Keller et al., 2019 - Google Patents
Study of biofilm growth on slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces made from fluoroporKeller et al., 2019
- Document ID
- 13148826294873366881
- Author
- Keller N
- Bruchmann J
- Sollich T
- Richter C
- Thelen R
- Kotz F
- Schwartz T
- Helmer D
- Rapp B
- Publication year
- Publication venue
- ACS applied materials & interfaces
External Links
Snippet
Undesired growth of biofilms represents a fundamental problem for all surfaces in long-term contact with aqueous media. Mature biofilms resist most biocide treatments and often are a pathogenic threat. One way to prevent biofilm growth on surfaces is by using slippery liquid …
- 230000012010 growth 0 title abstract description 45
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C09—DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; MISCELLANEOUS COMPOSITIONS; MISCELLANEOUS APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS
- C09D—COATING COMPOSITIONS, e.g. PAINTS, VARNISHES OR LACQUERS; FILLING PASTES; CHEMICAL PAINT OR INK REMOVERS; INKS; CORRECTING FLUIDS; WOODSTAINS; PASTES OR SOLIDS FOR COLOURING OR PRINTING; USE OF MATERIALS THEREFOR
- C09D5/00—Coating compositions, e.g. paints, varnishes or lacquers, characterised by their physical nature or the effects produced; Filling pastes
- C09D5/16—Antifouling paints; Under-water paints
- C09D5/1687—Use of special additives
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
Keller et al. | Study of biofilm growth on slippery liquid-infused porous surfaces made from fluoropor | |
Wang et al. | Fabrication of slippery lubricant-infused porous surface with high underwater transparency for the control of marine biofouling | |
Wang et al. | Robust biomimetic hierarchical diamond architecture with a self-cleaning, antibacterial, and antibiofouling surface | |
Hwang et al. | The anti-biofouling properties of superhydrophobic surfaces are short-lived | |
Ellinas et al. | Is there a threshold in the antibacterial action of superhydrophobic surfaces? | |
Zhu et al. | Slippery liquid-like solid surfaces with promising antibiofilm performance under both static and flow conditions | |
Encinas et al. | Submicrometer-sized roughness suppresses bacteria adhesion | |
Howell et al. | Self-replenishing vascularized fouling-release surfaces | |
Liu et al. | Dual-functional, superhydrophobic coatings with bacterial anticontact and antimicrobial characteristics | |
He et al. | Emerging applications of bioinspired slippery surfaces in biomedical fields | |
Kolewe et al. | Bacterial adhesion is affected by the thickness and stiffness of poly (ethylene glycol) hydrogels | |
Dai et al. | Kill–resist–renew trinity: Hyperbranched polymer with self-regenerating attack and defense for antifouling coatings | |
Li et al. | Hydrophobic liquid-infused porous polymer surfaces for antibacterial applications | |
Ren et al. | Fouling-resistant behavior of silver nanoparticle-modified surfaces against the bioadhesion of microalgae | |
Kelleher et al. | Cicada wing surface topography: an investigation into the bactericidal properties of nanostructural features | |
Balaure et al. | Recent advances in surface nanoengineering for biofilm prevention and control. Part I: molecular basis of biofilm recalcitrance. passive anti-biofouling nanocoatings | |
Neoh et al. | Combating bacterial colonization on metals via polymer coatings: relevance to marine and medical applications | |
Lee et al. | Development of multimodal antibacterial surfaces using porous amine-reactive films incorporating lubricant and silver nanoparticles | |
Mu et al. | Influence of surface roughness, nanostructure, and wetting on bacterial adhesion | |
Schumacher et al. | Engineered nanoforce gradients for inhibition of settlement (attachment) of swimming algal spores | |
Zhang et al. | Quantitatively predicting bacterial adhesion using surface free energy determined with a spectrophotometric method | |
Liu et al. | Complementary effects of nanosilver and superhydrophobic coatings on the prevention of marine bacterial adhesion | |
Kumar et al. | Functional nanomaterials, synergisms, and biomimicry for environmentally benign marine antifouling technology | |
Gu et al. | On-demand removal of bacterial biofilms via shape memory activation | |
Cao et al. | Hierarchical rose petal surfaces delay the early-stage bacterial biofilm growth |