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Dive into the research topics where John A. Howarter is active.

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Featured researches published by John A. Howarter.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part B | 2011

In situ formation of silver nanoparticles in photocrosslinking polymers

Ya-Jun Cheng; Diana N. Zeiger; John A. Howarter; Xinran Zhang; Nancy J. Lin; Joseph M. Antonucci; Sheng Lin-Gibson

Nanocomposites of cross-linked methacrylate polymers with silver nanoparticles have been synthesized by coupling photoinitiated free radical polymerization of dimethacrylates with in situ silver ion reduction. A polymerizable methacrylate bearing a secondary amino functional group was used to increase the solubility of the silver salt in the hydrophobic resin system. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) revealed that the silver ion reduction had no significant effect on the degree of vinyl conversion of the methacrylate. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) measurements showed an increased silver concentration at the composite surface compared to the expected concentration based on the total amount of silver salt added. Furthermore, the surface silver concentration leveled off when the silver salt mass fractions were 0.08% or greater. Composites with low concentrations of silver salt (< 0.08% by mass) exhibited comparable mechanical properties to those containing no silver. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) confirmed that the silver nanoparticles formed within the polymer matrix were nanocrystalline in nature and primarily ≈ 3 nm in diameter, with some large particle aggregates. Composites containing silver nanoparticles were shown to reduce bacterial colonization with as little as 0.03% (by mass) silver salt, while additional amounts of silver salt did not further decrease their surface colonization. With a substantial effect on bacterial growth and minimal effects on mechanical properties, the in situ formation of silver nanoparticles within methacrylate materials is a promising technique for synthesizing antibacterial nanocomposites for biomedical applications.


Soft Matter | 2010

Instabilities as a measurement tool for soft materials

John A. Howarter; Christopher M. Stafford

Mechanical instabilities such as wrinkles, creases, and folds have long been viewed as a source of frustration for engineers and often a point of curiosity among scientists. Scientists aspire to understand the underlying physics behind the formation of mechanical instabilities and how to manipulate them for various endeavours, while engineers use this same understanding to design materials that inhibit or impede the formation of instabilities in critical applications. In recent years, a new movement in this community has emerged: harnessing these instabilities to provide critical insight into the properties of soft materials. We describe here the foundation of one particular analytical tool based on surface wrinkling and how this approach has been used to measure materials and systems that are inherently difficult to characterize. We also highlight some of the specific challenges and opportunities we envision for this measurement tool. Within this framework, we believe that there is great potential for broadening the capabilities of wrinkling metrology as the field of instability-engineering continues to mature.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2010

Investigation of thermally responsive block copolymer thin film morphologies using gradients.

Jennifer Y. Kelly; Julie N. L. Albert; John A. Howarter; Shuhui Kang; Christopher M. Stafford; Thomas H. Epps; Michael J. Fasolka

We report the use of a gradient library approach to characterize the structure and behavior of thin films of a thermally responsive block copolymer (BCP), poly(styrene-b-tert-butyl acrylate) (PS-b-PtBA), which exhibits chemical deprotection and morphological changes above a thermal threshold. Continuous gradients in temperature and film thickness, as well as discrete substrate chemistry conditions, were used to examine trends in deprotection, nanoscale morphology, and chemical structure. Thermal gradient annealing permitted the extraction of transformation rate constants (k(t)) for the completion of thermal deprotection and rearrangement of the film morphology from a single BCP library on hydroxyl and alkyl surfaces, respectively. The transformation rate constants ranged from 1.45 × 10(-4) s(-1) to 5.02 × 10(-5) s(-1) for temperatures between 185 and 140 °C for hydroxyl surfaces. For the same temperature range, the alkyl surfaces yielded k(t) values ranging from 4.76 × 10(-5) s(-1) to 5.73 × 10(-6) s(-1), an order of magnitude slower compared to hydroxyl surfaces. Activation energies of the thermal deprotection and film transformation on these surfaces were also extrapolated from linear fits to Arrhenius behavior. Moreover, we noted a morphology shift and orientation transformation from parallel lamellae to perpendicular cylinders at the free surface because of changes in volume fraction and surface energetics of the initially symmetric BCP. Using gradient techniques, we are able to correlate morphological and chemical structure changes in a rapid fashion, determine kinetics of transitions, and demonstrate the effect of surface chemistry on the deprotection reaction in thermally responsive BCP thin films.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Enhanced Wettability and Transport Control of Ultrafiltration and Reverse Osmosis Membranes with Grafted Polyelectrolytes.

