posted on 2017-09-27, 18:21authored byZiquan Cao, Qing Bian, Ying Chen, Fuxin Liang, Guojie Wang
A robust
light-responsive coating based on Janus composite particles
is achieved. First, strawberry-like silica Janus particles are synthesized
by the sol–gel process at a patchy emulsion interface. One
side of the silica Janus particles possesses nanoscale roughness,
and the other side is flat. Then, spiropyran-containing polymer brushes
are grafted onto the coarse hemispherical side of the as-synthesized
Janus particles, and the other flat side is modified with imidazoline
groups. The light-responsive polymer brush-terminated coarse hemispherical
sides direct toward the air when the Janus composite particles self-organize
into a layer on the surface of epoxy resin substrate. The imidazoline
groups react with the epoxy groups in the epoxy resin to form a robust
smart coating. The coating can be reversibly triggered between hydrophobic
and hydrophilic by UV and visible-light irradiation, which is attributed
to the isomerization of spiropyran moieties. When the hydrophobic
ring-closed spiropyran form is prominent, HeLa cells can be effectively
captured onto the coating. After UV light irradiation, the ring-closed
spiropyran form changes to the hydrophilic ring-opened zwitterionic
merocyanine form, and then the captured cells are released. This work
shows promising potential for engineering advanced smart biointerfaces.