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Hydrophilic/hydrophobic

Tian Y, Fendler J FI, Flungerbuhler FI, Guldi D M and Asmus K-D 1999 Effects of hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance and stereochemistry on the supramolecular assembly of functionalized fullerenes Supramol. Sc/. C 7 67-73... [Pg.2431]

In section C2.5.2 we considered a variational-type theory to treat the thennodynamics of the random hydrophobic-hydrophilic heteropolymer. Here we describe a limiting behaviour of the random bond model [30]. [Pg.2663]

Partially hydrolyzed poly(vinyl alcohol) grades are preferred because they have a hydrophobic /hydrophilic balance that make them uniquely suited for emulsion polymerization. The compatibUity of the residual acetate units with the poly(vinyl acetate) latex particles partly explains the observed stabilization effect. The amount of PVA employed is normally 4—10% on the weight of vinyl acetate monomer. The viscosity of the resulting latex increases with increasing molecular weight and decreasing hydrolysis of the PVA (318). [Pg.488]

Suspension Polymerization. Suspension polymerization is carried out in small droplets of monomer suspended in water. The monomer is first finely dispersed in water by vigorous agitation. Suspension stabiUzers act to minimize coalescence of droplets by forming a coating at the monomer—water interface. The hydrophobic—hydrophilic properties of the suspension stabiLizers ate key to resin properties and grain agglomeration (89). [Pg.502]

Phenol is the starting material for numerous intermediates and finished products. About 90% of the worldwide production of phenol is by Hock process (cumene oxidation process) and the rest by toluene oxidation process. Both the commercial processes for phenol production are multi step processes and thereby inherently unclean [1]. Therefore, there is need for a cleaner production method for phenol, which is economically and environmentally viable. There is great interest amongst researchers to develop a new method for the synthesis of phenol in a one step process [2]. Activated carbon materials, which have large surface areas, have been used as adsorbents, catalysts and catalyst supports [3,4], Activated carbons also have favorable hydrophobicity/ hydrophilicity, which make them suitable for the benzene hydroxylation. Transition metals have been widely used as catalytically active materials for the oxidation/hydroxylation of various aromatic compounds. [Pg.277]

A unique feature of such DNA-directed self-assemblies is their site-selective immobilization, which makes it possible to construct well-defined nanostructures. On the other hand, the possibility of the introduction of a vast number of substitutes (like peptidic sequences, nucleoproteins, of hydrophobic hydrocarbon chains) to an adamantane core (adamantyl) makes such a process capable of designing steric colloidal and supramolecular conformations by setting hydrophobic/hydrophilic and other interactions. In addition, the rigidity of the adamantane structure can provide strength and rigidity to such self-assemblies [150]. [Pg.239]

The peripheral substitution with hydrophobic chains on one hemisphere and hydrophilic groups on the other provides the perfect hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance allowing the formation of stable Langmuir films. In addition, a perfect reversibility has been observed in successive compression/decompression cycles (Fig. 18). [Pg.104]

Although the potassium superoxide route can be universally applied to various alkyl methacrylates, it is experimentally more difficult than simple acid hydrolysis. In addition, limited yields do not permit well-defined hydrophobic-hydrophilic blocks. On the other hand, acid catalyzed hydrolysis is limited to only a few esters such as TBMA, but yields of carboxylate are quantitative. Hydrolysis attempts of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and poly(isopropyl methacrylate) (PIPMA) do not yield an observable amount of conversion to the carboxylic acid under the established conditions for poly(t-butyl methacrylate) (PTBMA). This allows for selective hydrolysis of all-acrylic block copolymers. [Pg.270]

Drug Release from PHEMA-l-PIB Networks. Amphiphilic networks due to their distinct microphase separated hydrophobic-hydrophilic domain structure posses potential for biomedical applications. Similar microphase separated materials such as poly(HEMA- -styrene-6-HEMA), poly(HEMA-6-dimethylsiloxane- -HEMA), and poly(HEMA-6-butadiene- -HEMA) triblock copolymers have demonstrated better antithromogenic properties to any of the respective homopolymers (5-S). Amphiphilic networks are speculated to demonstrate better biocompatibility than either PIB or PHEMA because of their hydrophilic-hydrophobic microdomain structure. These unique structures may also be useful as swellable drug delivery matrices for both hydrophilic and lipophilic drugs due to their amphiphilic nature. Preliminary experiments with theophylline as a model for a water soluble drug were conducted to determine the release characteristics of the system. Experiments with lipophilic drugs are the subject of ongoing research. [Pg.210]

