Article
Electrospray induced surface activation of polystyrene microbeads for diagnostic applications
Registro en:
FOTI, Leonardo et al. Electrospray induced surface activation of polystyrene microbeads for diagnostic applications. Journal of Materials Chemistry B, n. 3, p. 2725-2731, 2015.
2050-750X
10.1039/c4tb01884b
Autor
Foti, Leonardo
Sionek, Andre
Stori, Elis Moura
Soares, Paula Poli
Pereira, Miriam Marzall
Krieger, Marco Aurélio
Petzhold, Cesar Liberato
Schreiner, Wido Herwig
Soares, Maurilio José
Goldenberg, Samuel
Saul, Cyro Ketzer
Resumen
INCT para Diagnósticos em Saúde Pública (National Institute of Science and Technology for Diagnostics in Public Health), funded by the National Council of Technological and Scientific Development (CNPq –
Brasil) Electrospray is generally regarded as a “soft” technique due to the absence of any observable molecular fragmentation or destruction. This study reports on a novel and easy way to induce surface activation on the surface of polystyrene microbeads through electrospray deposition into a grounded aqueous electrolyte solution bath. This process, nicknamed EISA, which stands for electrospray induced surface activation, proposes that when a highly charged microbead formed by the electrospray process sinks into the aqueous electrolyte solution, it behaves like a highly charged spherical capacitor that discharges in the conductive liquid. The energy released leads to a breakup of the polystyrene surface bonds and water oxidation with oxygen. Further reactions produce a carboxylated surface that was confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and protein coupling. An immunoassay based on these modified microbeads was also developed and presented for use in syphilis detection, demonstrating a reliable signal-to-noise ratio between positive and negative results.