925 resultados para Stability in organic solvents
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Molecular self-assembly takes advantage of supramolecular non-covalent interactions (ionic, hydrophobic, van der Waals, hydrogen and coordination bonds) for the construction of organized and tunable systems. In this field, lipophilic guanosines can represent powerful building blocks thanks to their aggregation proprieties in organic solvents, which can be controlled by addition or removal of cations. For example, potassium ion can template the formation of piled G-quartets structures, while in its absence ribbon-like G aggregates are generated in solution. In this thesis we explored the possibility of using guanosines as scaffolds to direct the construction of ordered and self-assembled architectures, one of the main goals of bottom-up approach in nanotechnology. In Chapter III we will describe Langmuir-Blodgett films obtained from guanosines and other lipophilic nucleosides, revealing the “special” behavior of guanine in comparison with the other nucleobases. In Chapter IV we will report the synthesis of several thiophene-functionalized guanosines and the studies towards their possible use in organic electronics: the pre-programmed organization of terthiophene residues in ribbon aggregates could allow charge conduction through π-π stacked oligothiophene functionalities. The construction and the behavior of some simple electronic nanodevices based on these organized thiopehene-guanosine hybrids has been explored.
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Der Fokus dieser Arbeit liegt in dem Design, der Synthese und der Charakterisierung neuartiger photosensitiver Mikrogele und Nanopartikel als potentielle Materialien für Beladungs- und Freisetzungsanwendungen. Zur Realisierung dieses Konzepts wurden verschiedene Ansätze untersucht.Es wurden neuartige niedermolekulare lichtspaltbare Vernetzermoleküle auf der Basis von o-Nitrobenzylderivaten synthetisiert, charakterisiert und zur Herstellung von photosensitiven PMMA und PHEMA Mikrogelen verwendet. Diese sind unter Bestrahlung in organischen Lösungsmitteln quellbar und zersetzbar. Durch die Einführung anionischer MAA Gruppen in solche PHEMA Mikrogele wurde dieses Konzept auf doppelt stimuliresponsive p(HEMA-co-MAA) Mikrogele erweitert. Hierbei wurde ein pH-abhängiges Quellbarkeitsprofil mit der lichtinduzierten Netzwerkspaltung in wässrigen Medien kombiniert. Diese duale Sensitivität zu zwei zueinander orthogonalen Reizen stellt ein vielversprechendes Konzept zur Kombination einer pH-abhängigen Beladung mit einer lichtinduzierten Freisetzung von funktionellen Substanzen dar. Desweiteren wurden PAAm Mikrogele entwickelt, welche sowohl eine Sensitivität gegenüber Enzymen als auch Licht aufweisen. Dieses Verhalten wurde durch die Verwendung von (meth-)acrylatfunktionalisierten Dextranen als polymere Vernetzungsmoleküle erreicht. Das entsprechende stimuliresponsive Profil basiert auf der enzymatischen Zersetzbarkeit der Polysaccharid-Hauptkette und der Anbindung der polymerisierbaren Vinyleinheiten an diese über photospaltbare Gruppen. Die gute Wasserlöslichkeit der Vernetzermoleküle stellt einen vielversprechenden Ansatz zur Beladung solcher Mikrogele mit funktionellen hydrophilen Substanzen bereits während der Partikelsynthese dar. Ein weiteres Konzept zur Beladung von Mikrogelen basiert auf der Verwendung von photolabilen Wirkstoff-Mikrogel Konjugaten. In einem ersten Schritt zur Realisierung solch eines Ansatzes wurde ein neuartiges Monomer entwickelt. Hierbei wurde Doxorubicin über eine lichtspaltbare Gruppe an eine polymerisierbare Methacrylatgruppe angebunden. Für die Freisetzung hydrophober Substanzen in wässrigen Medien wurden polymere Photolack-Nanopartikel entwickelt, welche sich unter Bestrahlung in Wasser zersetzen. Die lichtinduzierte Änderung der Hydrophobizität des Polymers ermöglichte die Freisetzung von Nilrot durch das Auflösen der partikulären Struktur. Ein interessanter Ansatz zur Verhinderung einer unkontrollierten Freisetzung funktioneller Substanzen aus Mikrogelen ist die Einführung einer stimuliresponsiven Schale. In diesem Kontext wurden Untersuchungen zur Bildung von nicht-stimulisensitiven Schalen um vorgefertigte Mikrogelkerne und zur Synthese von Hydrogelkernen in vorgefertigten polymeren Schalen (Nanokapseln) durchgeführt.
