silicon and 1-bromopropane

silicon has been researched along with 1-bromopropane* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for silicon and 1-bromopropane

ArticleYear
SU-8 photolithography on reactive plasma thin-films: coated microwells for peptide display.
    Colloids and surfaces. B, Biointerfaces, 2013, Aug-01, Volume: 108

    We have developed a technique to create 50μm-deep microwells coated with a reactive and robust thin film, which withstands photolithographic processing, and allows for subsequent chemical functionalisation with biological cues (i.e. peptides). First, plasma polymerisation of 1-bromopropane was used to generate a bromine-functionalised thin film (BrPP) on a substrate of silicon wafer. Second, an epoxy functionalised polymer UV photoresist, SU-8, was deposited and developed to create 50μm-deep patterned microwells that display the BrPP coating at their base. Third, amino acids or peptides were selectively attached to the bottom of the microwells through bromine displacement by an amine or thiol nucleophile. Each surface functionalisation step was monitored by XPS, AFM, and contact angle measurements. These functionalities were then used as linkers to immobilise enzymes (e.g. HRP), which retain activity at the end of the process as shown by a biochemical activity assay. Peptide promoters of cell attachment were also immobilised and their functionality was evaluated using an L929 fibroblast adhesion assay. In conclusion, this work describes an innovative combination of plasma thin film deposition and photolithography to create 50μm-deep functionalised microwells for peptide display in biological applications.

    Topics: Cell Adhesion; Cell Line; Coated Materials, Biocompatible; Enzymes, Immobilized; Epoxy Compounds; Fibroblasts; Horseradish Peroxidase; Hydrocarbons, Brominated; Microscopy, Atomic Force; Peptides; Photochemical Processes; Photoelectron Spectroscopy; Polymers; Protein Array Analysis; Silicon; Surface Properties

2013
Facile charge-displacement at silicon gives spaced-out reaction.
    Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011, Oct-19, Volume: 133, Issue:41

    Adsorbates on metals, but not previously on semiconductors, have been observed to display long-range repulsive interactions. On metals, due to efficient dissipation, the repulsions are weak, typically on the order of 5 meV at 10 Å. On the 7×7 reconstruction of the Si(111) surface, charge transport through the surface has been demonstrated by others using charge injection by STM tips. Here we show that for both physisorbed brominated molecules, and for chemisorbed Br-atoms, induced charge-transfer in the Si(111)-7×7 surface can lead to a strong repulsive interaction between adsorbates, calculated as 200 meV at 13.4 Å. This large repulsive interaction must be channeled through the surface since it causes widely spaced "one-per-corner-hole" patterns of physisorption (three cases--directly observed here) and subsequent chemisorption (four cases observed). The patterns were observed by ultrahigh vacuum scanning tunneling microscopy for four different brominated hydrocarbon adsorbates; 1,2-dibromoethane, 1-bromopropane, 1-bromopentane, and bromobenzene, deposited individually on the surface. In every case, adsorbates were overwhelmingly more likely to be found singly than multiply adjacent to a corner-hole, constituting a distinctive pattern having a probability p = 7 × 10(-5) compared to a random distribution.

    Topics: Adsorption; Bromobenzenes; Ethylene Dibromide; Hydrocarbons, Brominated; Particle Size; Quantum Theory; Silicon; Surface Properties

2011