KEY TERMS hydrophobic hydrophilic monomer cross-linking polymer copolymer hydrogel... [Pg.225]

The ProteinChip System from Ciphergen Biosystems uses patented SELDI (Surface-Enhanced Laser Desorption/Ionization) ProteinChip technology to rapidly perform the separation, detection, and analysis of proteins at the femtomole level directly from biological samples. ProteinChip Systems use ProteinChip Arrays which contain chemically (cationic, anionic, hydrophobic, hydrophilic, etc.) or biochemically (antibody, receptor, DNA, etc.) treated surfaces for specific interaction with proteins of interest. Selected washes create on-chip, high-resolution protein maps. This protein mass profile, or reten-tate map of the proteins bound to each of the ProteinChip Array surfaces, is quantitatively detected in minutes by the ProteinChip Reader. [Pg.262]

One of the most promising applications of enzyme-immobilized mesoporous materials is as microscopic reactors. Galameau et al. investigated the effect of mesoporous silica structures and their surface natures on the activity of immobilized lipases [199]. Too hydrophilic (pure silica) or too hydrophobic (butyl-grafted silica) supports are not appropriate for the development of high activity for lipases. An adequate hydrophobic/hydrophilic balance of the support, such as a supported-micelle, provides the best route to enhance lipase activity. They also encapsulated the lipases in sponge mesoporous silicates, a new procedure based on the addition of a mixture of lecithin and amines to a sol-gel synthesis to provide pore-size control. [Pg.141]

Clay minerals or phyllosilicates are lamellar natural and synthetic materials with high surface area, cation exchange and swelling properties, exfoliation ability, variable surface charge density and hydrophobic/hydrophilic character [85], They are good host structures for intercalation or adsorption of organic molecules and macromolecules, particularly proteins. On the basis of the natural adsorption of proteins by clay minerals and various clay complexes that occurs in soils, many authors have investigated the use of clay and clay-derived materials as matrices for the immobilization of enzymes, either for environmental chemistry purpose or in the chemical and material industries. [Pg.454]

Layered phosphate/phosphonate and phosphonate materials, obtained by substitution of the phosphate moiety by phosphonate groups, display interesting tunable hydrophilic/organophilic properties for adsorption processes. When Candida rugosa lipase (CRL) is simply equilibrated with zirconium phosphate and phosphonate [135,136], immobilization was demonstrated to take place at the surface of the microcrystals. However, because lipase exhibits a strong hydrophobic character, its uptake by zirconium phosphate and phosphonate was much more related to the hydrophobic/hydrophilic character of the supports than to the surface area properties. A higher uptake is observed for zirconium-phenylphosphonate (78 %)... [Pg.462]

The concept of zeolite action was tested in a particular reaction where the enzyme is exposed from the beginning to an acidic environment the esterification of geraniol with acetic acid catalyzed by Candida antarctica lipase B immobilized on zeolite NaA [219]. Lipases have been used for the hydrolysis of triglycerides and due to their ambivalent hydrophobic/hydrophilic properties they are effective biocatalysts for the hydrolysis of hydrophobic substrates [220]. When water-soluble lipases are used in organic media they have to be immobilized on solid supports in order to exhibit significant catalytic activity. [Pg.469]

T. Ohsaka, F. Matsumoto, and K. Tokuda, An electrochemical approach to dismutation of superoxide ion using a biological model system with a hydrophobic/hydrophilic interface, in Frontiers of Reactive Oxygen Species in Biological and Medicine (K. Asaka and T. Yoshikawa, eds), pp. 91—93. Elsevier Science B.V. Oxford (1994). [Pg.204]