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Polycarbosilanes are a class of polymers at the interface between organic and inorganic chemistry. They are characterized by a high thermal and chemical inertness and high flexibility, especially pronounced for branched structures. Linear polycarbosilanes are well known as precursors for the preparation of SiCx ceramics. Additionally, more sophisticated architectures like dendrimers, hyperbranched polymers or block copolymers have been the subject of research for more than a decade. The scope of this work was to expand the properties and fields of application for polycarbosilane-containing structures. Thus, the work is divided in two major parts. The first part covers the synthesis and characterization of hyperbranched polycarbosilanes containing organometallic moieties. Hyperbranched poly-carbosilanes were synthesized using hydrosilylation of diallylmethylsilane and methyldiundecenylsilane. The degree of branching for polydiallymethylsilane was determined using standard 1H-NMR spectroscopy. The functional building blocks ferrocenyldimethylsilane and diferrocenylmethylsilane were synthesized which contain an isolated ferrocene unit or two ferrocenes bridged by silicon, respectively. Hyperbranched polycarbosilanes functionalized with ferrocenyl moieties were synthesized by modification of preformed polymers or by copolymerization of AB2 carbosilane monomers with AX-type ferrocenylsilanes. Polymers with Mn = 2500-9000g/mol and ferrocene contents of up to 67wt% were obtained. Electrochemical characterization by cyclic voltammetry revealed that polymers functionalized with isolated ferrocene units showed a single reversible oxidation wave, while voltammograms for polymers functionalized with diferrocenyl silane exhibited two well-separated reversible oxidation-reduction waves. This shows that the polymer bound ferrocenes bridged by silicon are electronically communicating and thus oxidation of the first ferrocene shifts the oxidation potential for the adjacent one. The polymers were utilized successfully for the preparation of modified electrodes with persistent and reproducible electrochemical response in organic solvents as well as in aqueous solution. The presented work has proven that ferrocenyl-functionalized hyperbranched polymers exhibit similar electrochemical properties as the analogous dendrimers. In a further approach it was shown that hyperbranched polymers containing organometallic moieties can be synthesized by polymerization of a new ferrocene-containing AB2 monomer - diallylferrocenylsilane. The second part of this work is dedicated to the preparation of core-functional hyperbranched polycarbosilanes. Low molecular weight ambifunctional molecules were synthesized that contain double bonds for the attachment of a polycarbosilane polymer as well as a second functionality available for further reaction and modification. Reactive vinyl groups in the core molecule allow an efficient attachment of hyperbranched polycarbosilane which was proven by MALDI-ToF and GPC. In combination with slow monomer addition techniques molecular weight and polydispersity of the polymers were controlled successfully. Core-functional polymers were characterized by NMR-spectroscopy, MALDI-ToF and GPC. Polymers with polydispersities <2 and molecular weights up to 5300g/mol were obtained. Transformation of the double bonds of the carbosilane was demonstrated with various silanes using hydrosilylation reaction or hydrogenation. Additionally, the core-functionality was varied resulting in polymers with bromo-, phthalimide-, amine- or azide moieties. Thus, a versatile synthetic strategy was developed that allows the synthesis of tailor-made polymers.A promising approach is the application of the polymer building blocks in copolymer synthesis. Bisglycidolization of amine-functional polycarbosilanes produces macro-initiators that are suitable for the multibranching-ring opening polymerization of glycidol. This experiments lead to the first example of hyperbranched-hyperbranched amphiphilic block copolymers, hb-PG-b-hb-PCS. Furthermore, the implementation of copper-catalyzed cycloaddition between azide-functional polycarbosilane and alkyne-functional poly(ethoxyethyl glycidylether) resulted in linear-hyperbranched block copolymers. The facile removal of acetal protecting groups provided convenient access to lin-PG-b-hb-PCS.
