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Quantum dots (QDs) are inorganic semiconductor nanocrystals capable of emitting light. The current major challenge lies in the use of heavy metals, which are known to be highly toxic to humans and pose significant environmental risks. Researchers have turned to indium (In) as a promising option for more environmentally benign QDs, specifically indium phosphide (InP). A significant obstacle remains in sustaining the long-term photostability of InP-based QDs when exposed to the environment. To tackle this, electrospraying is used in this work to protect indium phosphide/zinc selenide/zinc sulfide (InP/ZnSe/ZnS) QDs by embedding them within polymer core-shell microparticles of poly[(lauryl methacrylate)-co-(ethylene glycol dimethacrylate)]/poly(methyl methacrylate) (poly(LMA-co-EGDMA)/PMMA). During the flight of droplets, the liquid monomer core of LMA and EGDMA with QDs is encapsulated by the solid shell of PMMA formed due to solvent evaporation, resulting in a liquid-core/solid-shell particle structure. After that, the captured core of monomers is polymerized into a cross-linked polymer with the embedded QDs via a thermal initiation. They demonstrate how a successful core-shell particle formation is achieved to produce structures for initially liquid monomer systems via coaxial electrospraying that are used for cross-linked polymers, which are of major interest for the encapsulation of InP-based QDs for generally improved photostability over pristine QDs.
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The motion of self-propelling microswimmers is significantly affected by confinement, which can enhance or reduce their mobility and also steer the direction of their propulsion. While their interactions with solid boundaries have already received considerable attention, many aspects of the influence of liquid-liquid interfaces (LLI) on active particle propulsion still remain unexplored. In this work, we studied the adsorption and motion of bimetallic Janus sideways propelled rods dispersed at the interface between an aqueous solution of hydrogen peroxide and oil. The wetting properties of the bimetallic rods result in a wide distribution of their velocities at the LLI. While a fraction of rods remain immotile, we note a significant enhancement of motility for the rest of the particles with velocities of up to 8 times higher in comparison to those observed near a solid wall. Liquid-liquid interfaces, therefore, can provide a new way to regulate the propulsion of bimetallic particles.
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A possible application of self-propelling particles is the transport of microscopic cargo. Maximizing the collection and transport efficiency of particulate matter requires the area swept by the moving particle to be as large as possible. One such particle geometry are rods propelled perpendicular to their long axis, that act as "sweepers" for collecting particles. Here we report on the required Janus coating to achieve such motion, and on the dynamics of the collection and transport of microscopic cargo by sideways propelled Janus rods.
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In this study, we report on the influence of mechanochemical activation on the chemical stability of amorphous solid dispersions made up of indomethacin and hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose (HPMC), poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP), poly(vinylpyrrolidone vinylacetate) (PVPVA), or Soluplus. In agreement with our recently published work, all applied carriers were found to be prone to polymer degradation. Covalent bonds within the polymers were cleaved and mechanoradicals were generated. Furthermore, decomposition of indomethacin was also observed but occurred only in the presence of polymers. Hence, it is proposed that the generated mechanoradicals from the polymers are responsible for the chemical degradation of indomethacin. Our study also strongly suggests the existence of a critical polymer- and process-dependent molecular weight limit "M∞", below which only limited mechanodegradation takes place since the lower-molecular-weight polymer PVP K12PF had a less profound influence on the degradation of indomethacin in comparison to PVP K25.
