over large distances during assembly. The mechanism of growth for these films thus appears similar to that recently reported for the exponential growth of films fabricated using a variety of biologically relevant polyelectrolytes. The use of living/controlled methods of polymerization to synthesize well-defined samples of
PAA
facilitates an interpretation of these differences in film behavior as arising largely from differences in polymer molecular weight and polydispersity. This work provides insight into the assembly and structure of a well-studied weak polyelectrolyte film system and illustrates the potential of living/controlled methods of polymerization to contribute to the characterization and understanding of the physical properties of these ionically cross-linked materials.
...
PMID:Assembly of multilayered films using well-defined, end-labeled poly(acrylic acid): influence of molecular weight on exponential growth in a synthetic weak polyelectrolyte system. 1761 62
Organic thin film transitors (TFTs) with the conducting polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonic acid), PEDOT:PSS, as the active layer and cross-linked, layer-by-layer assembled poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/poly(acrylic acid) (
PAH
/
PAA
) multilayers as the gate dielectric layer were investigated. A combination of spectroscopic data and device performance characteristics was used to study the behavior of these TFT devices under a variety of controlled environmental test conditions. It was shown that depletion and recovery of the device can be induced to occur by a means that is consistent with the electrochemical oxidation and reduction of water contained in the film. In addition to acting as a reactant, moisture also acts as a plasticizer to control the mobility of other species contained in the film and thereby permits bistable operation of these devices. Raman spectroscopy was used to show that the observed device switching behavior is due to a change in the PEDOT doping level.
...
PMID:Bistability in doped organic thin film transistors. 1769 84
Polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEMs) formed at interfaces between aqueous solutions and thermotropic (water-immiscible) liquid crystals (LCs) offer the basis of a new method to tailor the nanometer-scale structure and chemical functionality of these interfaces. Toward this end, we report a study that compares the growth of PEMs formed at mobile and deformable interfaces defined by LCs relative to growth observed at model (rigid) solid surfaces. Experiments aimed at determining if polyelectrolytes such as poly(sodium-4-styrenesulfonate) (PSS) can partition from the aqueous phase into the bulk of the LC yielded no evidence of such partitioning. Whereas measurements of the growth of PEMs formed from poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (
PAH
) and PSS at the aqueous-LC interface revealed growth characteristics similar to those measured at both hydrophobic and hydrophilic interfaces of solids, the growth of PEMs from
PAH
and poly(acrylic acid) (
PAA
) at the aqueous-LC interface was found to differ substantially from the solids investigated: (i) the linear growth of PEMs of
PAH
/
PAA
that was measured at the aqueous-LC interface under conditions that did not lead to the growth of PEMs at the interface of octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS)-treated glass (a hydrophobic solid surface), and (ii) in comparison to the growth of PEMs of
PAH
/
PAA
at the surface of glass (a hydrophilic charged surface), a higher rate of growth was observed at the aqueous-LC interface. The finding that the growth rate of PEMs of
PAH
/
PAA
at aqueous-LC interfaces is greater than on solid surfaces is supported by additional measurements of growth as a function of pH. Finally, the pH-triggered reorganization of
PAH
/
PAA
PEMs supported at the aqueous-LC interface led to changes in the order and optical properties of the LC. These data are discussed in light of the nature of aqueous-LC interfaces, including the mobility and deformability of the interface and recent measurements of the zeta-potentials of aqueous-LC interfaces.
...
PMID:Characterization of the growth of polyelectrolyte multilayers formed at interfaces between aqueous phases and thermotropic liquid crystals. 1841 43
Liquid cell atomic force microscopy (LC-AFM) is used to image self-assembled polyelectrolyte films eliminating any drying effects on the film structure. Weak/weak and strong/weak polyelectrolyte films are formed by the alternated deposition of poly(acrylic acid) [
PAA
]/poly(allylamine hydrochloride) [
PAH
], and poly(sodium 4-styrene sulfonate) [PSS]/
PAH
, respectively, forming a granular surface structure. Number and area of grains (GN, GA) are used to characterize the surface of these films during their build up process. We show that hydrophilic
PAA
increases GA and decreases GN, while these parameters follow an opposite behavior with PSS. In both cases, GA and GN always have a simple inverse relationship, and then grain surface coverage (GS=GNGA) is nearly constant and independent of polyelectrolyte nature and the substrates used here, but also in the published data as well. The drying of the weak/weak film was also imaged after natural and forced solvent evaporation, and the surface structure is strongly affected, although the GS values keep roughly the same value found for wet films. The set of these results indicates that GS may be considered as a constant parameter during the build-up for the self-nascent assembled polyelectrolytes. The granular structure is still maintained after glucose oxidase adsorption on these films with comparable GS values.
...