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Small, smaller, nano - it is a milestone in the development of new materials and technologies. Nanoscience is now present in our daily lives: in the car industry with self-cleaning surfaces, in medicine with cancer therapies, even our clothes and cosmetics utilize nanoparticles. The number and variety of applications has been growing fast in recent years, and the possibilities seem almost infinite. Nanoparticles made of inorganic materials have found applications in new electronic technologies, and organic nanomaterials have been added to resins to produce very strong but light weight materials.rnThis work deals with the combination of organic and inorganic materials for the fabrication of new, functional hybrid systems. For that purpose, block copolymers were made with a long, solubility-enhancing and semiconducting block, and a short anchor block. They were synthesized by either RAFT polymerization or Siegrist polycondensation. For the second block, an active ester was grafted on and subsequently reacted with the anchor molecules in a polymer analogue reaction. The resulting block copolymers had different properties; poly(para-phenylene vinylene) showed self-assembly in organic solvents, which resulted in gelling of the solution. The fibers from a diluted solution were visible through microscopy. When polymer chains were attached to TiO2 nanorods, the hybrids could be integrated into polymer fibers. A light-induced charge separation was demonstrated through KPFM. The polymer charged positively and the charge could travel along the fibers for several hundred nanometers. Polymers made via RAFT polymerization were based on poly(vinyltriphenylamine). Ruthenium chromophores which carried anchor groups were attached to the second block. These novel block copolymers were then attached to ZnO nanorods. A light-induced charge separation was also demonstrated in this system. The ability to disperse inorganic nanoparticles within the film is another advantage of these block copolymers. This was shown with the example of CdSe tetrapods. Poly(vinyltriphenylamine dimer) with disulfide anchor groups was attached to CdSe tetrapods. These four-armed nanoparticles are supposed to show very high charge transport. A polymer without anchor groups was also mixed with the tetrapods in order to investigate the influence of the anchor groups. It was shown that without them no good films were formed and the tetrapods aggregated heavily in the samples. Additionally, a large difference in the film qualities and the aggregation of the tetrapods was found in the sample of the polymer with anchor groups, dependent on the tetrapod arm length and the polymer loading. These systems are very interesting for hybrid solar cells. This work also illustrates similar systems with quantum dots. The influence of the energy level of the polymer on the hole transport from the polymer to the quantum dots, as well as on the efficiency of QLEDs was studied. For this purpose two different polymers were synthesized with different HOMO levels. It was clearly shown that the polymer with the adjusted lower HOMO level had a better hole injection to the quantum dots, which resulted in more efficient light emitting diodes.rnThese systems all have in common the fact that novel, and specially designed polymers, were attached to inorganic nanocrystals. All of these hybrid materials show fascinating properties, and are helpful in the research of new materials for optoelectronic applications.
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Soybean lipoxygenase-1 (SBLO-1) catalyzes the oxygenation of linoleic acid to form 13(S) and 9(R) hydroperoxides. The manner in which substrates bind to the lipoxygenase family of enzymes is not known. It is believed fatty acid substrates may bind either with the aliphatic end first or with the carboxylate group facing the interior of the protein. This thesis tested a potential methyl-end first substrate binding mechanism by studying the activity of SBLO-1 to oxygenate immobilized linoleoyl residues attached to an insoluble polymer. Linoleic acid was attached to aminohexyl agarose in the presence of N-(3- dimethylaminopropyl)-N’-ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC) and Nhydroxysuccinimide (NHS). The concentration of the covalently attached residues was facilitated by enriching linoleic acid with a small amount of the radioactive 14C-isotope. Functionalization yields of 3% available primary amines on the resin were obtained. Enzymatic oxygenation of the linoleoyl-residues was verified using the ferrous oxidation in xylenol orange (FOX) assay. Approximately 30% of the attached linoleoyl moieties were converted to hydroperoxides in the presence of SBLO-1. A disulfide-containing cleavable linker, cystamine, was used as part of an improved method to isolate the product in a facile manner. Cystamine was attached to NHS-activated agarose with approximately 5% overall functionalization yield of available functional groups. 14C-linoleic acid was successfully covalently linked to the cystamine moieties in the presence of EDC and NHS. The FOX assay verified the enzymatic oxygenation of the linoleoyl residues attached to cystamine-derivatized agarose. The isolation of the peroxide product was attempted in a series of extractions in organic solvents. The product was analyzed using GC/MS which did not show a new peak indicative of product. Further work is needed to successfully analyze the stereoand regiochemistry of the oxygenated product. The presence of the peroxides in this study indicated the linoleoyl residues behave as substrates of SBLO-1. It is unknown how bulky substrates bind to the active site; however, it is difficult to rationalize a carboxylate group-first binding mode. Discovery of the 13(S)-hydroperoxide product on the linoleoyl-agarose would support the claim of a potential methyl-end first binding mechanism.
