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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.
1

The Bioproduction of L-phenylacetylcarbinol in solid-liquid two phase partitioning bioreactors

KHAN, Tanya Razia 26 August 2010 (has links)
Biphasic systems such as two-phase partitioning bioreactors (TPPBs) have been used to alleviate biological inhibition by sequestering inhibitory compounds within an immiscible phase. The use of solid polymer beads as this auxiliary phase provides a fully biocompatible alternative to commonly used yet potentially toxic organic solvents. This work focused on the application of solid-liquid TPPBs to the bioproduction of the pharmaceutical precursor L-phenylacetylcarbinol (PAC), a biotransformation which suffers from substrate (benzaldehyde), product (PAC), and by-product (benzyl alcohol) inhibition, and simple strategies to improve TPPB performance in general. A wide range of commercially available, biocompatible, and non-bioavailable polymers were screened for their affinity for benzaldehyde, PAC, and benzyl alcohol. Hytrel G3548L demonstrated the highest affinity for all three target compounds and was subsequently used in solid-liquid TPPBs for PAC production. Using 15% v/v polymer beads, PAC concentration was increased by 104% and benzyl alcohol concentration decreased by 38% over the single phase control. The delivery of benzaldehyde from polymer beads demonstrated only a 6-8% reduction in mass productivity with improved operational simplicity and reduced operator intervention. The final objective of this work was to independently investigate various aspects of the aqueous phase composition and determine how each factor affects the partition coefficient of benzaldehyde in Hytrel G3548L. Temperature and pH were observed to have no significant effect on partitioning. Salt and glucose additions increased the partition coefficient by 173% and 30% respectively compared to RO water, while ethanol was found to decrease the partition coefficient from 44 (±1.6) to 1 (±0.3). These findings may be applied to solid-liquid TPPBs to increase or decrease partitioning as required, leading to improved bioreactor performance. This work has successfully shown that with careful polymer selection, solid-liquid TPPBs can be used to increase the productivity of a biotransformation without the associated biocompatibility problems that have sometimes been observed with organic solvents. The delivery of inhibitory substrate from the polymer phase was successfully accomplished, which is a novel demonstration in the field of solid-liquid TPPBs for biocatalysis. Finally this work contributes a range of simple strategies to improve the partitioning behavior of solid-liquid TPPBs using the aqueous phase composition. / Thesis (Master, Chemical Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2010-08-26 10:53:38.569
2

Génération de particules de polymères à structure contrôlée par la microfluidique / Polymer particles generation with structures controlled by microfluidics

Marcati, Alain 27 November 2009 (has links)
Ces travaux de recherche s’inscrivent d’une part dans une thématique d’intensification de procédés : la synthèse des particules de polymères est classiquement réalisée en batch en présence de solvants, tensioactifs et agents stabilisateurs. Dans ces conditions, les particules générées ont une distribution de taille assez large. Pour palier à celà, la synthèse des particules est envisagée en continu dans des microcanaux avec l’eau en phase dispersante, sans ajout de tensioactifs et sans traitement de surface des parois du microréacteur. L’utilisation de l’échelle micrométrique va ainsi procurer une très grande régularité aux dispersions générées et empêcher la coalescence des gouttelettes au sein du milieu qui provoque la polydispersité des particules dans les cuves agitées. Nous avons donc développé des outils microfluidiques et étudié l’hydrodynamique dans ces microréacteurs pour obtenir la génération de gouttelettes sphériques afin de synthétiser des billes d’un diamètre inférieur à la centaine de microns par polymérisation directe des gouttes. Ces travaux visent d’autre part, la production de nouveaux matériaux puisque l’objectif était non seulement de produire des particules simples mais d’envisager des structures plus complexes telles que des particules multicouches de type oignon pour lesquelles on pourrait choisir la nature et l’épaisseur de chaque couche. Nous avons donc travaillé sur la manipulation de l’écoulement après polymérisation pour envisager des méthodes d’enrobage des particules coeurs. Enfin nous avons trouvé une nouvelle application liée à la synthèse de particules en microcanaux : la création de colonnes chromatographiques remplies de particules. / This work is full part of process intensification : polymer particles are usually synthesized in batch reactors with solvents, surfactants and stabilizers. In these conditions, particles are obtained with large size distribution. In order to reduce size distribution, particles synthesis is then studied in a continuous process in microchannels in water, without surfactants nor surface treatment of microreactors’ walls. The micron-size scale provides indeed better control of monomer dispersion and prevents droplets coalescence which is the major reason of polydispersity in stirred tank reactors.That is why we have developped microfluidic tools and studied hydrodynamics and droplet generation into microreactors in order to synthetize polymer beads smaller than a hundred microns by direct polymerization of spherical droplets. This work also deals with new material creaction : the objective was also to produce onion-like structures for whom we could choose each layer chemical nature and thickness. We have then analysed manipulation of partciles flow to determine ways of encapsulating core particles. Finally, we also developped a new application related to polymer beads into microchannels : the creation of micropacked chromatography columns
3

