Abstract

In this publication we present a detailed study of visco- elastic biofilms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Sample solutions were extracted from biofilm layers grown on Pseudomonas isolation agar. This aqueous solutions of extracel- lular polymeric substances exhibit weak elastic effects caused by entanglements and a small number of permanent junction points formed by calcium ions. The cross-linking mechanisms are confirmed by the Cox-Merz rule and dynamic fre- quency sweep tests, which result in an average lifetime of junction points of the order of 17 ms. The experimental data reveal 3.4·10 17 elastically effective chains per liter of solution and no significant temper- ature effects in the regime between 2 and 24 � C. This result coincides pretty well with the concentration of dissolved polymer chains (2.9·10 17 molecules/l). Upon addi- tion of calcium ions, one observes the formation of stable supermolec- ular networks with permanent junc- tion points. These cross-linking points did not show thermal fluctu- ations in time zones between 10 ms and several hours. The entanglement density of these gels is of the same order as observed in the non-cross- linked sol state (entrapped entan- glements). In spite of the different molecular composition alginate gels show the same type of cross-linking mechanism as gels of extracellular polymeric substances.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call