Asunto(s)
Portadores de Fármacos/química , Indometacina/química , Polímeros/química , Derivados de la Hipromelosa/química , Peso Molecular , Polietilenglicoles/química , Polivinilos/química , Povidona/análogos & derivados , Povidona/química , Pirrolidinas/químicaRESUMEN
In this work, a chemical (and physical) evaluation of cryogenic milling to manufacture amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs) is provided to support novel mechanistic insights in the cryomilling process. Cryogenic milling devices are considered as reactors in which both physical transitions (reduction in crystallite size, polymorphic transformations, accumulation of crystallite defects, and partial or complete amorphization) and chemical reactions (chemical decomposition, etc.) can be mechanically triggered. In-depth characterization of active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) (content determination) and polymer (viscosity, molecular weight, dynamic vapor sorption, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, and ANS and thioflavin T staining) chemical decomposition demonstrated APIs to be more prone to chemical degradation in case of presence of a polymer. A significant reduction of the polymer chain length was observed and in case of BSA denaturation/aggregation. Hence, mechanochemical activation process(es) for amorphization and ASD manufacturing cannot be regarded as a mild technique, as generally put forward, and one needs to be aware of chemical degradation of both APIs and polymers.
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Portadores de Fármacos/química , Composición de Medicamentos/métodos , Gelatina/química , Derivados de la Hipromelosa/química , Povidona/química , Albúmina Sérica Bovina/química , Cinarizina/química , Cristalización , Estabilidad de Medicamentos , Dispersión Dinámica de Luz , Fenofibrato/química , Vidrio/química , Indometacina/química , Estructura Molecular , Peso Molecular , Naproxeno/química , Solubilidad , Espectroscopía Infrarroja por Transformada de Fourier , Temperatura de Transición , ViscosidadRESUMEN
Water-soluble polymers are still the most popular carrier for the preparation of amorphous solid dispersions (ASDs). The advantage of this type of carrier is the fast drug release upon dissolution of the water-soluble polymer and thus the initial high degree of supersaturation of the poorly soluble drug. Nevertheless, the risk for precipitation due to fast drug release is a phenomenon that is frequently observed. In this work, we present an alternative carrier system for ASDs where a water-soluble and water-insoluble carrier are combined to delay the drug release and thus prevent this onset of precipitation. Poly(2-alkyl-2-oxazoline)s were selected as a polymer platform since the solution properties of this polymer class depend on the length of the alkyl sidechain. Poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline) (PEtOx) behaves as a water-soluble polymer at body temperature, while poly(2-n-propyl-2-oxazoline) (PPrOx) and poly(2-sec-butyl-2-oxazoline) (PsecBuOx) are insoluble at body temperature. Since little was known about the polymer's miscibility behaviour and especially on how the presence of a poorly-water soluble drug impacted their miscibility, a preformulation study was performed. Formulations were investigated with X-ray powder diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. PEtOx/PPrOx appeared to form an immiscible blend based on DSC and this was even more pronounced after heating. The six drugs that were tested in this work did not show any preference for one of the two phases. PEtOx/PsecBuOx on the other hand appeared to be miscible forming a homogeneous blend between the two polymers and the drugs.
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Portadores de Fármacos/química , Oxazoles/química , Composición de Medicamentos , Liberación de Fármacos , Indometacina/química , SolubilidadRESUMEN
Stress relaxation upon cessation of shear flow is known to be described by single-mode or multimode monotonic exponential decays. This is considered to be ubiquitous in nature. However, we found that, in some cases, the relaxation becomes anomalous in that an increase in the relaxing stress is observed. Those observations were made for physicochemically very different systems, having in common, however, the presence of self-associating units generating structures at large length scales. The nonmonotonic stress relaxation can be described phenomenologically by a generic model based on a redistribution of energy after the flow has stopped. When broken bonds are reestablished after flow cessation, the released energy is partly used to locally increase the elastic energy by the formation of deformed domains. If shear has induced order such that these elastic domains are partly aligned, the reestablishing of bonds gives rise to an increase of the overall stress.
