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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Predicting the skin-permeating components of externally-applied medicinal herbs: application of a newly constructed linear free-energy relationship equation for human skin permeation

Zeng, X., Wang, Z., Liu, Xiangli, Chen, M., Fahr, A., Zhang, K. 06 May 2018 (has links)
No / A linear free-energy relationship (LFER) equation that is able to provide a valid prediction of the skin permeability coefficients (log Kp) of neutral molecules, ions and ionic species has recently been constructed and optimized. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of predicting the skin-permeating components (SPCs) of externally applied herbs using the LFER equation, with Evodiae fructus (EF) taken as a model herb. The log Kp values of the reported chemical components of EF at pH 4.0 were calculated using the LFER equation and their structural descriptors. The results showed that the essential oils, quinolone, acridone and indole alkaloids of EF are more permeable when compared to other main components, such as phenylpropanoids, furoquinoline alkaloids, limonoids and flavonoids. The SPCs of EF were further collected via ex vivo skin permeation experiments, and analyzed by liquid chromatography-high resolution tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 80 SPCs were detected, and part of them were tentatively identified based on their empirical molecular formulae and MS/MS spectra. The SPCs are made up of 58 alkaloids, including 23 or more quinolone alkaloids, 14 or more indole alkaloids and 1 acridone alkaloid, and 22 non-alkaloids, including 7 or more essential oils and 1 flavonoid, which is in good agreement with the prediction by the LFER equation. It is suggested that a log Kp of −7.0 may be considered as a borderline, above which are potential SPCs and below which are non-SPCs. Very interestingly, the primary SPCs give a good explanation to the antihypertensive action of externally applied EF. To sum up, the LFER equation can be used to predict the SPCs of externally applied herbs, and thus to narrow the range of their potential effective components and speed up the pharmacological study. / This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 81703939 and 81503221), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grant No. 2017M620403), the Project of Industry, Education and Research Funds of Fujian Collaborative Innovation Center for Exploitation and Utilization of Marine Biological Resources (Grant No. FJMBIO1608), the Science and Technology Planning Project of Fujian Province (Grant No. 2017Y4015), the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (Grant No. 2014A030310365), the Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province (Grant No. 2014CFC1045) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Grant No. 20720150069), as well as the Clinical Medical Research Program of Wuhan Health and Family Planning Commission (Grant No. WX15A02).
12

Concerted or Stepwise? : <i>β-Elimination, Nucleophilic Substitution, Copper Catalysed Aziridination and Ruthenium Catalysed Transfer Hydrogenation Studied by Kinetic Isotope Effects and Linear Free-Energy Relationships</i>

Ryberg, Per January 2002 (has links)
<p>This thesis describes the use of kinetic isotope effects, linear free energy relationships and stereochamical studies to distinguish between different mechanistic alternatives and to obtain information about transition state structure.</p><p>In the first part fluorine and deuterium kinetic isotope effects were determined for the base promoted HF elimination from 4-fluoro-4-(4’-nitrophenyl)butane-2-on. During this work a new method for the determination of fluorine kinetic isotope effects was developed. The results from the study demonstrates that the reaction proceeds via an E1cB<sub>ip</sub> mechanism.</p><p>In the second part the transition state structure for the S<sub>N</sub>2 reaction between ethyl chloride and cyanide ion in DMSO was studied. Kinetic isotope effects for six different positions in the reacting system, both in cyanide and ethyl chloride, were determined. The experimental isotope effects were then compared with the theoretically predicted isotope effects. </p><p>The third part describes the use of Hammett type free-energy relationships and stereochemical evidence to study the mechanism of the copper catalysed alkene aziridination. The results from the study support a model that involves the simultaneous presence of two different copper nitrene intermediates. One which reacts non-stereospecifically via a radical intermediate and one which reacts stereospecifically via a concerted mechanism.</p><p>In the fourth part a mechanistic study of the Ru(aminoalcohol) catalysed transfer hydrogenation of acetophenone in isopropanol is described. Kinetic isotope effects were determined for both proton and hydride transfer. The observation of significant primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects for both proton and hydride transfer support a mechanism where the proton and hydride are transferred simultaneously in a concerted mechanism.</p>
13

Concerted or Stepwise? : β-Elimination, Nucleophilic Substitution, Copper Catalysed Aziridination and Ruthenium Catalysed Transfer Hydrogenation Studied by Kinetic Isotope Effects and Linear Free-Energy Relationships

