899 resultados para STRUCTURE-PROPERTY RELATIONSHIPS
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Solution enthalpies of 1,4-dioxane have been obtained in 15 protic and aprotic solvents at 298.15 K. Breaking the overall process through the use of Solomonov's methodology the cavity term was calculated and interaction enthalpies (Delta H-int) were determined. Main factors involved in the interaction enthalpy have been identified and quantified using a QSPR approach based on the TAKA model equation. The relevant descriptors were found to be pi* and beta, which showed, respectively, exothermic and endothermic contributions. The magnitude of pi* coefficient points toward non-specific solute-solvent interactions playing a major role in the solution process. The positive value of the beta coefficient reflects the endothermic character of the solvents' hydrogen bond acceptor (HBA) basicity contribution, indicating that solvent molecules engaged in hydrogen bonding preferentially interact with each other rather than with 1,4-dioxane. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Solution enthalpies of 18-crown-6 have been obtained for a set of 14 protic and aprotic solvents at 298.15 K. The complementary use of Solomonov's methodology and a QSPR-based approach allowed the identification of the most significant solvent descriptors that model the interaction enthalpy contribution of the solution process (Delta H-int(A/S)). Results were compared with data previously obtained for 1,4-dioxane. Although the interaction enthalpies of 18-crown-6 correlate well with those of 1,4-dioxane, the magnitude of the most relevant parameters, pi* and beta, is almost three times higher for 18-crown-6. This is rationalized in terms of the impact of the solute's volume in the solution processes of both compounds. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Tese de Doutoramento em Ciência e Engenharia de Polímeros e Compósitos
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A series of copolymers containing differing proportions of pyrrole and N-methyl pyrrole were prepared electrochemically at various temperatures using acetonitrile as the solvent. The resultant electrical conductivity decreases universally with increasing fraction of N-methyl pyrrole. Films prepared with p-toluene sulfonate as the dopant show a marked variation in structural anisotropy as revealed by X-ray scattering with apparent copolymer content. There is a clear trend between the variation in electrical conductivity and this structural anisotropy. Different patterns of behaviour are observed for films prepared using perchlorate as the dopant and this is attributed to the role of the dopant and final structure in determining the relative reactivities of the pyrrole and N-methyl pyrrole monomers. These observations support the concept that the introduction of methyl substituents into a polypyrrole chain results in a twisted chain conformation. The structure and properties of the resultant copolymer films are particularly sensitive to the preparation conditions.
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From the perspective of a new-generation opto-electronic technology based on organic semiconductors, a major objective is to achieve a deep and detailed knowledge of the structure-property relationships, in order to optimize the electronic, optical, and charge transport properties by tuning the chemical-physical characteristics of the compounds. The purpose of this dissertation is to contribute to such understanding, through suitable theoretical and computational studies. Precisely, the structural, electronic, optical, and charge transport characteristics of several promising organic materials recently synthesized are investigated by means of an integrated approach encompassing quantum-chemical calculations, molecular dynamics and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Particular care is addressed to the rationalization of optical and charge transport properties in terms of both intra- and intermolecular features. Moreover, a considerable part of this project involves the development of a home-made set of procedures and parts of software code required to assist the modeling of charge transport properties in the framework of the non-adiabatic hopping mechanism applied to organic crystalline materials. As a first part of my investigations, I mainly discuss the optical, electronic, and structural properties of several core-extended rylene derivatives, which can be regarded to as model compounds for graphene nanoribbons. Two families have been studied, consisting in bay-linked perylene bisimide oligomers and N-annulated rylenes. Beside rylene derivatives, my studies also concerned electronic and spectroscopic properties of tetracene diimides, quinoidal oligothiophenes, and oxygen doped picene. As an example of device application, I studied the structural characteristics governing the efficiency of resistive molecular memories based on a derivative of benzoquinone. Finally, as a second part of my investigations, I concentrate on the charge transport properties of perylene bisimides derivatives. Precisely, a comprehensive study of the structural and thermal effects on the charge transport of several core-twisted chlorinated and fluoro-alkylated perylene bisimide n-type semiconductors is presented.
