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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Imbrogno is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Imbrogno.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Polymer Brushes for Membrane Separations: A Review

John J. Keating; Joseph Imbrogno; Georges Belfort

The fundamentals and applications of polymer brush-modified membranes are reviewed. This new class of synthetic membranes is explored with an emphasis on tuning the membrane performance through polymer brush grafting. This work highlights the intriguing performance characteristics of polymer brush-modified membranes in a variety of separations. Polymer brushes are a versatile and effective means in designing membranes for applications in protein adsorption and purification, colloid stabilization, sensors, water purification, pervaporation of organic compounds, gas separations, and as stimuli responsive materials.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

A new combinatorial method for synthesizing, screening, and discovering antifouling surface chemistries.

Joseph Imbrogno; Matthew D. Williams; Georges Belfort

A set of diverse monomers were synthesized using combinatorial chemistry and tested using our unique high-throughput screening platform. The versatility of our platform is exemplified by possible applications in reducing biological fouling on ship hulls, filtration membranes, and surgical instruments, to name a few. To demonstrate its efficacy, the novel monomers were graft-polymerized onto light sensitive poly(ether sulfone) (PES) membranes via atmospheric-pressure plasma polymerization. A diverse library was synthesized by reacting a common vinyl ester linker with a library of maleimides containing various different functional groups. This allowed us to produce a library of many different surfaces and graft them all using the same linker chemistry. The modified surfaces were then tested and screened for the best antiprotein adsorption (nonfouling) properties. Membranes, functionalized with carboxylic acid, zwitterionic, and ester groups, had the lowest protein adhesion compared with that of an unmodified control PES membrane after a static fouling test. After dynamic fouling, these same functionalities as well as a hydroxyl group exhibited the highest permeability. These monomers performed better than our best previously synthesized amide monomers as well as our best poly(ethylene glycol) monomers, which are known to have very high protein resistance. Hansen solubility parameters qualitatively predicted which monomers performed best, indicating favorable interactions with water molecules.


Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering | 2016

Membrane Desalination: Where Are We, and What Can We Learn from Fundamentals?

Joseph Imbrogno; Georges Belfort

Although thermal desalination technology provides potable water in arid regions (e.g., Israel and the Gulf), its relatively high cost has limited application to less arid regions with large populations (e.g., California). Energy-intensive distillation is currently being replaced with less costly pressure- and electrically driven membrane-based processes. Reverse osmosis (RO) is a preferred membrane technology owing to process and pre- and posttreatment improvements that have significantly reduced energy requirements and cost. Further technical advances will require a deeper understanding of the fundamental science underlying RO. This includes determining the mechanism for water selectivity; elucidating the behavior of molecular water near polar and apolar surfaces, as well as the advantages and limitations of hydrophobic versus hydrophilic pores; learning the rules of selective water transport from nature; and designing synthetic analogs for selective water transport. Molecular dynamics simulations supporting experiments will play an important role in advancing these efforts. Finally, future improvements in RO are limited by inherent technical mass transfer limitations.


Langmuir | 2016

Phosphate Ions Affect the Water Structure at Functionalized Membrane Surfaces

Aliyah Barrett; Joseph Imbrogno; Georges Belfort; Poul B. Petersen

Antifouling surfaces improve function, efficiency, and safety in products such as water filtration membranes, marine vehicle coatings, and medical implants by resisting protein and biofilm adhesion. Understanding the role of water structure at these materials in preventing protein adhesion and biofilm formation is critical to designing more effective coatings. Such fouling experiments are typically performed under biological conditions using isotonic aqueous buffers. Previous studies have explored the structure of pure water at a few different antifouling surfaces, but the effect of electrolytes and ionic strength (I) on the water structure at antifouling surfaces is not well studied. Here sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy is used to characterize the interfacial water structure at poly(ether sulfone) (PES) and two surface-modified PES films in contact with 0.01 M phosphate buffer with high and low salt (Ionic strength, I= 0.166 and 0.025 M, respectively). Unmodified PES, commonly used as a filtration membrane, and modified PES with a hydrophobic alkane (C18) and with a poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) were used. In the low ionic strength phosphate buffer, water was strongly ordered near the surface of the PEG-modified PES film due to exclusion of phosphate ions and the creation of a surface potential resulting from charge separation between phosphate anions and sodium cations. However, in the high ionic strength phosphate buffer, the sodium and potassium chloride (138 and 3 mM, respectively) in the phosphate buffered saline screened this charge and substantially reduced water ordering. A much smaller water ordering and subsequent reduction upon salt addition was observed for the C18-modified PES, and little water structure change was seen for the unmodified PES. The large difference in water structuring with increasing ionic strength between widely used phosphate buffer and phosphate buffered saline at the PEG interface demonstrates the importance of studying antifouling coatings in the same aqueous environment for which they are designed. These results further suggest that strong long-range water structuring is limited in high ionic strength environments, such as within cells, facilitating chemical and biological reactions and processes.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Egg White Varnishes on Ancient Paintings: A Molecular Connection to Amyloid Proteins

Joseph Imbrogno; Arpan Nayak; Georges Belfort

For about 400 years, egg white was used to coat and protect paintings without detailed understanding of its molecular properties. A molecular basis is provided for its advantageous properties and one of its protective properties is demonstrated with oxygen transport behavior. Compared to the native secondary structure of ovalbumin in solution of circa 33% α-helix and β-sheet, attenuated total reflection-FTIR (ATR-FTIR) spectra showed a 73% decrease of α-helix content and a 44% increase of β-sheet content over eight days. The data suggest that the final coating of dissolved ovalbumin from egg white after long exposure to air, which is hydrophobic, comprises mostly β-sheet content (ca. 50%), which is predicted to be the lowest-energy structure of proteins and close to that found in amyloid fibrils. Coating a synthetic polytetrafluoroethylene membrane with multiple layers of egg white decreased oxygen diffusion by 50% per layer with a total decrease of almost 100% for four layers.


Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2015

Making polymeric membranes antifouling via “grafting from” polymerization of zwitterions

Qian Li; Joseph Imbrogno; Georges Belfort; Xiaolin Wang


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

New Class of Synthetic Membranes: Organophilic Pervaporation Brushes for Organics Recovery

Joseph Grimaldi; Joseph Imbrogno; James E. Kilduff; Georges Belfort


Desalination | 2017

Critical aspects of RO desalination: A combination strategy

Joseph Imbrogno; John J. Keating; James E. Kilduff; Georges Belfort


ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering | 2017

Polarized, Cobblestone, Human Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cell Maturation on a Synthetic PEG Matrix

Yangzi Tian; Michael R. Zonca; Joseph Imbrogno; Andrea M. Unser; Lauren Sfakis; Sally Temple; Georges Belfort; Yubing Xie


Macromolecular Bioscience | 2014

Enhanced Stem Cell Pluripotency in Surface-Modified Electrospun Fibrous Matrices

Michael R. Zonca; Philip S. Yune; James K. Williams; Minghao Gu; Andrea M. Unser; Joseph Imbrogno; Georges Belfort; Yubing Xie

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Georges Belfort

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Arpan Nayak

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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James E. Kilduff

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Andrea M. Unser

State University of New York System

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John J. Keating

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Joseph Grimaldi

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Michael R. Zonca

State University of New York System

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Yubing Xie

State University of New York System

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Iv John Joseph Keating

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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