DocumentCode
1885463
Title
Initial adhesion of microorganisms to polymeric membranes
Author
Kang, Seoktae ; Agarwal, Gaurav ; Hoek, Eric M V ; Deshusses, Marc A.
Author_Institution
Chem. & Environ. Eng., California Univ., Riverside, CA, USA
fYear
2003
fDate
20-23 July 2003
Firstpage
262
Abstract
Biofilms form in nearly every environment that provides a surface, nutrients, and water. They can be found, for example, in almost all natural aquatic environments; on teeth, bone interstices, and oral epithelia of animals and humans; on hulls of marine installations and ship bottoms; on prosthetic devices and medical implants; on water conduits and in filters; and even ion the "sterile" surfaces of the computer chip manufacturing industry. The generally accepted stages in the development of microbial biofilms are transport to the surface, initial attachment, "more permanent" adhesion, proliferation, and biofilm formation. In some of the systems described above transport is dominated by microorganism mobility (combination of thermal diffusion and motility), in others convective drag forces influence the transport of microbes toward the surface of interest. Once in close proximity to a surface, microorganisms may initially attach via any combination of intermolecular (van der Waals), electrostatic, or hydrophobic forces like simple colloids, and later become more permanently adhered by exuding extra-cellular polymeric substances (EPS).
Keywords
adhesion; biomembranes; biotransport; cellular biophysics; colloids; microorganisms; polymers; thermal diffusion; thin films; adhesion; bone interstices; colloids; computer chip manufacturing; drag forces; electrostatic forces; extra-cellular polymeric substances; hydrophobic forces; intermolecular forces; marine installations; medical implants; microbial biofilms; microorganism mobility; nutrients; oral epithelia; polymeric membranes; prosthetic devices; sterile surfaces; teeth; thermal diffusion; van der Waals forces; Adhesives; Animals; Biomembranes; Bones; Humans; Marine vehicles; Microorganisms; Polymers; Prosthetics; Teeth;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
MEMS, NANO and Smart Systems, 2003. Proceedings. International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7695-1947-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICMENS.2003.1222005
Filename
1222005
Link To Document