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Follow on Google News | Underwater Strong Nano AdhesivesBy: University Research Their findings appear online in the journal Nature Communications (http://www.nature.com/ Presence of water limits the ability of an adhesive to stick to surfaces under wet conditions. However, a protein secreted by mussels has the ability to penetrate the superficial water layer and adhere to the underlying surface. These proteins are rich in catechol content and features prominently ranging from less than 5 mol% to 30 mol%. Other common naturally occurring amino acids, for example, lysine, phosphoserine and histidine, are also relevant to protein adhesion, however, the role of these other residues is still an enigma in the wet adhesion community. Catechol is often thought to be the magic bullet behind the strong wet adhesive properties of the proteins underwater. The researchers from UC Santa Barbara translated the strong wet adhesion of the mussel proteins into a smaller and simpler zwitterionic platform. They simplified and combined several motifs borrowed from the interfacial adhesive mussel proteins (including catechol, positive and negative charges, and nonpolar residues) into a single, low-molecular- The adhesion energies measured (Wad~50 mJ m−2) in the study is the highest reported to date for a nanometer-thick film (a billionth of a meter) formed underwater, and 2–3 times greater than the strongest adhesive mussel foot protein. The findings also describes the design principles for engineering synthetic molecules that will contribute to the development of tunable systems for applications in protective coatings, medical adhesives and, drug delivery. Such novel zwitterion-mediated adhesion is likely to stimulate applications at multiple length scales including nanofabrications that require molecularly smooth and thin (<4 nm) This research was a collaborative effort between Chemical Engineering, Marine Science Institute and Chemistry and Biochemistry departments at the University of California Santa Barbara. Dr. B. Kollbe Ahn and Dr. Saurabh Das co-lead the project and ideas for the designing and testing of the novel molecules used in this study. End
Page Updated Last on: Oct 25, 2015
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