5 resultados para PROTEOGLYCAN SYNTHESIS RATES
em Aston University Research Archive
Resumo:
This thesis is concerned with the design and synthesis of a novel, injectable proteoglycan analogue for tissue repair. This is of particular relevance to the restoration of disc height to a degraded nucleus pulposus of the intervertebral disc. The focus is on the use of sulfonate monomers as proteoglycan analogues, in particular sodium 2-acrylamido-2-methylpropane sulfonic acid and the potassium salt of 3-sulfopropyl acrylate. For most biomedical applications, synthetic hydrogels need to show dimensional stability to changes in pH, osmolarity, and temperature. This is readily achieved by neutral structures however ionic sulfonate containing hydrogels are responsive to environmental change which renders them difficult to manage in most tissue replacement applications. In this case osmotic responsiveness rather than stability is desirable. Therefore sulfonate based materials possess advantageous properties. This is a result of the sulfonate becoming an ideal surrogate for the sulfate group present within the structure of natural proteoglycans. This thesis reports polymerisation studies based on the production of a redox initiated copolymer system capable of polymerising in situ within a timescale of circa. 5-7 minutes. The rheological properties, osmotic drive, and residual monomer content of successful compositions is analysed. Properties are adapted to mimic those of the target natural tissue. The adaptation of the material for use as an injectable intra-ocular lens, with hyaluronic acid as an interpenetrate is reported. The synthesis of a radiopaque macromer to allow visibility of the repair system once in situ is investigated and discussed. The results presented in this thesis describe a suitable proteoglycan tissue analogue which is injectable, biomimetic, osmotically responsive and mechanically stable in its desired application.
Resumo:
Ionic liquids based on 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (BmimBF4) and 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (BmimPF6) were used as reusable alternatives to volatile organic solvents (VOCs) for ethylenediammonium diacetate (EDDA) catalyzed Gewald synthesis of 2-aminothiophenes. Significant rate enhancement and improvement of the yield were observed. The ionic liquids containing catalyst EDDA were recycled several times with no decreases in yields and reaction rates.
Resumo:
Aromatic and aliphatic diacid chlorides were used to condense naturally occurring diamino acids and their esterified derivatives. It was anticipated the resulting functional polyamides would biodegrade to physiologically acceptable compounds and show pH dependant solubility could be used for biomedical applications ranging from enteric coatings to hydrosoluble drug delivery vehicles capable of targeting areas of low physiological pH. With these applications in mind the polymers were characterised by infra red spectroscopy, gel permeation chromatography and in the case of aqueous soluble polymers by potentiometric titration. Thin films of poly (lysine ethyl ester isophthalamide) plasticised with poly (caprolactone) were cast from DMSO/chloroform solutions and their mechanical properties measured on a Hounsfield Hti tensiometer. Interfacial synthesis was investigated as a synthetic route for the production of linear functional polyamides. High molecular weight polymer was obtained only when esterified diamino acids were condensed with aromatic diacid chlorides. The method was unsuitable for the production of copolymers of free and esterified amino acids with a diacid chloride. A novel miscible mixed solvent single phase reaction was investigated for production of copolymers of esterified and non-esterified amino acids with diacid chlorides. Aliphatic diacid chlorides were unsuitable for condensing diamino acids using this technique because of high rates of hydrolysis. The technique gave high molecular weight homopolymers from esterified diamino acids and aromatic diacid chlorides.
Resumo:
High quality CuS and CuS/ZnS core/shell nanocrystals (NCs) were synthesized in a large quantity using a facile hydrothermal method at low temperatures of 60 C and evaluated in the photodegradation of Rhodamine B (RhB) under visible light irradiation. Synthesis time plays an important role in controlling the morphology, size and photocatalytic activity of both CuS and CuS/ZnS core/shell NCs which evolve from spherical shaped particles to form rods with increasing reaction time, and after 5 h resemble "flower" shaped morphologies in which each "flower" is composed of many NCs. Photocatalytic activity originates from photo-generated holes in the narrow bandgap CuS, with encapsulation by large bandgap ZnS layers used to form the core/shell structure that improves the resistance of CuS towards photocorrosion. Such CuS/ZnS core/shell structures exhibit much higher photocatalytic activity than CuS or ZnS NCs alone under visible light illumination, and is attributed to higher charge separation rates for the photo-generated carriers in the core/shell structure. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.
Resumo:
The application of heterogeneous catalysts for the manufacture of renewable biodiesel fuels offers an exciting, alternative clean chemical technology to current energy intensive processes employing soluble base catalysts. We recently synthesised tuneable MgO nanocrystals as efficent solid base catalysts for biodiesel synthesis, and have developed a simple X-ray spectroscopic method to quantitatively determine surface basicity, thereby providing a rapid screening tool for predicting the reactivity of new solid base catalysts. Promotion of these MgO nanocrystals through Cs doping dramatically enhances biodiesel production rates due to the formaion of a mixed Cs Mg(CO ) phase. These MgO derived nanocatalysts permit energy efficent, continuous processing of diverse, sustainable oil feedstocks in flow reactors.