Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating

Problem statement: Polystyrene failed to provide any reactive functionality of surface hydrophilicity that is capable of binding proteins. It is known that polystyrene must be chemically modified to make its surface amenable to covalent crosslinking with protein. Approach: The aim of this study was...

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Main Authors: Yusilawati, A.N., Maizirwan, M., Hamzah, M.S., Ng, K.H., Wong, Chiow San
Format: Article
Published: Science Publications 2010
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/1249/
https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2010.724.731
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spelling my.um.eprints.12492019-11-13T06:38:28Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/1249/ Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating Yusilawati, A.N. Maizirwan, M. Hamzah, M.S. Ng, K.H. Wong, Chiow San Q Science (General) QC Physics Problem statement: Polystyrene failed to provide any reactive functionality of surface hydrophilicity that is capable of binding proteins. It is known that polystyrene must be chemically modified to make its surface amenable to covalent crosslinking with protein. Approach: The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of UV/ozone treatment on gelatin coating. The surfaces of microsize polystyrene beads (150 μm) were modified by UV/ozone treatment system at different treatment time, ozone flow-rate and UV intensity was analyzed by Design expert software. The treated beads were characterized with ATR-FTIR analysis to determine the introduction of carbonyl (-C=O), carboxylic group (-COOH) and amide group (-CO-NH2) onto the polystyrene surface. Sample characterization was also carried out by SEM and densitometer. Gelatin immobilization was then preceded by incubating treated PS sample in gelatin solution and the total amount of gelatin coated on the modified surface was identified by Bradford assay. Results: The maximum amount of gelatin obtained was 63.75 μg mL-1 while the lowest amount obtained for untreated PS (9.947 μg mL-1). The introduction of carbonyl, hydroxyl and amide group on the polystyrene beads surface was confirmed by ATR-FTIR analysis and thus measures the importance of UV/ozone treatment. Conclusion: From the results, it has been found that time is the most significant factor to prepare samples for gelatin immobilization at reduced flow rate and at an increased Ultraviolet (UV) intensity in the ranges of study. © 2010 Science Publications. Science Publications 2010 Article PeerReviewed Yusilawati, A.N. and Maizirwan, M. and Hamzah, M.S. and Ng, K.H. and Wong, Chiow San (2010) Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating. American Journal of Applied Sciences, 7 (6). pp. 724-731. ISSN 1554-3641 https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2010.724.731 doi:10.3844/ajassp.2010.724.731
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Q Science (General)
QC Physics
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
QC Physics
Yusilawati, A.N.
Maizirwan, M.
Hamzah, M.S.
Ng, K.H.
Wong, Chiow San
Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
description Problem statement: Polystyrene failed to provide any reactive functionality of surface hydrophilicity that is capable of binding proteins. It is known that polystyrene must be chemically modified to make its surface amenable to covalent crosslinking with protein. Approach: The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of UV/ozone treatment on gelatin coating. The surfaces of microsize polystyrene beads (150 μm) were modified by UV/ozone treatment system at different treatment time, ozone flow-rate and UV intensity was analyzed by Design expert software. The treated beads were characterized with ATR-FTIR analysis to determine the introduction of carbonyl (-C=O), carboxylic group (-COOH) and amide group (-CO-NH2) onto the polystyrene surface. Sample characterization was also carried out by SEM and densitometer. Gelatin immobilization was then preceded by incubating treated PS sample in gelatin solution and the total amount of gelatin coated on the modified surface was identified by Bradford assay. Results: The maximum amount of gelatin obtained was 63.75 μg mL-1 while the lowest amount obtained for untreated PS (9.947 μg mL-1). The introduction of carbonyl, hydroxyl and amide group on the polystyrene beads surface was confirmed by ATR-FTIR analysis and thus measures the importance of UV/ozone treatment. Conclusion: From the results, it has been found that time is the most significant factor to prepare samples for gelatin immobilization at reduced flow rate and at an increased Ultraviolet (UV) intensity in the ranges of study. © 2010 Science Publications.
format Article
author Yusilawati, A.N.
Maizirwan, M.
Hamzah, M.S.
Ng, K.H.
Wong, Chiow San
author_facet Yusilawati, A.N.
Maizirwan, M.
Hamzah, M.S.
Ng, K.H.
Wong, Chiow San
author_sort Yusilawati, A.N.
title Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
title_short Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
title_full Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
title_fullStr Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
title_full_unstemmed Surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
title_sort surface modification of polystyrene beads by ultraviolet/ozone treatment and its effect on gelatin coating
publisher Science Publications
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/1249/
https://doi.org/10.3844/ajassp.2010.724.731
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score 13.211869