posted on 2022-12-01, 23:29authored byJaroslaw Mazuryk, Katarzyna Klepacka, Joanna Piechowska, Jakub Kalecki, Ladislav Derzsi, Piotr Piotrowski, Piotr Paszke, Dorota A. Pawlak, Simone Berneschi, Wlodzimierz Kutner, Piyush Sindhu Sharma
The present research
reports on in-water, site-specific
photodeposition
of glyphosate (GLP)-containing polyacrylamide (PAA-GLP) nanometer-thick
films (nanofilms) on an inner surface of fused silica (fused quartz)
microcapillaries presilanized with trimethoxy(octen-7-yl)silane (TMOS).
TMOS was chosen because of the vinyl group presence in its structure,
enabling its participation in the (UV light)-activated free-radical
polymerization (UV-FRP) after its immobilization on a fused silica
surface. The photodeposition was conducted in an aqueous (H2O/ACN; 3:1, v/v) solution, using
UV-FRP (λ = 365 nm) of the acrylamide (AA) functional monomer,
the N,N′-methylenebis(acrylamide)
(BAA) cross-linking monomer, GLP, and the azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN)
UV-FRP initiator. Acetonitrile (ACN) was used as the porogen and the
solvent to dissolve monomers and GLP. Because of the micrometric diameters
of microcapillaries, the silanization and photodeposition procedures
were first optimized on fused silica slides. The introduction of TMOS,
as well as the formation of PAA and PAA-GLP nanofilms, was determined
using atomic force microscopy (AFM), scanning electron microscopy
with energy-dispersive X-ray (SEM–EDX) spectroscopy, and confocal
micro-Raman spectroscopy. Particularly, AFM and SEM–EDX measurements
determined nanofilms’ thickness and GLP content, respectively,
whereas in-depth confocal (micro-Raman spectroscopy)-assisted imaging
of PAA- and PAA-GLP-coated microcapillary inner surfaces confirmed
the successful photodeposition. Moreover, we examined the GLP impact
on polymer gelation by monitoring hydration in a hydrogel and a dried
powder PAA-GLP. Our study demonstrated the usefulness of the in-capillary
micro-Raman spectroscopy imaging and in-depth profiling of GLP-encapsulated
PAA nanofilms. In the future, our simple and inexpensive procedure
will enable the fabrication of polymer-based microfluidic chemosensors
or adsorptive-separating devices for GLP detection, determination,
and degradation.