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Nuclear medicine imaging techniques such as PET are of increasing relevance in pharmaceutical research being valuable (pre)clinical tools to non-invasively assess drug performance in vivo. Therapeutic drugs, e.g. chemotherapeutics, often suffer from a poor balance between their efficacy and toxicity. Here, polymer based drug delivery systems can modulate the pharmacokinetics of low Mw therapeutics (prolonging blood circulation time, reducing toxic side effects, increasing target site accumulation) and therefore leading to a more efficient therapy. In this regard, poly-N-(2-hydroxypropyl)-methacrylamide (HPMA) constitutes a promising biocompatible polymer. Towards the further development of these structures, non-invasive PET imaging allows insight into structure-property relationships in vivo. This performant tool can guide design optimization towards more effective drug delivery. Hence, versatile radiolabeling strategies need to be developed and establishing 18F- as well as 131I-labeling of diverse HPMA architectures forms the basis for short- as well as long-term in vivo evaluations. By means of the prosthetic group [18F]FETos, 18F-labeling of distinct HPMA polymer architectures (homopolymers, amphiphilic copolymers as well as block copolymers) was successfully accomplished enabling their systematic evaluation in tumor bearing rats. These investigations revealed pronounced differences depending on individual polymer characteristics (molecular weight, amphiphilicity due to incorporated hydrophobic laurylmethacrylate (LMA) segments, architecture) as well as on the studied tumor model. Polymers showed higher uptake for up to 4 h p.i. into Walker 256 tumors vs. AT1 tumors (correlating to a higher cellular uptake in vitro). Highest tumor concentrations were found for amphiphilic HPMA-ran-LMA copolymers in comparison to homopolymers and block copolymers. Notably, the random LMA copolymer P4* (Mw=55 kDa, 25% LMA) exhibited most promising in vivo behavior such as highest blood retention as well as tumor uptake. Further studies concentrated on the influence of PEGylation (‘stealth effect’) in terms of improving drug delivery properties of defined polymeric micelles. Here, [18F]fluoroethylation of distinct PEGylated block copolymers (0%, 1%, 5%, 7%, 11% of incorporated PEG2kDa) enabled to systematically study the impact of PEG incorporation ratio and respective architecture on the in vivo performance. Most strikingly, higher PEG content caused prolonged blood circulation as well as a linear increase in tumor uptake (Walker 256 carcinoma). Due to the structural diversity of potential polymeric carrier systems, further versatile 18F-labeling strategies are needed. Therefore, a prosthetic 18F-labeling approach based on the Cu(I)-catalyzed click reaction was established for HPMA-based polymers, providing incorporation of fluorine-18 under mild conditions and in high yields. On this basis, a preliminary µPET study of a HPMA-based polymer – radiolabeled via the prosthetic group [18F]F-PEG3-N3 – was successfully accomplished. By revealing early pharmacokinetics, 18F-labeling enables to time-efficiently assess the potential of HPMA polymers for efficient drug delivery. Yet, investigating the long-term fate is essential, especially regarding prolonged circulation properties and passive tumor accumulation (EPR effect). Therefore, radiolabeling of diverse HPMA copolymers with the longer-lived isotope iodine-131 was accomplished enabling in vivo evaluation of copolymer P4* over several days. In this study, tumor retention of 131I-P4* could be demonstrated at least over 48h with concurrent blood clearance thereby confirming promising tumor targeting properties of amphiphilic HPMA copolymer systems based on the EPR effect.
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Organic molecular semiconductors are subject of intense research for their crucial role as key components of new generation low cost, flexible, and large area electronic devices such as displays, thin-film transistors, solar cells, sensors and logic circuits. In particular, small molecular thienoimide (TI) based materials are emerging as novel multifunctional materials combining a good processability together to ambipolar or n-type charge transport and electroluminescence at the solid state, thus enabling the fabrication of integrated devices like organic field effect transistors (OFETs) and light emitting transistor (OLETs). Given this peculiar combination of characteristics, they also constitute the ideal substrates for fundamental studies on the structure-property relationships in multifunctional molecular systems. In this scenario, this thesis work is focused on the synthesis of new thienoimide based materials with tunable optical, packing, morphology, charge transport and electroluminescence properties by following a fine molecular tailoring, thus optimizing their performances in device as well as investigating and enabling new applications. Investigation on their structure-property relationships has been carried out and in particular, the effect of different π-conjugated cores (heterocycles, length) and alkyl end chain (shape, length) changes have been studied, obtaining materials with enhanced electron transport capability end electroluminescence suitable for the realization of OFETs and single layer OLETs. Moreover, control on the polymorphic behaviour characterizing thienoimide materials has been reached by synthetic and post-synthetic methodologies, developing multifunctional materials from a single polymorphic compound. Finally, with the aim of synthesizing highly pure materials, simplifying the purification steps and avoiding organometallic residues, procedures based on direct arylation reactions replacing conventional cross-couplings have been investigated and applied to different classes of molecules, bearing thienoimidic core or ends, as well as thiophene and anthracene derivatives, validating this approach as a clean alternative for the synthesis of several molecular materials.