Kai Gao; Logan T. Kearney; Ruocun Wang; John A. Howarter

End-functionalized poly(acrylic acid) (PAA-silane) was synthesized with reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer (RAFT) polymerization and attached to both polysulfone ultrafiltration (UF) and polyamide reverse osmosis (RO) membranes through a nonimpairing, one-step grafting to approach in order to improve membrane surface wettability with minimal impact on membrane transport performance. After PAA grafting, composition and morphology changes on the membrane surface were characterized with Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Static contact angle on PAA grafted membranes exhibited an increase in surface hydrophilicity and hence a potential enhancement in antifouling performance. The native contact angle on the polysulfone membrane systems was 86° and was reduced to 24° after modification, while the polyamide film contact angle decreased from 58° to 25°. The PAA layer endowed the porous UF membrane with dynamic control over the permeability and selectivity through the manipulation of the solution pH. The UF membrane with a 35 nm average pore size displayed a 115% increase in flux when the contact solution was changed from pH 11 to pH 3. This effect was diminished to 70% and 32% as the average pore size decreased to 20 and 10 nm, respectively. Modified RO membranes displayed no reduction in membrane performance indicating that the underlying materials were unaffected by the modification environment or added polymer. Model polyamide and polysulfone surfaces were reacted with the PAA-silane inside a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) to help inform the deposition behavior for the respective membrane chemistries.


Macromolecular Bioscience | 2012

Effect of Polymer Degree of Conversion on Streptococcus mutans Biofilms

Alison M. Kraigsley; Kathy Tang; Katrice A. Lippa; John A. Howarter; Sheng Lin-Gibson; Nancy J. Lin

Biofilm-material interactions are increasingly recognized as critical to success of some materials/devices and failure of others. We use a model system of dental monomers, salivary pellicles, and oral biofilms to demonstrate for the first time that degree of conversion of cross-linked dimethacrylate polymers alters biofilm metabolic activity. This response is due primarily to leachable release (not surface chemistry) and is complex, with no changes in some biofilm measurements (i.e., biomass), and time- and leachable-dependent responses in others (i.e., metabolic activity). These results highlight the need for considering biofilm-material interactions when designing/evaluating new materials.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Hydrothermal Synthesis and Processing of Barium Titanate Nanoparticles Embedded in Polymer Films

Michael D. Toomey; Kai Gao; Gamini Mendis; Elliott B. Slamovich; John A. Howarter

Barium titanate nanoparticles embedded in flexible polymer films were synthesized using hydrothermal processing methods. The resulting films were characterized with respect to material composition, size distribution of nanoparticles, and spatial location of particles within the polymer film. Synthesis conditions were varied based on the mechanical properties of the polymer films, ratio of polymer to barium titanate precursors, and length of aging time between initial formulations of the solution to final processing of nanoparticles. Block copolymers of poly(styrene-co-maleic anhydride) (SMAh) were used to spatially separate titanium precursors based on specific chemical interactions with the maleic anhydride moiety. However, the glassy nature of this copolymer restricted mobility of the titanium precursors during hydrothermal processing. The addition of rubbery butadiene moieties, through mixing of the SMAh with poly(styrene-butadiene-styrene) (SBS) copolymer, increased the nanoparticle dispersion as a result of greater diffusivity of the titanium precursor via higher mobility of the polymer matrix. Additionally, an aminosilane was used as a means to retard cross-linking in polymer-metalorganic solutions, as the titanium precursor molecules were shown to react and form networks prior to hydrothermal processing. By adding small amounts of competing aminosilane, excessive cross-linking was prevented without significantly impacting the quality and composition of the final barium titanate nanoparticles. X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were used to verify nanoparticle compositions. Particle sizes within the polymer films were measured to be 108 ± 5 nm, 100 ± 6 nm, and 60 ± 5 nm under different synthetic conditions using electron microscopy. Flexibility of the films was assessed through measurement of the glass transition temperature using dynamic mechanical analysis. Dielectric permittivity was measured using an impedance analyzer.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2011

Wetting Behavior of Oleophobic Polymer Coatings Synthesized from Fluorosurfactant-Macromers

John A. Howarter; Kirsten L. Genson; Jeffrey P. Youngblood


Archive | 2007

Stimuli-Responsive Polymeric Surface Materials

Jeffrey P. Youngblood; John A. Howarter


Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 2012

Manipulating morphology and orientation in thermally responsive block copolymer thin films

Jennifer Y. Kelly; Julie N. L. Albert; John A. Howarter; Christopher M. Stafford; Thomas H. Epps; Michael J. Fasolka


Archive | 2005

FLUORINATED SURFACTANTS AS STIMULI-RESPONSIVE POLYMERS AND BRUSHES

John A. Howarter; Jeffrey P. Youngblood; Si Nco

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Christopher M. Stafford

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jennifer Y. Kelly

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Peter M. Johnson

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Michael J. Fasolka

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Sheng Lin-Gibson

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Nancy J. Lin

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Diana N. Zeiger

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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