Boron nitride nanotubes : synthesis, characterization, functionalization, and potential applications
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Boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) are structurally similar to carbon nanotubes (CNTs), but exhibit completely different physical and chemical properties. Thus, BNNTs with various interesting properties may be complementary to CNTs and provide an alternative perspective to be useful in different applications. However, synthesis of high quality of BNNTs is still challenging. Hence, the major goals of this research work focus on the fundamental study of synthesis, characterizations, functionalization, and explorations of potential applications. In this work, we have established a new growth vapor trapping (GVT) approach to produce high quality and quantity BNNTs on a Si substrate, by using a conventional tube furnace. This chemical vapor deposition (CVD) approach was conducted at a growth temperature of 1200 °C. As compared to other known approaches, our GVT technique is much simpler in experimental setup and requires relatively lower growth temperatures. The as-grown BNNTs are fully characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), Energy Filtered Mapping, Raman spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infra Red spectroscopy (FTIR), UV-Visible (UV-vis) absorption spectroscopy, etc. Following this success, the growth of BNNTs is now as convenient as growing CNTs and ZnO nanowires. Some important parameters have been identified to produce high-quality BNNTs on Si substrates. Furthermore, we have identified a series of effective catalysts for patterned growth of BNNTs at desirable or pre-defined locations. This catalytic CVD technique is achieved based on our finding that MgO, Ni or Fe are the good catalysts for the growth of BNNTs. The success of patterned growth not only explains the role of catalysts in the formation of BNNTs, this technique will also become technologically important for future device fabrication of BNNTs. Following our success in controlled growth of BNNTs on substrates, we have discovered the superhydrophobic behavior of these partially vertically aligned BNNTs. Since BNNTs are chemically inert, resistive to oxidation up to ~1000°C, and transparent to UV-visible light, our discovery suggests that BNNTs could be useful as self-cleaning, insulating and protective coatings under rigorous chemical and thermal conditions. We have also established various approaches to functionalize BNNTs with polymeric molecules and carbon coatings. First, we showed that BNNTs can be functionalized by mPEG-DSPE (Polyethylene glycol-1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine), a bio-compatible polymer that helps disperse and dissolve BNNTs in water solution. Furthermore, well-dispersed BNNTs in water can be cut from its original length of >10µm to(>20hrs). This success is an essential step to implement BNNTs in biomedical applications. On the other hand, we have also succeeded to functionalize BNNTs with various conjugated polymers. This success enables the dispersion of BNNTs in organic solvents instead of water. Our approaches are useful for applications of BNNTs in high-strength composites. In addition, we have also functionalized BNNTs with carbon decoration. This was performed by introducing methane (CH4) gas into the growth process of BNNT. Graphitic carbon coatings can be deposited on the side wall of BNNTs with thicknesses ranging from 2 to 5 nm. This success can modulate the conductivity of pure BNNTs from insulating to weakly electrically conductive. Finally, efforts were devoted to explore the application of the wide bandgap BNNTs in solar-blind deep UV (DUV) photo-detectors. We found that photoelectric current generated by the DUV light was dominated in the microelectrodes of our devices. The contribution of photocurrent from BNNTs is not significant if there is any. Implication from these preliminary experiments and potential future work are discussed.
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Encapsulation complexes are assemblies in which a reversibly formed host more or less completely surrounds guest molecules. Host structures held together by hydrogen bonds have lifetimes in organic solvents of milliseconds to hours, long enough to directly observe the encapsulated guest by NMR spectroscopy. We describe here the action of alkyl ammonium compounds as guests that gather up to six molecules of the host module to form encapsulation complexes. The stoichiometry of the complexes—the largest hydrogen-bonded host capsules to date—is determined by the size and concentration of the guest.