PMID:Granular structure of self-assembled PAA/PAH and PSS/PAH nascent films imaged in situ by LC-AFM. 1844 87
The competing mechanisms that regulate adhesion of bacteria to surfaces and subsequent biofilm formation remain unclear, though nearly all studies have focused on the role of physical and chemical properties of the material surface. Given the large monetary and health costs of medical-device colonization and hospital-acquired infections due to bacteria, there is considerable interest in better understanding of material properties that can limit bacterial adhesion and viability. Here we employ weak polyelectrolyte multilayer (PEM) thin films comprised of poly(allylamine) hydrochloride (
PAH
) and poly(acrylic acid) (
PAA
), assembled over a range of conditions, to explore the physicochemical and mechanical characteristics of material surfaces controlling adhesion of Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteria and subsequent colony growth. Although it is increasingly appreciated that eukaryotic cells possess subcellular structures and biomolecular pathways to sense and respond to local chemomechanical environments, much less is known about mechanoselective adhesion of prokaryotes such as these bacteria. We find that adhesion of viable S. epidermidis correlates positively with the stiffness of these polymeric substrata, independently of the roughness, interaction energy, and charge density of these materials. Quantitatively similar trends observed for wild-type and actin analogue mutant Escherichia coli suggest that these results are not confined to only specific bacterial strains, shapes, or cell envelope types. These results indicate the plausibility of mechanoselective adhesion mechanisms in prokaryotes and suggest that mechanical stiffness of substrata materials represents an additional parameter that can regulate adhesion of and subsequent colonization by viable bacteria.
...
PMID:Substrata mechanical stiffness can regulate adhesion of viable bacteria. 1845 30
Patterned poly(acrylic acid) (
PAA
)/poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (
PAH
) multilayer films with line structures of different lateral size and vertical height were fabricated by a room-temperature imprinting technique, and their cell adhesion properties were investigated. The nonimprinted
PAA
/
PAH
multilayer films are cytophilic toward NIH/3T3 fibroblasts and HeLa cells whether
PAA
or
PAH
is the outer most layer. In contrast, the
PAA
/
PAH
multilayer films with a 6.5-microm-line/3.5-microm-space pattern structure are cytophobic toward NIH/3T3 fibroblasts and HeLa cells when the height of the lines is 1.29 microm. By either increasing the lateral size of the patters to 69-microm-line/43-mum-space or decreasing the height of the imprinted lines to approximately 107 nm, imprinted
PAA
/
PAH
multilayer films become cytophilic. This kind of transition of cell adhesion behavior derives from the change of the physical pattern size of the
PAA
/
PAH
multilayer films and is independent of the chemical composition of the films. The easy patterning of layer-by-layer assembled polymeric multilayer films with the room-temperature imprinting technique provides a facile way to tailor the cellular behavior of the layered polymeric films by simply changing the pattern dimensions.
...
PMID:Cell adhesion properties of patterned poly(acrylic acid)/poly(allylamine hydrochloride) multilayer films created by room-temperature imprinting technique. 1857 30
Hollow microcapsules containing polymeric micelles in their walls were fabricated by alternating assembly of poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (
PAH
) and poly(styrene- b-acrylic acid) (PS- b-
PAA
) micelles on MnCO(3) microparticles followed by sacrificing the templates in acid solution. The successful formation of
PAH
/micelle multilayers on both planar and curved substrates was confirmed by UV-vis spectroscopy, ellipsometry, and xi-potential measurements. The PS- b-
PAA
micelles retained their structure during the whole assembly process. The as-prepared microcapsules showed extraordinary stability against concentrated HCl (37%) and 0.1 M NaOH solutions. No variation in capsule size or shape was observed in acidic solution, while slight swelling and distortion of the capsules took place in alkaline solution. However, these capsules completely recovered their original size and morphology after being incubated in acidic solution again. The microcapsules, in which large voids exist between the micelle grains on the walls, were totally permeable to fluorescein-tagged dextran with an M(w) of 2000 kDa. Assembly of additional
PAH
/poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) multilayers could substantially reduce the permeation of the same molecules. These multicompartmental capsules combine polymeric micelles with multilayer polyelectrolyte microcapsules and could possibly be imparted with multifunctions, thus possibly finding diverse applications in the fields of drug delivery, biosensing, and nanobiotechnology.
...
PMID:Assembly of polymeric micelles into hollow microcapsules with extraordinary stability against extreme pH conditions. 1859 Mar
We report the use of copolymers synthesized with specific block ratios of weakly and strongly charged groups for the preparation of stable, pH-responsive multilayers. In this study, we utilized reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization in the synthesis of novel pH-sensitive copolymers comprising block domains of acrylic acid (AA) and styrene sulfonate (SS) groups. The
PAA
x- b-SS y copolymers, containing 37%, 55%, and 73% of AA groups by mass (denoted as
PAA
37- b-SS 63,
PAA
55- b-SS 45, and
PAA
73- b-SS 27, respectively), were utilized to perform stepwise multilayer assembly in alternation with poly(allylamine hydrochloride),
PAH
. The ratio of AA to SS groups, and the effect of the pH of both anionic and cationic adsorption solutions, on multilayer properties, were investigated using ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy. The presence of SS moieties in the
PAA
x- b-SS y copolymers, regardless of the precise composition, lead to films with a relatively consistent thickness. Exposure of these multilayers to acidic conditions postassembly revealed that these multilayers do not exhibit the characteristic large swelling that occurs with
PAA
/
PAH
films. The film stability was attributed to the presence of strongly charged SS groups.
PAA
x- b-SS y/
PAH
films were also formed on particle substrates under various adsorption conditions. Microelectrophoresis measurements revealed that the surface charge and isoelectric point of these core-shell particles are dependent on assembly pH and the proportion of AA groups in
PAA
x- b-SS y. These core-shell particles can be used as precursors to hollow capsules that incorporate weak polyelectrolyte functionality. The role of AA groups in determining the growth profile of these capsules was also examined. The multilayer films prepared may find applications in areas where pH-responsive films are required but large film swelling is unfavorable.
...
PMID:Synthesis, multilayer film assembly, and capsule formation of macromolecularly engineered acrylic acid and styrene sulfonate block copolymers. 1864 62
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