Anti-Fouling and Anti-Biofilm Performance of Self-Polishing Waterborne Polyurethane with Gemini Quaternary Ammonium Salts

Polymers (Basel). 2023 Jan 7;15(2):317. doi: 10.3390/polym15020317.

Abstract

Biofilms are known to be difficult to eradicate and control, complicating human infections and marine biofouling. In this study, self-polishing and anti-fouling waterborne polyurethane coatings synthesized from gemini quaternary ammonium salts (GQAS), polyethylene glycol (PEG), and polycaprolactone diol (PCL) demonstrate excellent antibiofilm efficacy. Their anti-fouling and anti-biofilm performance was confirmed by a culture-based method in broth media, with the biofilm formation factor against Gram-positive (S. aureus) and Gram-negative bacterial strains (E. coli) for 2 days. The results indicate that polyurethane coatings have excellent anti-biofilm activity when the content of GQAS reached 8.5 wt% against S. aureus, and 15.8 wt% against E. coli. The resulting waterborne polyurethane coatings demonstrate both hydrolytic and enzymatic degradation, and the surface erosion enzymatic degradation mechanism enables them with good self-polishing capability. The extracts cyto-toxicity of these polyurethane coatings and degradation liquids was also systematically studied; they could be degraded to non-toxic or low toxic compositions. This study shows the possibility to achieve potent self-polishing and anti-biofilm efficacy by integrating antibacterial GQAS, PEG, and PCL into waterborne polyurethane coatings.

Keywords: anti-biofilm; anti-fouling; self-polishing; waterborne polyurethane.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by National Natural Science Foundation (52001081, 52071091, 52274296], the Basic and Applied Basic Research Project of Guangzhou (202201011525), the Opening Project of State Key Laboratory of Polymer Materials Engineering (Sichuan University) (sklpme2018-4-32), the Open Program of State Key Laboratory of Metal Material for Marine Equipment and Application (SKLMEA-K202007).