Application of Raman and Fluorescence Spectroscopy to Single Chromatographic Beads

Larsson, Mina January 2005 (has links)
<p>Chromatography is a powerful technique, essential in chemical analyses and preparative separation in industry and research. Many different kinds of chromatographic material are needed, due to the large variety of applications. Detailed methods of characterisation are needed to design new chromatographic materials and understand their properties. In this thesis, confocal Raman spectroscopy and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) have been applied to micrometer-size chromatographic beads, for which these techniques have not been used earlier. New methodology, optimized for use with the chromatographic beads, has been developed and evaluated. </p><p>Confocal spectroscopy has been used to determine distributions of functional groups within single chromatographic beads. This distribution is of great importance in determining the chromatographic properties, since the material is porous and the solute molecules can diffuse inside the beads. Most of the confocal experiments have been performed with Raman spectroscopy; fluorescence spectroscopy, using Nd<sup>3+</sup> ions or dye-labelled proteins as fluorescence probes, has been used for comparison. </p><p>The concentration of adsorbed analytes is very low within the beads. SERS was therefore used to enhance the Raman signal. SERS-active surfaces were prepared by incorporating gold nano-particles into the interior of the bead. TEM measurements showed that the gold nano-particles could be observed throughout, and it was possible to record analyte spectra from different positions within the bead. Enhanced spectra could be obtained both for small test molecules and for larger bio-molecules, although the spectra for the smaller analytes were much more intense.</p>
4

Application of Raman and Fluorescence Spectroscopy to Single Chromatographic Beads

Larsson, Mina January 2005 (has links)
Chromatography is a powerful technique, essential in chemical analyses and preparative separation in industry and research. Many different kinds of chromatographic material are needed, due to the large variety of applications. Detailed methods of characterisation are needed to design new chromatographic materials and understand their properties. In this thesis, confocal Raman spectroscopy and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) have been applied to micrometer-size chromatographic beads, for which these techniques have not been used earlier. New methodology, optimized for use with the chromatographic beads, has been developed and evaluated. Confocal spectroscopy has been used to determine distributions of functional groups within single chromatographic beads. This distribution is of great importance in determining the chromatographic properties, since the material is porous and the solute molecules can diffuse inside the beads. Most of the confocal experiments have been performed with Raman spectroscopy; fluorescence spectroscopy, using Nd3+ ions or dye-labelled proteins as fluorescence probes, has been used for comparison. The concentration of adsorbed analytes is very low within the beads. SERS was therefore used to enhance the Raman signal. SERS-active surfaces were prepared by incorporating gold nano-particles into the interior of the bead. TEM measurements showed that the gold nano-particles could be observed throughout, and it was possible to record analyte spectra from different positions within the bead. Enhanced spectra could be obtained both for small test molecules and for larger bio-molecules, although the spectra for the smaller analytes were much more intense.
5

Synthesis and applications of functional magnetic polymer beads; synthesis and mass spectrometry analysis of model peptides

Zhao, Xiaoning 01 January 2012 (has links)
The first part of the thesis describes the synthesis and application of functional magnetic polymer beads. The traditional suspension polymerization approach was used to synthesize polystyrene-iron oxide (Fe 3 O 4 ) based magnetic beads. The beads were coupled to different surface functional groups. The Fe 3 O 4 particles were encapsulated into a polystyrene shell. The surface functional groups were generated by graft-polymerization with functional monomers. The average size of the beads was in the range of 100-500 μm. Chemical tests showed that the beads were stable in strong acid, strong base and polar solvent. The beads had a fast response to an external magnetic field. A self-emulsion-polymerization approach was developed to synthesize smaller magnetic beads with the - OH groups on the surface. A modified approach based on traditional suspension-polymerization was developed to synthesize acid-durable beads with more Fe 3 O 4 encapsulated inside the beads. A novel emulsion-suspension polymerization method was successfully developed to synthesize much smaller magnetic beads ( A new peptide synthesis approach was developed using functional magnetic beads as the resin for solid phase synthesis. In this application, synthesized magnetic beads were further modified by a two-step reaction. The amino group was anchored onto the surface of these beads, followed by coupling with the Rink amide linker. The resulting beads were used as the resin to synthesize several model peptides. The peptides were successfully synthesized, and the sequences were confirmed by mass spectrometry analysis. The yields of the peptides were comparable to those obtained from commercial Rink amide resin. The second part of the thesis describes the synthesis and mass spectrometry analysis of two series of model peptides. One series has the linear (non-cyclic) structure, A n K, KA n , P n K, and AcA n K. The other series contains cyclic peptides, c-Ac-DAKAK and c-Ac-DADapAK. All peptides were synthesized using solid phase peptide synthesis. The relative proton affinities of the model peptides were measured using the collision induced dissociation experiments using a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. It was found that the effective proton affinity of a cyclic peptide was significantly reduced compared to a linear analogue. The reduced proton affinity implies an increased lipophilicity of the peptide.

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