One strategy to decrease the incidence of hospital-acquired infections is to avoid the survival of pathogens in the environment by the development of surfaces with antimicrobial activity. To study the antibacterial behaviour of active surfaces, different approaches have been developed of which ISO 22916 is the standard. To assess the performance of different testing methodologies to analyse the antibacterial activity of hydrophobic surface patterned plastics as part of a Horizon 2020 European research project. Four different testing methods were used to study the antibacterial activity of a patterned film, including the ISO 22916 standard, the immersion method, the touch-transfer inoculation method, and the swab inoculation method, this latter developed specifically for this project. The non-realistic test conditions of the ISO 22916 standard showed this method to be non-appropriate in the study of hydrophobic patterned surfaces. The immersion method also showed no differences between patterned films and smooth controls due to the lack of attachment of testing bacteria on both surfaces. The antibacterial activity of films could be demonstrated by the touch-transfer and the swab inoculation methods, that more precisely mimicked the way of high-touch surfaces contamination, and showed to be the best methodologies to test the antibacterial activity of patterned hydrophobic surfaces. A new ISO standard would be desirable as the reference method to study the antibacterial behaviour of patterned surfaces.
Patterned surfaces with tunable wetting properties are described. A hybrid hierarchical surface realized by combining two different materials exhibits different wetting states, depending on the speed of impingement of the water droplets. Both "lotus" (high contact angle and low adhesion) and "petal" (high contact angle and high adhesion) states were observed on the same surface without the need of any modification of the surface. The great difference between the capillary pressures exerted by the microstructures and nanostructures was the key factor that allowed us to tailor effectively the adhesiveness of the water droplets. Having a low capillary pressure for the microstructures and a high capillary pressure for the nanostructures, we allow to the surface the possibility of being in a lotus state or in a petal state.
Nanotechnology, the
manipulation of matter on atomic, molecular,
and supramolecular scales, has become the most appealing strategy
for biomedical applications and is of great interest as an approach
to preventing microbial risks. In this study, we utilize the antimicrobial
performance and the drug-loading ability of novel nanoparticles based
on silicon oxide and strontium-substituted hydroxyapatite to develop
nanocomposite antimicrobial films based on a poly(
l
-lactic
acid) (PLLA) polymer. We also demonstrate that nanoimprint lithography
(NIL), a process adaptable to industrial application, is a feasible
fabrication technique to modify the surface of PLLA, to alter its
physical properties, and to utilize it for antibacterial applications.
Various nanocomposite PLLA films with nanosized (black silicon) and
three-dimensional (hierarchical) hybrid domains were fabricated by
thermal NIL, and their bactericidal activity against
Escherichia coli
and
Staphylococcus
aureus
was assessed. Our findings demonstrate that
besides hydrophobicity the nanoparticle antibiotic delivery and the
surface roughness are essential factors that affect the biofilm formation.
In this study we present a flexible and adaptable fabrication method to create complex hierarchical structures over inherently hydrophobic resist materials. We have tested these surfaces for their superhydrophobic behaviour and successfully verified their self-cleaning properties. The followed approach allow us to design and produce superhydrophobic surfaces in a reproducible manner. We have analysed different combination of hierarchical micro-nanostructures for their application to self-cleaning surfaces. A static contact angle value of 170° with a hysteresis of 4° was achieved without the need of any additional chemical treatment on the fabricated hierarchical structures. Dynamic effects were analysed on these surfaces, obtaining a remarkable self-cleaning effect as well as a good robustness over impacting droplets.
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