(604d) Silk Protein Self-Assembly As a Pathway Towards Universal Nano-Thin Coatings | AIChE

(604d) Silk Protein Self-Assembly As a Pathway Towards Universal Nano-Thin Coatings

Authors 

Zha, R. - Presenter, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Messersmith, P., University of California, Berkeley
Scheibel, T., University of Bayreuth
Bauer, J., University of Bayreuth
Winkler, A., University of Bayreuth
Delparastan, P., University of California, Berkeley
Fink, T. D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Silk is a supramolecular material with exceptional properties such as mechanical robustness and biocompatibility. Here, we present a mild and substrate-independent process that leverages the self-assembly of silk protein dissolved in aqueous solution into insoluble thin-film coatings. We demonstrate that the kinetics of this process can be tuned using one or more kosmotropic factors, such as heat or potassium phosphate. Using multi-scale imaging and spectroscopy techniques, we show that these coatings can exhibit homogeneity across a large surface area and excellent fidelity to fine substrate topology. Furthermore, our studies suggest that these nano-thin coatings resist bacterial colonization and biofilm formation and are therefore promising materials for biomedical device interfaces.