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UV- and Visible-Light Photopatterning of Molecular Gradients Using the Thiol–yne Click Reaction
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    Surfaces, Interfaces, and Applications

    UV- and Visible-Light Photopatterning of Molecular Gradients Using the Thiol–yne Click Reaction
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    ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

    Cite this: ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2022, 14, 28, 32696–32705
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    https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c06946
    Published July 11, 2022
    Copyright © 2022 American Chemical Society

    Abstract

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    The rational design of chemical coatings is used to control surface interactions with small molecules, biomolecules, nanoparticles, and liquids as well as optical and other properties. Specifically, micropatterned surface coatings have been used in a wide variety of applications, including biosensing, cell growth assays, multiplexed biomolecule interaction arrays, and responsive surfaces. Here, a maskless photopatterning process is studied, using the photocatalyzed thiol–yne “click” reaction to create both binary and gradient patterns on thiolated surfaces. Nearly defect-free patterns are produced by first coating glass surfaces with mercaptopropylsilatrane, a silanizing agent that forms smoother self-assembled monolayers than the commonly used 3-mercaptopropyltrimethoxysilane. Photopatterning is then performed using UV (365 nm) or visible (405 nm) light to graft molecules onto the surface in tunable concentrations based on the local exposure. The technique is demonstrated for multiple types of molecular grafts, including fluorescent dyes, poly(ethylene glycol), and biotin, the latter allowing subsequent deposition of biomolecules via biotin–avidin binding. Patterning is demonstrated in water and dimethylformamide, and the process is repeated to combine molecules soluble in different phases. The combination of arbitrary gradient formation, broad applicability, a low defect rate, and fast prototyping thanks to the maskless nature of the process creates a particularly powerful technique for molecular surface patterning that could be used for a wide variety of micropatterned applications.

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    Supporting Information

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    The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.2c06946.

    • Experimental conditions used while testing silanization with MPS; results from the optimization of solvent and incubation time in 5 mM MPS; images from different postsilanization procedures using a standard 5 mM MPS in toluene for 24 h; UV–vis absorbance and fluorescence spectra of the two dyes; pattern used for determining the relationship between dose and subsequent fluorescence intensity; intensities from the first 10 min of the exposure tests for FAM on MPTMS; additional images; demonstration of observed bleaching for photopatterned FAM on a surface treated with MPS; synthesis procedure for MPS and related 1H NMR spectra; original artwork; and explanation of provided MATLAB scripts for use in correcting the vignetting effect in our optical setup (PDF)

    • MATLAB scripts used for the production of field corrections, image slice generation, and the automated processing of image sequences (ZIP)

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    ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

    Cite this: ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2022, 14, 28, 32696–32705
    Click to copy citationCitation copied!
    https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c06946
    Published July 11, 2022
    Copyright © 2022 American Chemical Society

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