Spelling suggestions: "subject:"athermal responsiveness"" "subject:"ephermal responsiveness""
1 |
pH Responsive Highly Branched Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) with Trihistidine or Acid Chain EndsSwift, Thomas, Lapworth, J., Swindells, K., Swanson, L., Rimmer, Stephen 19 July 2016 (has links)
Yes / Thermally responsive highly branched poly(N-isopropyl acrylamide)s (HB-PNIPAM) were prepared and end-functionalised
to give polymers with acid or trihistidine end groups. These polymers exhibit a broad coil-to-globule transition across a
wide temperature range which can be measured using covalently attached fluorescent tags. The acid chain ends provided
a material with a distinct change in solution behaviour at pH close to the pKa of the carboxylate group. At pH 11 this
polymer did not show a cloud point up to 50 °C but fluorescence measurements on the labelled polymers showed that a
coil to glubule transition did take place. The globular state, above the LCST, appeared to be more swollen if the end group
carried charge then when it was uncharged. A polymer with trihistidine and free carboxylate chain ends, which contained
multiple charges at various pH, did show LCSTs at all pH and the polymer globule was shown to be swollen at each pH.
|
2 |
Thermally switchable polymers achieve controlled Escherichia coli detachmentHook, A.L., Chang, Chien-Yi, Scurr, D.J., Langer, R., Anderson, D.G., Williams, P., Davies, M.C., Alexander, M.R. 02 April 2014 (has links)
Yes / The thermally triggered release of up to 96% of attached uropathogenic E. coli is achieved on two polymers with opposite changes in surface wettability upon reduction in temperature. This demonstrates that the bacterial attachment to a surface cannot be explained in terms of water contact angle alone; rather, the surface composition of the polymer plays the key role. / Wellcome Trust (grant number 085245) and the NIH (grant number R01 DE016516)
|
Page generated in 0.0866 seconds