2 resultados para 2-BUTENE

em Aston University Research Archive


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Polyanhydrides are useful biodegradable vehicles for controlled drug delivery. In aqueous media the breaking of the anhydride bonds resulting in gradually polymer fragments collapse and release drugs in a controlled manner. In this study, two new biodegradable polyanhydrides copolymers were synthesised using a melt-polycondensation method. The first is poly (bis (p-carboxyphenoxy)-2-butene-co-sebacic acid) (CP2B: SA), which has double bonds along the polymer backbone. The second is crosslinked poly (glutamic acid-sebacic acid-co-sebacic acid) (GluSA: SA), where the conjugated unit of glutamic acid with sebacic acid (glutamic acid-SA) acted as a crosslinking fragment in producing the crosslinking polymer. The two polymers were applied to preparation of microspheres with bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a model protein, using both double emulsion solvent evaporation and spray drying methods. The characterisation of the microspheres, morphology, particle size, and drug loading, was studied. The in vitro hydrolytic degradation of polymers and blank microspheres was monitored using IR, GPC, and DSC. In vitro drug release behaviour was also studied. Though the studies showed cleavages of anhydride bonds occurred rapidly (<5 days), bulks of the polymer microspheres could be observed after a few weeks to a month; and only around 10-35% of the protein was detectable in a four-week period in vitro. We found the pH of the medium exerts a large impact on the release of the protein from the microspheres. The higher the pH, the faster the release. Therefore the release of the protein from the polyanhydride microspheres was pH-sensitive due mainly to the dissolution of monomers from the microspheres.

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The selective oxidation of crotyl alcohol has been explored over a Pd(111) model catalyst. At low temperatures, the alcohol adsorbs intact with the C=C bond parallel to the surface. Activation likely proceeds through an allyl alkoxide intermediate that follows two distinct reaction channels. Over the clean surface, ∼90% of the alcohol oxidizes to surface bound crotonaldehyde above 200 K, which subsequently all decarbonylates to propene and CO at room temperature. The minor reaction channel involves C-O scission to 2-butene and water. While some of these undesired reactively formed alkene products desorb around 300 K, the majority dehydrogenate to irreversibly bound carbon above 380 K. This latter decomposition pathway is unlikely to be important at the low temperatures utilized in liquid-phase crotyl alcohol oxidation over supported palladium catalysts. Adsorbed CO persists until 430 K and is likely responsible for site-blocking and deactivation of dispersed metallic Pd clusters. Coadsorbed oxygen suppresses crotonaldehyde decarbonylation and promotes its release from the surface. © 2007 American Chemical Society.