Abstract
With the
microfluidics community embracing 3D resin printing as a rapid fabrication
method, controlling surface chemistry has emerged as a new challenge.
Fluorination of 3D printed surfaces is highly desirable in many applications
due to chemical inertness, low friction coefficients, anti-fouling properties
and the potential for selective hydrophobic patterning. Despite sporadic
reports, silanization methods have not been optimized for covalent bonding with
polymeric resins. As a case study, we tested the silanization of a commercially
available (meth)acrylate-based resin (BV-007A) with a fluoroalkyl
trichlorosilane. Interestingly, plasma oxidation was unnecessary for silanization
of this resin, and indeed was ineffective. Solvent-based deposition in a
fluorinated oil (FC-40) generated significantly higher contact angles than
deposition in ethanol or gas-phase deposition, yielding hydrophobic surfaces with
contact angle > 110˚ under optimized conditions. Attenuated Total Reflectance-Fourier
Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy indicated that the increase in
contact angle correlated with consumption of a carbonyl moiety, suggesting
covalent bonding of the silane without plasma oxidation. Consistent with a
covalent bond, the silanization was resistant to mechanical damage and
hydrolysis in methanol, and was stable over long-term storage. When tested on a
suite of photocrosslinkable resins, this silanization protocol generated highly
hydrophobic surfaces (contact angle > 110˚) on three resins and moderate
hydrophobicity (90 – 100˚) on the remainder. Selective patterning of hydrophobic regions in
an open 3D-printed microchannel was possible in combination with simple masking
techniques. Thus, this facile
fluorination strategy is expected to be applicable
for resin-printed materials in a variety of contexts including micropatterning
and multiphase microfluidics.
Supplementary materials
Title
Catterton ResinFluorination SI
Description
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