See other pages where Hydrophilic/hydrophobic is mentioned: [Pg.2418]    [Pg.2627]    [Pg.2627]    [Pg.2660]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.486]    [Pg.568]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.244]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.444]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.111]   


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Amine resins, hydrophobic-hydrophilic

Amino acids hydrophobic/hydrophilic

Amino hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity

Amphoteric hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity

Balance between hydrophobic/hydrophilic

Balance, hydrophile-hydrophobe

Balance, hydrophobic/hydrophilic

Balanced hydrophobic and hydrophilic

Comonomers, hydrophobic-hydrophilic

Concentrated Emulsion Polymerization Pathway to Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Microsponge Molecular Reservoirs

Copolymers hydrophilic-hydrophobic grafts

Copolymers, hydrophobic hydrophilic polymer grafted

Effect of hydrophilic and hydrophobic group types

Hydrophile-hydrophobe

Hydrophile-hydrophobe ratio

Hydrophilic and Hydrophobic Patterning

Hydrophilic and hydrophobic

Hydrophilic and hydrophobic residues

Hydrophilic and hydrophobic segments)

Hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces

Hydrophilic surface hydrophobicity

Hydrophilic vs. hydrophobic

Hydrophilic-Hydrophobic Polymer Composites

Hydrophilic-hydrophobic balance value

Hydrophilic-hydrophobic block copolymers)

Hydrophilic-hydrophobic dipole

Hydrophilic-hydrophobic property

Hydrophilic-hydrophobic transition

Hydrophilic/Hydrophobic Patterning

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic balance theory

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers adsorption onto

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers characterization

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers functionalized

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers improvement

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers plasma protein

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers surface properties

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic copolymers units

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic interface

Hydrophilic/hydrophobic surfaces

Hydrophilicity Hydrophobic compounds

Hydrophilicity and Hydrophobicity

Hydrophilicity or Hydrophobicity of Polymeric Materials and Their Behavior toward Protein Adsorption

Hydrophilicity, Hydrophobicity, and Superhydrophobicity

Hydrophilicity-hydrophobicity

Hydrophilicity-hydrophobicity

Hydrophilicity-hydrophobicity balance

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity Flotation

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity adsorbate-induced

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity properties

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity properties biodegradation mechanisms

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity properties block copolymers

Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity properties polymers

Hydrophobic Modification of Hydrophilic Polymers

Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions

Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Substances

Hydrophobic and hydrophilic acrylates

Hydrophobic and hydrophilic polymers

Hydrophobic and hydrophilic solutes

Hydrophobic hydrophilic substances

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic boundaries

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic composite

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic composite membranes

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic copolymers

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic interactions, protein binding

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic microenvironments

Hydrophobic-hydrophilic micropatterns

Hydrophobic/Hydrophilic Microfluidics

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic amino

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic behavior

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic domain

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic effects

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic fractionation

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic ratio

Hydrophobic/hydrophilic separation

Hydrophobic/hydrophillic interactions

Hydrophobically hydrophilically modified

Hydrophobicity-hydrophilicity, effect

Hydrophobicity-hydrophilicity, effect interfaces

Interaction hydrophilic-hydrophobic

Interaction hydrophobic-hydrophilic, protein

Membrane electrode assembly hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity

Mixtures of Hydrophilic and Hydrophobic Silicas

Multifunctional hydrophilic and hydrophobic

Polymeric membranes hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity

Porous Structure and Hydrophilic-Hydrophobic Properties of Highly Dispersed Carbon Electrodes

Protein hydrophobic-hydrophilic

Resin hydrophobic-hydrophilic balance

Reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer hydrophilic-hydrophobic blocks

Selective heterogeneous catalysts hydrophilicity-hydrophobicity

Substrates, hydrophilic, hydrophobic

Surface hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity

Switchable Hydrophobic-hydrophilic Fluorinated Layer for Offset Processing

Textile fibers hydrophobic/hydrophilic, properties

Water hydrophilic-hydrophobic

Wettability Hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity

Wettability hydrophilic/hydrophobic

Wetting Films on Locally Heterogeneous Surfaces Hydrophilic Surface with Hydrophobic Inclusions

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