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Makromolekulare Wirkstoffträgersysteme sind von starkem Interesse bezüglich der klinischen Anwendung chemotherapeutischer Agenzien. Um ihr klinisches Potential zu untersuchen ist es von besonderer Bedeutung das pharmakokinetische Profil in vivo zu bestimmen. Jede Veränderung der Polymerstruktur beeinflusst die Körperverteilung des entsprechenden Makromoleküls. Aufgrund dessen benötigt man detailliertes Wissen über Struktur-Eigenschaftsbeziehungen im lebenden Organismus, um das Nanocarrier System für zukünftige Anwendungen einzustellen. In dieser Beziehung stellt das präklinische Screening mittels radioaktiver Markierung und Positronen-Emissions-Tomographie eine nützliche Methode für schnelle sowie quantitative Beobachtung von Wirkstoffträgerkandidaten dar. Insbesondere poly(HPMA) und PEG sind im Arbeitsgebiet Polymer-basierter Therapeutika stark verbreitet und von ihnen abgeleitete Strukturen könnten neue Generationen in diesem Forschungsbereich bieten.rnDie vorliegende Arbeit beschreibt die erfolgreiche Synthese verschiedener HPMA und PEG basierter Polymer-Architekturen – Homopolymere, Statistische und Block copolymere – die mittels RAFT und Reaktivesterchemie durchgeführt wurde. Des Weiteren wurden die genannten Polymere mit Fluor-18 und Iod-131 radioaktiv markiert und mit Hilfe von microPET und ex vivo Biodistributionsstudien in tumortragenden Ratten biologisch evaluiert. Die Variation in Polymer-Architektur und darauffolgende Analyse in vivo resultierte in wichtige Schlussfolgerungen. Das hydrophile / lipophile Gleichgewicht hatte einen bedeutenden Einfluss auf das pharmakokinetische Profil, mit besten in vivo Eigenschaften (geringe Aufnahme in Leber und Milz sowie verlängerte Blutzirkulationszeit) für statistische HPMA-LMA copolymere mit steigendem hydrophoben Anteil. Außerdem zeigten Langzeitstudien mit Iod-131 eine verstärkte Retention von hochmolekularen, HPMA basierten statistischen Copolymeren im Tumorgewebe. Diese Beobachtung bestätigte den bekannten EPR-Effekt. Hinzukommend stellen Überstrukturbildung und damit Polymergröße Schlüsselfaktoren für effizientes Tumor-Targeting dar, da Polymerstrukturen über 200 nm in Durchmesser schnell vom MPS erkannt und vom Blutkreislauf eliminiert werden. Aufgrund dessen wurden die hier synthetisierten HPMA Block copolymere mit PEG Seitengruppen chemisch modifiziert, um eine Verminderung in Größe sowie eine Reduktion in Blutausscheidung zu induzieren. Dieser Ansatz führte zu einer erhöhten Tumoranreicherung im Walker 256 Karzinom Modell. Generell wird die Körperverteilung von HPMA und PEG basierten Polymeren stark durch die Polymer-Architektur sowie das Molekulargewicht beeinflusst. Außerdem hängt ihre Effizienz hinsichtlich Tumorbehandlung deutlich von den individuellen Charakteristika des einzelnen Tumors ab. Aufgrund dieser Beobachtungen betont die hier vorgestellte Dissertation die Notwendigkeit einer detaillierten Polymer-Charakterisierung, kombiniert mit präklinischem Screening, um polymere Wirkstoffträgersysteme für individualisierte Patienten-Therapie in der Zukunft maßzuschneidern.rn
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Solid-state shear pulverization (SSSP) is a unique processing technique for mechanochemical modification of polymers, compatibilization of polymer blends, and exfoliation and dispersion of fillers in polymer nanocomposites. A systematic parametric study of the SSSP technique is conducted to elucidate the detailed mechanism of the process and establish the basis for a range of current and future operation scenarios. Using neat, single component polypropylene (PP) as the model material, we varied machine type, screw design, and feed rate to achieve a range of shear and compression applied to the material, which can be quantified through specific energy input (Ep). As a universal processing variable, Ep reflects the level of chain scission occurring in the material, which correlates well to the extent of the physical property changes of the processed PP. Additionally, we compared the operating cost estimates of SSSP and conventional twin screw extrusion to determine the practical viability of SSSP.
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Solid-state shear pulverization (SSSP) is a unique processing technique for mechanochemical modification of polymers, compatibilization of polymer blends, and exfoliation and dispersion of fillers in polymer nanocomposites. A systematic parametric study of the SSSP technique is conducted to elucidate the detailed mechanism of the process and establish the basis for a range of current and future operation scenarios. Using neat, single component polypropylene (PP) as the model material, we varied machine type, screw design, and feed rate to achieve a range of shear and compression applied to the material, which can be quantified through specific energy input (Ep). As a universal processing variable, Ep reflects the level of chain scission occurring in the material, which correlates well to the extent of the physical property changes of the processed PP. Additionally, we compared the operating cost estimates of SSSP and conventional twin screw extrusion to determine the practical viability of SSSP.
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The addition of small quantities (similar to 5 wt pct) layered silicates into polymer materials has the potential to greatly increase the modulus without adversely affecting the toughness or processability of the composite. The effect of microstructural features in the polymer nanocomposite and their possible effects on the mechanical properties with particular reference to linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE)/montmorillonite nanocomposites was discussed.
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We discuss recent progress towards the establishment of important structure-property-function relationships in eumelanins-key functional bio-macromolecular systems responsible for photoprotection and immune response in humans, and implicated in the development of melanoma skin cancer. We focus on the link between eumelanin's secondary structure and optical properties such as broad band UV-visible absorption and strong non-radiative relaxation; both key features of the photo-protective function. We emphasise the insights gained through a holistic approach combining optical spectroscopy with first principles quantum chemical calculations, and advance the hypothesis that the robust functionality characteristic of eumelanin is related to extreme chemical and structural disorder at the secondary level. This inherent disorder is a low cost natural resource, and it is interesting to speculate as to whether it may play a role in other functional bio-macromolecular systems.