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The linear and nonlinear rheological behavior of two rod-like particle suspensions as a function of concentration is studied using small amplitude oscillatory shear, steady shear and capillary breakup extensional rheometry. The rod-like suspensions are composed of fd virus and its mutant fdY21M, which are perfectly monodisperse, with a length on the order of 900 nm. The particles are semiflexible yet differ in their persistence length. The effect of stiffness on the rheological behavior in both, shear and extensional flow, is investigated experimentally. The linear viscoelastic shear data is compared in detail with theoretical predictions for worm-like chains. The extensional properties are compared to Batchelor's theory, generalized for the shear thinning nature of the suspensions. Theoretical predictions agree well with the measured complex moduli at low concentrations as well as the nonlinear shear and elongational viscosities at high flow rates. The results in this work provide guidelines for enhancing the elongational viscosity based on purely frictional effects in the absence of strong normal forces which are characteristic for high molecular weight polymers.
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Linear flow dichroism is shown to be a powerful tool to characterize the hydrodynamic dimensions of extremely small nonspherical colloids in solution. Dispersions of prolate and oblate quantum dots (QDs) are employed to investigate the validity of flow dichroism as a characterization tool. Shape-anisotropic QDs are important from an application perspective, where it is necessary to have a good knowledge of their hydrodynamic dimensions to predict and control their orientation during solution processing. Flow dichroism quantifies the tumbling motion of QDs in shear flow by optical means, which provides a characteristic signature of the particle shape, hydrodynamic friction, and size distribution. The effects of particle size and shape, size polydispersity, and shear rate on the temporal evolution of the flow-induced alignment are discussed in detail on the basis of numerical solutions of the Smoluchowski equation that describes the motion for the probability of the orientation of colloids in shear flow. It is shown that the combination of flow-dichroism experiments and the theoretical approach on the basis of the Smoluchowski equation provides a means to measure hydrodynamic aspect ratios and polydispersity, which for such small particles is not feasible with standard methods similar to light scattering. Flow dichroism will be useful not only for shape-anisotropic colloidal QDs, but also for other nanoscale systems.
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We explore the relaxation behavior of model colloidal gels under steady shear flow by means of orthogonal superposition rheometry. Fumed silica and carbon black dispersions in Newtonian matrices are used as a model system. As shear rate increases, the frequency dependent orthogonal moduli of the gels shift along the frequency axis without changing their shape, which finally can be superimposed to yield a single master curve. This indicates that the shear rate tunes a master clock for overall relaxation modes in the sheared colloidal gels to produce a "time-shear rate superposition (TSS)", as temperature does in polymeric liquids to produce a time-temperature superposition (TTS). The horizontal shift factor required at each shear rate to obtain the master curve is found to be directly proportional to the suspension viscosity for all the cases. From this result, we suggest that the suspension viscosity determines the overall relaxation time of the particles in the flowing colloidal gel.
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Wetting dynamics drive numerous processes involving liquids in contact with solid substrates with a wide range of geometries. The spreading dynamics of organic liquids and liquid metals at, respectively, room temperature and >1000 °C have been studied extensively, both experimentally and numerically; however, almost no attention has been paid to the wetting behavior of molten drops of thermoplastic polymers, despite its importance, for example, in the processing of fiber-reinforced polymer composites. Indeed, the ability of classical theories of dynamic wetting, that is, the hydrodynamic and the molecular-kinetic theories, to model these complex liquids is unknown. We have therefore investigated the spreading dynamics on glass, over temperatures between 200 and 260 °C, of two thermoplastics: polypropylene (PP) and poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF). PP and PVDF showed, respectively, the highest and lowest slip lengths due to their different interactions with the glass substrate. The jump lengths of PP and PVDF are comparable to their Kuhn segment lengths, suggesting that the wetting process of these polymers is mediated by segmental displacements. The present work not only provides evidence of the suitability of the classical models to model dynamic wetting of molten polymers but also advances our understanding of the wetting dynamics of molten thermoplastics at the liquid/solid interface.
