Abstract

Deposition kinetics of positively charged polymer microparticles, characterized by prolate spheroid shape, at silica and gold sensors was investigated using the quartz microbalance (QCM) technique. Reference measurements were also performed for positively charged polymer particles of spherical shape and the same mass as the spheroids. Primarily, the frequency and bandwidth shifts for various overtones were measured as a function of time. It is shown that the ratio of these signals is close to unity for all overtones. These results were converted to the dependence of the frequency shift on the particle coverage, directly determined by atomic force microscopy and theoretically interpreted in terms of the hydrodynamic model. A quantitative agreement with experiments was attained considering particle slip relative to the ambient oscillating flow. In contrast, the theoretical results pertinent to the rigid contact model proved inadequate. The particle deposition kinetics derived from the QCM method was compared with theoretical modeling performed according to the random sequential adsorption approach. This allowed to assess the feasibility of the QCM technique to furnish proper deposition kinetics for anisotropic particles. It is argued that the hydrodynamic slip effect should be considered in the interpretation of QCM kinetic results acquired for bioparticles, especially viruses.

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