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This thesis is concerned with the development of hydrogels that adhere to skin and can be used for topical or trans dermal release of active compounds for therapeutic or cosmetic use. The suitability of a range of monomers and initiator systems for the production of skin adhesive hydro gels by photopolymerisation was explored and an approximate order of monomer reactivity in aqueous solution was determined. Most notably, the increased reactivity of N-vinyl pyrrolidone within an aqueous system, as compared to its low rate of polymerisation in organic solvents, was observed. The efficacy of a series of photoinitiator systems for the preparation of sheet hydrogels was investigated. Supplementary redox and thermal initiators were also examined. The most successful initiator system was found to be Irgacure 184, which is commonly used in commercial moving web production systems that employ photopolymerisation. The influence of ionic and non-ionic monomers, crosslinking systems, water and glycerol on the adhesive and dynamic mechanical behaviour of partially hydrated hydrogel systems was examined. The aim was to manipulate hydrogel behaviour to modify topical and transdermal delivery capability and investigated the possibility of using monomer combinations that would influence the release characteristics of gels by modifying their hydrophobic and ionic nature. The copolymerisation of neutral monomers (N-vinyl pyrrolidone, N,N-dimethyl acrylamide and N-acryloyl morpholine) with ionic monomers (2-acrylamido-2-methylpropane sulphonic acid; sodium salt, and the potassium salt of 3-sulphopropyl acrylate) formed the basis of the study. Release from fully and partially hydrated hydrogels was studied, using model compounds and a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, Ibuprofen. Release followed a common 3-stage kinetic profile that includes an initial burst phase, a secondary phase of approximate first order release and a final stage of infinitesimally slow release such that the compound is effectively retained within the hydrogel. Use of partition coefficients, the pKa of the active and a knowledge of charge-based and polar interactions of polymer and drug were complementary in interpreting experimental results. In summary, drug ionisation, hydrogel composition and external release medium characteristics interact to influence release behaviour. The information generated provides the basis for the optimal design of hydrogels for specific dermal release applications and some understanding of the limitations of these systems for controlled release applications.
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Carbon nanomaterials are an active frontier of research in current nanotechnology. Single wall Carbon Nanotube (SWNT) is a unique material which has already found several applications in photonics, electronics, sensors and drug delivery. This thesis presents a summary of the author’s research on functionalisation of SWNTs, a study of their optical properties, and potential for an application in laser physics. The first significant result is a breakthrough in controlling the size of SWNT bundles by varying the salt concentrations in N-methyl 2-pyrrolidone (NMP) through a salting out effect. The addition of Sodium iodide leads to self-assembly of CNTs into recognizable bundles. Furthermore, a stable dispersion can be made via addition polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) polymer to SWNTs-NMP dispersion, which indicates a promising direction for SWNT bundle engineering in organic solvents. The second set of experiments are concerned with enhancement of photoluminescence (PL), through the formation of novel macromolecular complexes of SWNTs with polymethine dyes with emission from enhanced nanotubes in the range of dye excitation. The effect appears to originate from exciton energy transfer within the solution. Thirdly, SWNT base-saturable absorbers (SA) were developed and applied to mode locking of fibre lasers. SWNT-based SAs were applied in both composite and liquid dispersion forms and achieved stable ultrashort generation at 1000nm, 1550nm, and 1800 nm for Ytterbium, Erbium and Thulium-doped fibre laser respectively. The work presented here demonstrates several innovative approaches for development of rapid functionalised SWNT-based dispersions and composites with potential for application in various photonic devices at low cost.
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Nature is challenged to move charge efficiently over many length scales. From sub-nm to μm distances, electron-transfer proteins orchestrate energy conversion, storage, and release both inside and outside the cell. Uncovering the detailed mechanisms of biological electron-transfer reactions, which are often coupled to bond-breaking and bond-making events, is essential to designing durable, artificial energy conversion systems that mimic the specificity and efficiency of their natural counterparts. Here, we use theoretical modeling of long-distance charge hopping (Chapter 3), synthetic donor-bridge-acceptor molecules (Chapters 4, 5, and 6), and de novo protein design (Chapters 5 and 6) to investigate general principles that govern light-driven and electrochemically driven electron-transfer reactions in biology. We show that fast, μm-distance charge hopping along bacterial nanowires requires closely packed charge carriers with low reorganization energies (Chapter 3); singlet excited-state electronic polarization of supermolecular electron donors can attenuate intersystem crossing yields to lower-energy, oppositely polarized, donor triplet states (Chapter 4); the effective static dielectric constant of a small (~100 residue) de novo designed 4-helical protein bundle can change upon phototriggering an electron transfer event in the protein interior, providing a means to slow the charge-recombination reaction (Chapter 5); and a tightly-packed de novo designed 4-helix protein bundle can drastically alter charge-transfer driving forces of photo-induced amino acid radical formation in the bundle interior, effectively turning off a light-driven oxidation reaction that occurs in organic solvent (Chapter 6). This work leverages unique insights gleaned from proteins designed from scratch that bind synthetic donor-bridge-acceptor molecules that can also be studied in organic solvents, opening new avenues of exploration into the factors critical for protein control of charge flow in biology.