Ryberg, Per January 2002 (has links)
This thesis describes the use of kinetic isotope effects, linear free energy relationships and stereochamical studies to distinguish between different mechanistic alternatives and to obtain information about transition state structure. In the first part fluorine and deuterium kinetic isotope effects were determined for the base promoted HF elimination from 4-fluoro-4-(4’-nitrophenyl)butane-2-on. During this work a new method for the determination of fluorine kinetic isotope effects was developed. The results from the study demonstrates that the reaction proceeds via an E1cBip mechanism. In the second part the transition state structure for the SN2 reaction between ethyl chloride and cyanide ion in DMSO was studied. Kinetic isotope effects for six different positions in the reacting system, both in cyanide and ethyl chloride, were determined. The experimental isotope effects were then compared with the theoretically predicted isotope effects. The third part describes the use of Hammett type free-energy relationships and stereochemical evidence to study the mechanism of the copper catalysed alkene aziridination. The results from the study support a model that involves the simultaneous presence of two different copper nitrene intermediates. One which reacts non-stereospecifically via a radical intermediate and one which reacts stereospecifically via a concerted mechanism. In the fourth part a mechanistic study of the Ru(aminoalcohol) catalysed transfer hydrogenation of acetophenone in isopropanol is described. Kinetic isotope effects were determined for both proton and hydride transfer. The observation of significant primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects for both proton and hydride transfer support a mechanism where the proton and hydride are transferred simultaneously in a concerted mechanism.
14

Thermodynamics of the Abraham General Solvation Model: Solubility and Partition Aspects

Stovall, Dawn Michele 08 1900 (has links)
Experimental mole fraction solubilities of several carboxylic acids (2-methoxybenzoic acid, 4-methoxybenzoic acid, 4-nitrobenzoic acid, 4-chloro-3-nitrobenzoic acid, 2-chloro-5-nitrobenzoic acid,2-methylbenzoic acid and ibuprofen) and 9-fluorenone, thianthrene and xanthene were measured in a wide range of solvents of varying polarity and hydrogen-bonding characteristics. Results of these measurements were used to calculate gas-to-organic solvent and water-to-organic solvent solubility ratios, which were then substituted into known Abraham process partitioning correlations. The molecular solute descriptors that were obtained as the result of these computations described the measured solubility data to within an average absolute deviation of 0.2 log units. The calculated solute descriptors also enable one to estimate many chemically, biologically and pharmaceutically important properties for the ten solutes studied using published mathematical correlations.
15

The assessment of intramolecular hydrogen bonding in ortho-substituted anilines by an NMR method

Abraham, M.H., Abraham, R.J., Aghamohammadi, Amin, Afarinkia, Kamyar, Liu, Xiangli 20 July 2020 (has links)
Yes / We describe the Δlog P method for the assessment of intramolecular hydrogen bonds (IMHBs), and show that it is not a very general method of distinguishing between molecules in which there is an IMHB and molecules in which there is no IMHB. The ‘double’ Δlog P method of Shalaeva et al. is a much more reliable method for the assessment of IMHB but requires the synthesis of a model compound and the determination of no less than four water-solvent partition coefficients. In addition, it is difficult to apply to compounds that contain more than one hydrogen bond acidic group capable of IMHB. We then describe our NMR method of assessing IMHB, based on 1H NMR chemical shifts in solvents DMSO and CDCl3. We have determined 1H NMR chemical shifts for a number of ortho-substituted anilines and show that the only compound we have studied that forms an IMHB is methyl 2-methylaminobenzoate though there is no IMHB present in methyl 2-aminobenzoate. This apparently anomalous result is supported by both MM and ab initio calculations. The NMR method is much simpler and less time consuming than other methods for the assessment of IMHB. It provides a quantitative assessment of IMHB and can be applied to molecules with more than one hydrogen bond acidic group.
16

The Abraham Solvation Model Used for Prediction of Solvent-Solute Interactions and New Methods for Updating Parameters

Churchill, Brittani N. 05 1900 (has links)
The Abraham solvation model (ABSM) is an experimentally derived predictive model used to help predict various solute properties. This work covers various uses for the ABSM including predicting molar enthalpies of vaporization, predicting solvent coefficients for two new solvents (2,2,5,5-tetramethyloxolane and diethyl carbonate), predicting values for multiple new ionic liquids (ILs). This work also introduces a novel method for updating IL ABSM parameters by updating cation- and anion-specific values using linear algebra and binary matrices.
17

