Metal oxides can increase the adhesion of negatively-charged bacteria to surfaces primarily due to their positive charge. However, the hydrophobicity of a metal-oxide surface can also increase adhesion of bacteria. In order to understand the relative contribution of charge and hydrophobicity to bacterial adhesion, we measured the adhesion of 8 strains of bacteria, under conditions of low and high-ionic strength (1 and 100 mM, respectively) to 11 different surfaces and examined adhesion as a function of charge, hydrophobicity (water contact angle) and surface energy. Inorganic surfaces included three uncoated glass surfaces and eight metal-oxide thin films prepared on the upper (non-tin-exposed) side of float glass by chemical vapor depositi...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
The aim of this paper was to determine the adhesion of two physico-chemically characterized bacteria...
The general context of this work is to study the effect of physicochemical properties on bacterial a...
This thesis presents the effect of the bacterial adhesion on the glass surface (hydrophilic surfaces...
The ongoing interest in bacterial interactions with various surfaces, followed by attachment and sub...
Bacterial transport and attachment to surfaces is of considerable importance to engineered and natur...
Most bacterial strains adhere poorly to poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-brush coatings, with the exceptio...
Initial adhesion of bacteria to biomaterials ' surface is assumed to be an important stage in t...
International audienceUnderstanding the mechanism of the bacterial cell adhesion to solid surfaces i...
The adhesion of P. fluorescens (ATCC 17552) to copper, zinc and aluminium brass in the absence and p...
<p>As mentioned in the introduction of this thesis bacterial adhesion has been studied from a ...
Extracellular DNA (eDNA) is an important structural component of biofilms formed by many bacteria, b...
As mentioned in the introduction of this thesis bacterial adhesion has been studied from a variety o...
Extracellular DNA (eDNA) is an important structural component of biofilms formed by many bacteria, b...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
The aim of this paper was to determine the adhesion of two physico-chemically characterized bacteria...
The general context of this work is to study the effect of physicochemical properties on bacterial a...
This thesis presents the effect of the bacterial adhesion on the glass surface (hydrophilic surfaces...
The ongoing interest in bacterial interactions with various surfaces, followed by attachment and sub...
Bacterial transport and attachment to surfaces is of considerable importance to engineered and natur...
Most bacterial strains adhere poorly to poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO)-brush coatings, with the exceptio...
Initial adhesion of bacteria to biomaterials ' surface is assumed to be an important stage in t...
International audienceUnderstanding the mechanism of the bacterial cell adhesion to solid surfaces i...
The adhesion of P. fluorescens (ATCC 17552) to copper, zinc and aluminium brass in the absence and p...
<p>As mentioned in the introduction of this thesis bacterial adhesion has been studied from a ...
Extracellular DNA (eDNA) is an important structural component of biofilms formed by many bacteria, b...
As mentioned in the introduction of this thesis bacterial adhesion has been studied from a variety o...
Extracellular DNA (eDNA) is an important structural component of biofilms formed by many bacteria, b...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
Bacterial adhesion can be controlled by different material surface properties, such as surface charg...
The aim of this paper was to determine the adhesion of two physico-chemically characterized bacteria...