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Tissue engineering is a real challenge for the treatment of cartilage pathologies. In this field, biomimetic hydrogels based on natural polymers are among the most commonly used matrices. A hydrogel made of silanized hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC-Si) is especially promising because it can be injected in cartilaginous lesions by minimally invasive surgery. However, the current synthesis of HPMC-Si is limited by the insolubility of hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC). This thesis work was focused on finding new synthesis conditions for the design of HPMC-Si hydrogel. In order to obtain a complete solubilization of HPMC and to improve its functionalization by the (3-glycidyloxypropyl) trimethoxysilane (GPTMS), the use of ionic liquids (IL), which are excellent solvents for polysaccharides, was undertaken. The beginning of this study was first devoted to the selection of an IL and then to the development of new reaction conditions. With these new conditions, higher silicon rates were obtained for HPMC modified in ionic liquid medium, however no hydrogel could be formed. The second part was therefore devoted to the synthesis of GPTMS 13C. Indeed, thanks to this radiolabeling, a structural characterization by 13C NMR of the HPMC-Si could be achieved. Finally, the reactivity in organic solvents of three organosilanes, including the GPTMS, was investigated toward nucleophiles representing the common functions found in natural polymers (e.g. -NH2, -OH, -SH). The results of this thesis have provided insights into the GPTMS reactivity in organic medium and thus paves the way to new conditions for the silanization of polysaccharides.
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© 2015. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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This thesis focuses on two main topics: photoresponsive azobenzene-based polymers and supramolecular systems generated by the self-assembly of lipophilic guanosines. In the first chapters describe innovative photoresponsive devices and materials capable of performing multiple roles in the field of soft robotics and energy conversion. Chapter 2 describes a device obtained by coupling a photoresponsive liquid-crystalline network and a piezoelectric polymer to convert visible light into electricity. Chapter 3 deals with a material that can assume different shapes when triggered by three different stimuli in different environments. Chapter 4 reports a highly performing artificial muscle that contracts when irradiated. The last two chapters report on supramolecular structures generated from functionalized guanosines dissolved in organic solvents. Chapter 6 illustrates the self-assembly into G-quadruplexes of 8- and 5’-functionalized guanosines in the absence of templating ions. Chapter 7 describes the supramolecular structure generated by the assembly of a lipophilic guanosine in the presence of silver cations. Chapter 6 is reproduced from an already published paper, while the other chapters are going to be submitted to different journals in a couple of months.
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The use of melanin in bioinspired applications is mostly limited by its poor stability in solid films. This problem has been addressed here by incorporating melanin into dipalmitoyl phosphatidyl glycerol (DPPG) liposomes, which were then immobilized onto a solid substrate as an LbL film. Results from steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence indicated an increased stability for melanin incorporated into DPPG liposomes. If not protected by liposomes, melanin looses completely its fluorescence properties in LbL films. The thickness of the liposome-melanin layer obtained from neutron reflectivity data was 4.1 +/- 0.2 nm, consistent with the value estimated for the phospholipid bilayer of the liposomes, an evidence of the collapse of most liposomes. On the other hand, the final roughness indicated that some of the liposomes had their structure preserved. In summary, liposomes were proven excellent for encapsulation, thus providing a suitable environment, closer to the physiological conditions without using organic solvents or high pHs. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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In the printing industry, volatile organic compounds main sources are the uses of organic solvents, fountain solutions and cleaning agents. Nowadays, one circumstance which might confuse the exposure reality is that the majority of solvents which are often used have a faint odour. Therefore, the conditions at offset printing in regard to solvent exposure may seem acceptable to workers. Fortunately, general ventilation and local exhaust systems have also become more common, and new printing machines, often with automatic cleaning, have entered the market. The health effects of volatile organic solvents are dependent on the chemicals involved but, normally, are associated with affecting the nervous system, the liver and also the kidneys. The purpose of this study was to document the conditions regarding exposure to volatile organic compounds in an offset printing unit and to permit identify task with higher exposure and with priority for preventive measures application. Exposure assessment was done before and after installation of general ventilation and local exhaust equipments and during printing and cleaning procedure.