Análise de solubilização micelar através do uso de parâmetros derivados de química quântica / Analysis of micellar solubilization through use of parameters derived from quantum chemistry

Lima, Gilson Alberto Rosa 26 January 2000 (has links)
Uma das propriedades fundamentais de soluções de micelas aquosas é sua capacidade de solubililizar uma ampla faixa de solutos orgânicos com diferentes graus de polaridade e hidrofobicidade. Recentemente Quina et. aI., estudaram as interações químicas específicas que governam a solubilidade para um ampla faixa de solutos orgânicos em micelas usando relações lineares de energia livre de solvatação (LSERs), baseado nos parâmetros empíricos do soluto desenvolvido por Abraham. O presente trabalho trata a solubilização de solutos orgânicos em micelas baseado em parâmetros obtidos unicamente da estrutura molecular do soluto através de cálculos de química quântica. Nossos resultados mostram que valores experimentais de Ks para solubilização de solutos orgânicos em detergentes aniônicos (micelas de SDS, dodecil sulfato de sódio e agregados de SDS com PEG-polietilenoglicol) podem ser reproduzidos usando parâmetros teóricos. A relação linear teórica de energia livre de solvatação resultante é quimicamente condizente com LSERs baseados em parâmetros empíricos do soluto. No caso de detergentes catiônicos e não iônicos, a metodologia apresenta limitações, por que o método de cálculo de cargas formais usando a definição de análise populacional de Mulliken não descreve de maneira apropriada o caráter ácido e básico das pontes de hidrogênio entre os solutos e a água. Alternativas para resolver o problema da limitação imposta pelos parâmetros teóricos, mantendo a aproximação linear de energia livre, são discutidas. / One of the most fundamental properties of aqueous micelar solutions is their ability to solubilize a wide variety of organic solutes with quite distinct polarities and degree of hydrophobicity. Recently Quina et al., studied the specific chemical interactions governing the solubilities of a wide range of solutes in micelles using linear solvation energy relationships (LSERs) based on empirical solute parameters developed by Abraham. This work reports an investigation of the solubilization of organic solutes in micelles based on the use of theoretical solute parameters derived from quantum chemical calculations Our results show that the experimental Ks values for solubilization of organic solutes in anionic detergents (micelles of SDS-sodium dodecyl sulfate and aggregate formed between SDS and PEG-poly(ethylene glycol)) can be reproduced using theoretical parameters. The resultant theoretical linear solvation energy relationships are chemically consistent with LSERs based on empirical solute parameters. In the case of cationic and nonionic detergents, the theoretical parameters used to describe hydrogen bonding fail because methods of calculating formal charges using the concept of Mulliken populational analysis cannot describe hydrogen bonding donor and acceptor character in an appropriate way. Possible strategies to solve the theoretical descriptor problem in the context of the linear free energy approximation are discussed.
18

Análise de solubilização micelar através do uso de parâmetros derivados de química quântica / Analysis of micellar solubilization through use of parameters derived from quantum chemistry

Gilson Alberto Rosa Lima 26 January 2000 (has links)
Uma das propriedades fundamentais de soluções de micelas aquosas é sua capacidade de solubililizar uma ampla faixa de solutos orgânicos com diferentes graus de polaridade e hidrofobicidade. Recentemente Quina et. aI., estudaram as interações químicas específicas que governam a solubilidade para um ampla faixa de solutos orgânicos em micelas usando relações lineares de energia livre de solvatação (LSERs), baseado nos parâmetros empíricos do soluto desenvolvido por Abraham. O presente trabalho trata a solubilização de solutos orgânicos em micelas baseado em parâmetros obtidos unicamente da estrutura molecular do soluto através de cálculos de química quântica. Nossos resultados mostram que valores experimentais de Ks para solubilização de solutos orgânicos em detergentes aniônicos (micelas de SDS, dodecil sulfato de sódio e agregados de SDS com PEG-polietilenoglicol) podem ser reproduzidos usando parâmetros teóricos. A relação linear teórica de energia livre de solvatação resultante é quimicamente condizente com LSERs baseados em parâmetros empíricos do soluto. No caso de detergentes catiônicos e não iônicos, a metodologia apresenta limitações, por que o método de cálculo de cargas formais usando a definição de análise populacional de Mulliken não descreve de maneira apropriada o caráter ácido e básico das pontes de hidrogênio entre os solutos e a água. Alternativas para resolver o problema da limitação imposta pelos parâmetros teóricos, mantendo a aproximação linear de energia livre, são discutidas. / One of the most fundamental properties of aqueous micelar solutions is their ability to solubilize a wide variety of organic solutes with quite distinct polarities and degree of hydrophobicity. Recently Quina et al., studied the specific chemical interactions governing the solubilities of a wide range of solutes in micelles using linear solvation energy relationships (LSERs) based on empirical solute parameters developed by Abraham. This work reports an investigation of the solubilization of organic solutes in micelles based on the use of theoretical solute parameters derived from quantum chemical calculations Our results show that the experimental Ks values for solubilization of organic solutes in anionic detergents (micelles of SDS-sodium dodecyl sulfate and aggregate formed between SDS and PEG-poly(ethylene glycol)) can be reproduced using theoretical parameters. The resultant theoretical linear solvation energy relationships are chemically consistent with LSERs based on empirical solute parameters. In the case of cationic and nonionic detergents, the theoretical parameters used to describe hydrogen bonding fail because methods of calculating formal charges using the concept of Mulliken populational analysis cannot describe hydrogen bonding donor and acceptor character in an appropriate way. Possible strategies to solve the theoretical descriptor problem in the context of the linear free energy approximation are discussed.
19

