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Journal ArticleDOI

Surface properties and platelet adhesion characteristics of acrylic acid and allylamine plasma‐treated polyethylene

Tze-Man Ko, +1 more
- 05 Mar 1993 - 
- Vol. 47, Iss: 9, pp 1601-1619
TLDR
In this paper, acrylic acid and allylamine functional groups were incorporated onto thin films formed by plasma polymerization of acrylic acid in a low-pressure glow discharge, and ESCA, ATR-FTIR spectroscopy, and static contact-angle measurements confirmed the presence of these functional groups.
Abstract
Acidic oxygen-containing and basic nitrogen-containing functional groups were incorporated onto thin films formed by plasma polymerization of acrylic acid and allylamine in a lowpressure glow discharge. ESCA, ATR–FTIR spectroscopy, and static contact-angle measurements confirmed the presence of these functional groups. Surface hydrophilicity of the acrylic acid plasma polymer decreased with time due to the diffusion of hydrophilic oxygencontaining functional groups away from the surface of the plasma-treated polyethylene. In contrast, the hydrophilicity of the allylamine plasma polymer increased with time because of the extensive post-plasma-treatment oxidation with atmospheric oxygen. In assessing the blood compatibility of these two types of plasma polymer surfaces by platelet adhesion and spreading, the acidic acrylic acid plasma polymers showed an improvement in thromboresistance, but the basic allylamine plasma polymers were more thrombogenic than was the untreated low-density polyethylene base material. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Polymer surface modification by plasmas and photons

TL;DR: Pulsed UV-laser irradiation can produce submicron periodic linear and dot patterns on polymer surfaces without photomask, which can be used to increase surface roughness of inert polymers for improved adhesion as mentioned in this paper.
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Plasma Methods for the Generation of Chemically Reactive Surfaces for Biomolecule Immobilization and Cell Colonization ‐ A Review

TL;DR: This review surveys methods for the fabrication of polymeric surfaces and thin plasma polymer coatings that contain reactive chemical groups useful for the subsequent covalent immobilization, by solution chemical reactions or vapor phase grafting, of molecules or polymers that can exert bio-specific interfacial responses.
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Nonthermal Plasma Technology as a Versatile Strategy for Polymeric Biomaterials Surface Modification: A Review

TL;DR: A tutorial-type review of recent work on surface modification of polymeric biomaterials, with a focus on plasma-based strategies, to provide a fast introduction for researchers into the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atmospheric Pressure Plasma Deposition of Structurally Well-Defined Polyacrylic Acid Films

TL;DR: In this article, high retention of the carboxylic acid group has been verified by XPS and FT-IR spectroscopy and these films are found to exhibit low water contact angle values and display good adhesive and gas barrier performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydrophobic cotton fabric coated by a thin nanoparticulate plasma film

TL;DR: In this paper, audio frequency (AC) plasma of some kind of fluorocarbon chemical was applied to deposit a nanoparticulate hydrophobic film onto a cotton fabric surface, and the measurement of the video contact angle showed that the superhydrophobicity of the cotton fabric was obtained with a treatment of only 30 s. The results showed that textile performances of the plasma-coated fabric were superior to those of Scotchgard-sprayed samples, except for the moisture regain, which was almost the same.
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