Method of silanization of surfaces

4833093
Add to folder: View Folders  
Keywords to Highlight:

full-text

print

pdf

permalink

Inventors

Malmqvist, Magnus
Olofsson, Goran

Application #

111152

Filed

Oct-21-1987

Published

May-23-1989

Current US Class

134/42
427/255.6
435/6
435/7.32
435/7.4
435/7.8
436/527
436/828

International Classes

G01N 033/552; C12Q 001/68; C23G 016/00; B08B 007/00

Field of Search

436/527 436/828 435/174 435/176 435/6 435/7 427/3 427/255.6 134/42

Assignee

Forsvarets Forskningsanstalt (Stockholm, SE)

Examiners

Brown; Johnnie R.

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Fleit, Jacobson, Cohn & Price

US Patent References

4046870   Assay for free thyro...

Referenced by:

View Backward References

Other References

Buzek et al, Stoichiometry and Kinetics of the Reaction of Silica with Organosilicon Compounds, Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, vol. 79, No. 1, Jan. 1981, pp. 47-55. Hertl, Mechanism of Gaseous Siloxane Reaction with Silica I., The Journal of Physical Chemistry, vol. 72, No. 4, Apr. 1968, pp. 1248-1253. Hertl, Mechanism of Gaseous Siloxane Reaction with Silica II., The Journal of Physical Chemistry, vol. 72, No. 12, Nov. 1968, pp. 3993-3997. Methods in Enzymology (Klaus Mosbach, Ed.), vol. 44, 1976, Academic Press, pp. 134-149. Sagiv, Organized Monolayers by Adsorption. 1. Formation and Structure of Oleophobic Mixed Monolayers on Solid Surfaces, Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 102, Jan. 2, 1980, pp. 92-98. Handbook of Thin Film Technology (Leon I. Maissel & Reinhard Glang, Eds.), 1970, McGraw-Hill Book Company, pp. 6-37 to 6-42. Janata et al., Chemically Sensitive Field Effect Transistors, Ion-Selective Electrodes in Analytical Chemistry (H. Freiser, Ed.), vol. 2, 1980, pp. 107-172. Bascom, Structure of Silane Adhesion Promoter Films on Glass and Metal Surfaces, Macromolecules, vol. 5, No. 6, Nov.-Dec. 1972, pp. 792-798. Mittal et al., Vapor Deposited Silanes and Other Coupling Agents, J. Adhesion, 1976, vol. 8, pp. 93-97. Haller, Covalently Attached Organic Monolayers on Semiconductor Surfaces, Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 100, Dec. 20, 1978, pp. 8050-8055. Carlsson et al., Protein Thiolation and Reversible Protein-Protein Conjugation, Biochem. J. (1978), vol. 173, pp.723-737. Tadros et al, Adsorption of Potential-Determining Ions at the Silica Aqueous Electrolyte Interface and the Role of Somecations, J. Electronal. Chem., vol. 17 (1978), pp. 267-275. Chemical Abstracts, vol. 92 (1980), abstract No. 90 298e, Biophys.-Struct. Mech. 1979, 6(1) 67-80 (Eng.). Chemical Abstracts, vol. 93 (1980), abstract No. 91 093s, J. Appl. Biochem. 1979, 1(5-6), 442-7 (Eng.). Chemical Abstracts, vol. 91 (1979), abstract No. 188 710n, Sb. Nauchn. Tr., Vses. Nauchno-Issled. Inst. Lyuminoforov Osobo Chist. Veshchestv. 1978, 17, 90-4 (Russ.).

Citation

Cite This Patent

More From Subclass 527

6245578   Analytical apparatus
5366859   Radioimmunoassa...
4098876   Reverse sandwich i...
5766963   Combination hydro...
4558014   Assay apparatus a...
6054303   Cyclosporin immu...
5089391   Threshold ligand-r...
4880751   Immunoglobulin a...
4478946   Carrier bound im...
5695990   Phycobilisomes, de...
4592995   Reagent for strepto...
6210908   Activated peptides...
 

More From Class 436

5478527   Highly reflective bi...
6365104   Assembly for analy...
4894348   Fluorescein-conjug...
6184040   Diagnostic assay sy...
4957859   Antibodies for trans...
4857474   Phycoerythrins usef...
4200436   Immunochemical...
4151253   High-precision pre...
5939332   Phencyclidine ana...
6106781   Conveying system f...
4636360   Automatic analyzin...
5861259   Immunoassays for...
 
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method of silanizing surfaces for use in detecting organic molecules and biomolecules by means of surface-sensitive detection methods. The molecules to be detected become covalently bonded to the solid, plane test surface which contains, by means of silanization, groups which are functional for the covalent bonding. The invention relates to a silanization technique, which combines a special cleaning technique for the surfaces to be silanized and a silanization process at a low pressure and with the silane in gas phase and at an enhanced temperature of the surfaces to be silanized. The method gives reproducible surfaces provided with stable, homogenous and functional silane layers of mono-layer character.
 
Claims
We claim:

1. A method of silanizing a solid, plane surface so that a stable and reproducible silane layer is prepared on the surface, said silane layer having functional groups for covalent bonding of organic molecules, said method comprising the steps of:

making said solid, plane surface free from organic and inorganic contamination, activated, hdyrophilic and reproducible by cleaning said surface in a first, basic solution comprising an oxidant, rinsing said surface in water, and then cleaning said surface in a second, acid solution comprising an oxidant;

rinsing said solid, plane surface in water

blow drying said solid, plane surface; and

silanizing said solid, plane surface by vacuum distillation utilizing silane in a gas phase at a low pressure of 10.sup.'6 to 1 torr while maintaining the temperature of the solid surface between 75.degree.-250.degree. C.



Description
The present invention relates to an improved method of silanization of surfaces for use in detecting organic molecules or biomolecules, e.g., proteins.

Biomolecules may be detected by utilizing the biospecificity between two or more different molecules. The reaction product thus obtained may then be determined and measured in a number of different ways. The most common detection methods used today are based on some kind of labelling, for instance with an enzyme or radioactive isotopes, of one or more of the measuring system components. Such methods are time-consuming, require costly and relatively complicated equipment, are not suitable for automation, and the use of radioactive isotopes is not preferred for working environment reasons.

In surface-sensitive detection methods, the labelling of the components is eliminated, and the reaction product obtained is measured directly. Examples of detection methods of this kind are ellipsometry and simplified variants thereof (Ellipsometry and Polarized Light, Azzam, R. M. A. and Bashara, N. M., North Holland Publ., Amsterdam, 1977); chemically sensitive field-effect transistor, so-called CHEM-FET (Theory, Design and Biomedical Applications of Solid State Chemcial Sensors, Cheung, P. W., Flemming, D. G., Neuman, M. R. and Ko, W. H. (eds.), CRC Press Inc., 1977); and other electrochemical detection systems, such as measurement of differential capacitance and potential changes.
 
  A method for determining thyroxine uptake of a sample serum comprising: (a) incubating the sample serum with solid phase thyroxine and labeled anti-TBG...  An assay apparatus employing total internal reflection of excitation radiation at the interface between an optically conductive rod or fiber and a surrounding...