Tuning the Topography of Non‐Wetting Surfaces to Reduce Short‐Term Microbial Contamination Within Hospitals

Microbial contamination of hospital surfaces is a major contributor to infectious disease transmission. This work demonstrates that superhydrophobic (Cassie‐Baxter) micro post topographies can significantly reduce cell attachment compared to flat controls. For ordered micro post arrays (post diamete...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advanced functional materials 2024-08, Vol.34 (32), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: van den Berg, Desmond, Asker, Dalal, Kim, Jungchul, Kim, Ho‐Young, Aizenberg, Joanna, Hatton, Benjamin
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container_issue 32
container_start_page
container_title Advanced functional materials
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creator van den Berg, Desmond
Asker, Dalal
Kim, Jungchul
Kim, Ho‐Young
Aizenberg, Joanna
Hatton, Benjamin
description Microbial contamination of hospital surfaces is a major contributor to infectious disease transmission. This work demonstrates that superhydrophobic (Cassie‐Baxter) micro post topographies can significantly reduce cell attachment compared to flat controls. For ordered micro post arrays (post diameters 0.3 to 150 µm), the attachment of four pathogens (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, and Candida albicans) from discrete contaminant droplets upon short‐term contact (15 s to 30 min) are assessed. There is a 3‐4‐log decrease in microbial attachment when reducing the micro posts diameters from 150 to 0.3 µm for all strains, with large posts (>20 µm) exhibiting similar attachment rates to flat controls. The critical, maximum feature size to prevent attachment can be tuned depending on the ratio of the cell size to post diameter. Two potential mechanisms are discussed for this size effect. First, application of the random sequential adsorption model shows that this relative post/cell size effect may be due to a reduced probability of attachment, which is theorized to be the dominant mechanism. Alternatively, a physical model is suggested for bacterial cell “pull‐off” due to surface tension forces during droplet dewetting. This work may be important for the design of non‐wetting antimicrobial surfaces within healthcare environments. Microbial contamination of hospital surfaces contributes to infectious disease transmission. Here it is shown that the size of superhydrophobic (Cassie‐Baxter) micro‐posts is critically important to significantly reduce microbial cell attachment, during short‐term droplet contact. Posts that are of the cell size or smaller can reduce cell counts by factors of 103 to 104, compared to flat controls.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/adfm.202315957
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subjects Attachment
bacterial attachment
Contaminants
Contamination
Droplets
E coli
fomite
Hospitals
Hydrophobicity
infectious disease transmission
Infectious diseases
Microorganisms
Size effects
superhydrophobic surfaces
Surface tension
Wetting
title Tuning the Topography of Non‐Wetting Surfaces to Reduce Short‐Term Microbial Contamination Within Hospitals
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