Chromatografická charakterizace polyanilinem potažených stacionárních fází / Chromatographic characterization of polyaniline-coated stationary phases

Taraba, Lukáš January 2018 (has links)
(EN) This dissertation thesis is focused on physicochemical and chromatographic characterization of polyaniline-coated stationary phases. In the first part, surfaces of bare silica and octadecyl silica sorbents were modified by in-situ chemical polymerization of aniline hydrochloride and their subsequent systematic characterization was performed by using the linear solvation energy relationship approach in the HILIC mode of capillary LC. In addition, several common physicochemical techniques were used to characterize properties of these altered materials. The modified sorbents were then packed into capillary columns. The retention interactions taking place between solute and the separation system were evaluated on the basis of retention data of a number of various solutes. The results showed that polyaniline coating had a significant effect on the retention promoting interactions of both polyaniline-coated stationary phases. The assumed mixed-mode retention mechanism was proven for both the stationary phases. The second part dealt with investigation of the separation potential of polyaniline- coated silica stationary phase in different chromatographic modes. The retention factor curves of structurally similar solutes were constructed as a function of organic modifier portion in the mobile phase....
20

Oxygen Demand Trends, Land Cover Change, and Water Quality Management for an Urbanizing Oregon Watershed

Boeder, Michael Karl 01 January 2006 (has links)
In-stream aquatic habitat depends on adequate levels of dissolved oxygen. Human alteration of the landscape has an extensive influence on the biogeochemical processes that drive oxygen cycling in streams. Historic datasets allow researchers to track trends in chemical parameters concomitant with urbanization, while land cover change analysis allows researchers to identify linkages between water quality trends and landscape change. Using the Seasonal Kendall's test, I examined water quality trends in oxygen demand variables during the mid-1990s to 2003, for twelve sites in the Rock Creek sub-watershed of the Tualatin River, northwest Oregon. Significant trends occurred in each parameter. Dissolved oxygen (DO (%sat)) increased at five sites. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) decreased at seven sites. Total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN) decreased at five sites and increased at one site. Ammonium (NH3-N) decreased at one site and increased at one site. Multiple linear regression indicates that nitrogenous oxygen demand accounts for a significant amount of variance in COD at ten of the twelve sites (adjusted R2values from 0.14 to 0.73). Aerial photo interpretation revealed significant land cover change in agricultural land cover (-8% for the entire basin area) and residential land cover (+10% for the entire basin area). Correlation results between seasonal oxygen demand data and land cover values at multiple scales indicated that: (I) forest cover negatively influences COD at the full sub-basin scale and positively influences NH3-N at local scales, (2) residential land cover positively influences DO (%sat) values at local scales, (3) agricultural land cover does not influence oxygen demand at any land cover assessment scale, ( 4) local topography negatively influences TKN and NH3-N, and (5) urban runoff management infrastructure correlates positively with COD. Study results indicate that, with the exception of forested land, local scale land cover and landscape variables dominate influence on oxygen demand in the Rock Creek basin. Since DO conditions have improved in these streams, watershed management efforts should emphasize local influences in order to continue to maintain stream health.

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