Is a Permanently Sterile Surface Possible with Chemical Coating Technology?

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The discussion centers around a materials science course project focused on a coating that can render surfaces permanently sterile by destroying microbial cell membranes. The original poster recalls an article about this innovative coating, which is said to be chemically bonded to surfaces, making it resistant to washing or chipping. However, a participant expresses skepticism about the feasibility of achieving true sterility, noting that certain resilient pathogens, such as Bacillus and Clostridium spores, pose significant challenges due to their hardiness and unique structures. This highlights the complexities involved in developing coatings that can guarantee complete sterility in various environments. Additional resources or links related to this topic are sought to further explore the concept.
Will
I am in a materials science class and need to come up with a course project. One thing that interested me was in an article that I read in the paper a while back. It was about the development of some kind of coating that could be applied to surface that could render it permanently sterile. I think it worked by reacting with the cell membrane of a microbe, destroying it and killing the pathogen. I also thought I remember reading that this coating could not be washed or chipped off, like it was chemically bonded to the surface or something.
Any additional resources, links or information would be greatly appreciated!

Will
 
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While 'antiseptic' is possible, I don't see sterile as possible. Sterile means 'completely without life', therefore you would have to account for 'hard pathogens' such as baccilus and clostridium spores, mold spores, and mycobacterium. All of which are hard to kill and do not have a cell membrane (except for mycobacterium and that is more of a waxy membrane).
 
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