silicon and aminopropylsilane

silicon has been researched along with aminopropylsilane* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for silicon and aminopropylsilane

ArticleYear
Optimization and characterization of a homogeneous carboxylic surface functionalization for silicon-based biosensing.
    Colloids and surfaces. B, Biointerfaces, 2016, Jul-01, Volume: 143

    A well-organized immobilization of bio-receptors is a crucial goal in biosensing, especially to achieve high reproducibility, sensitivity and specificity. These requirements are usually attained with a controlled chemical/biochemical functionalization that creates a stable layer on a sensor surface. In this work, a chemical modification protocol for silicon-based surfaces to be applied in biosensing devices is presented. An anhydrous silanization step through 3-aminopropylsilane (APTES), followed by a further derivatization with succinic anhydride (SA), is optimized to generate an ordered flat layer of carboxylic groups. The properties of APTES/SA modified surface were compared with a functionalization in which glutaraldehyde (GA) is used as crosslinker instead of SA, in order to have a comparison with an established and largely applied procedure. Moreover, a functionalization based on the controlled deposition of a plasma polymerized acrylic acid (PPAA) thin film was used as a reference for carboxylic reactivity. Advantages and drawbacks of the considered methods are highlighted, through physico-chemical characterizations (OCA, XPS, and AFM) and by means of a functional Protein G/Antibody immunoassay. These analyses reveal that the most homogeneous, reproducible and active surface is achieved by using the optimized APTES/SA coupling.

    Topics: Biosensing Techniques; Carboxylic Acids; Glutaral; Microscopy, Atomic Force; Photoelectron Spectroscopy; Polymethacrylic Acids; Reproducibility of Results; Silanes; Silicon; Succinic Anhydrides; Surface Properties

2016
Attachment of 3-(Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane on silicon oxide surfaces: dependence on solution temperature.
    Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids, 2008, Nov-18, Volume: 24, Issue:22

    Parameters important to the self-assembly of 3-(aminopropyl)triethoxysilane (APTES) on chemically grown silicon oxide (SiO 2) to form an aminopropyl silane (APS) film have been investigated using in situ infrared (IR) absorption spectroscopy. Preannealing to approximately 70 degrees C produces significant improvements in the quality of the film: the APS film is denser, and the Si-O-Si bonds between the molecules and the SiO 2 surface are more structured and ordered with only a limited number of remaining unreacted ethoxy groups. In contrast, post-annealing the functionalized SiO 2 samples after room temperature reaction with APTES (i.e., ex situ annealing) does not lead to any spectral change, suggesting that post-annealing has no strong effect on the horizontal polymerization as suggested earlier. Both IR and ellipsometry data show that the higher the solution temperature, the denser and thinner the APS layer is for a given immersion time. Finally, the APS layer obtained by preannealing the solution at 70 degrees C exhibits a better stability in deionized water than the APS layer prepared at room temperature.

    Topics: Microscopy, Atomic Force; Normal Distribution; Oxides; Oxygen; Polymers; Silanes; Silicon; Silicon Dioxide; Spectrophotometry, Infrared; Surface Properties; Temperature; Time Factors; Water

2008