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We study the mechanism of depletion stabilization and the resultant microstructure of aqueous suspensions of nanosized silica and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA). Rheology, small-angle light scattering (SALS), and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) techniques enable us to analyze the microstructure at broad length scale from single particle size to the size of a cluster of aggregated particles. As PVA concentration increases, the microstructure evolves from bridging flocculation, steric stabilization, depletion flocculation to depletion stabilization. To our surprise, when depletion stabilization occurs, the suspension shows the stabilization at the cluster length scale, while maintaining fractal aggregates at the particle length scale. This sharply contrasts previously reported studies on the depletion stabilization of microsized particle and polymer suspensions, which exhibits the stabilization at the particle length scale. On the basis of the evaluation of depletion interaction, we propose that the depletion energy barrier exists between clusters rather than particles due to the comparable size of silica particle and the radius gyration of PVA.
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Nanopartículas/química , Alcohol Polivinílico/química , Floculación , Modelos Moleculares , Conformación Molecular , Tamaño de la Partícula , Reología , SuspensionesRESUMEN
We report a first application of vertical small-angle X-ray scattering to investigate the drying process of a colloidal suspension by overcoming gravity related restrictions. From the observation of the drying behavior of charge-stabilized colloidal silica in situ, we find the solidification of the colloidal particles exhibits an initial ordering, followed by a sudden aggregation when they overcome an electrostatic energy barrier. The aggregation can be driven not only by capillary pressure but also by thermal motion of the particles. The dominating contribution is determined by the magnitude of the energy barrier at the transition, which significantly decreases during drying due to an increased ionic strength.
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Dióxido de Silicio/química , Coloides/química , Dispersión del Ángulo Pequeño , Suspensiones/química , Difracción de Rayos XRESUMEN
Many hydrogel materials of interest are homogeneous on the micrometer scale. Electrospinning, the formation of sub-micrometer to micrometer diameter fibers by a jet of fluid formed under an electric field, is one process being explored to create rich microstructures. However, electrospinning a hydrogel system as it reacts requires an understanding of the gelation kinetics and corresponding rheology near the liquid-solid transition. In this study, we correlate the structure of electrospun fibers of a covalently cross-linked hydrogelator with the corresponding gelation transition and kinetics. Polyethylene oxide (PEO) is used as a carrier polymer in a chemically cross-linking poly(ethylene glycol)-high molecular weight heparin (PEG-HMWH) hydrogel. Using measurements of gelation kinetics from multiple particle tracking microrheology (MPT), we correlate the material rheology with the the formation of stable fibers. An equilibrated, cross-linked hydrogel is then spun and the PEO is dissolved. In both cases, microstructural features of the electrospun fibers are retained, confirming the covalent nature of the network. The ability to spin fibers of a cross-linking hydrogel system ultimately enables the engineering of materials and microstructural length scales suitable for biological applications.
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An ultrasonic microreactor with rough microchannels is presented in this study for oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion generation. Previous accounts have shown that surface pits or imperfections localize and enhance cavitation activity. In this study cavitation bubbles are localized on the rough microchannels of a borosilicate glass microreactor. The cavitation bubbles in the microchannel are primarily responsible for emulsification in the ultrasonic microreactor. We investigate the emulsification mechanism in the rough microchannels employing high-speed imaging to reveal the different emulsification modes influenced by the size and oscillation intensity of the cavitation bubbles. The effect of emulsification modes on the O/W emulsion droplet size distribution for different surface roughness and frequency is demonstrated. The positive effect of the frequency on minimizing the droplet size utilizing a reactor with large pits is presented. We also demonstrate microreactor systems for a successful generation of miniemulsions with high dispersed phase volume fractions up to 20%. The observed emulsification mechanism in the rough microchannel offers new insights into the utility and scale-up of ultrasonic microreactors for emulsification.
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Despite a wide set of experimental data and a large number of studies, the quantitative description of the relaxation mechanisms involved in the disorientation process of bidisperse blends is still under discussion. In particular, while it has been shown that the relaxation of self-unentangled long chains diluted in a short chain matrix is well approximated by a Constraint Release Rouse (CRR) mechanism, there is no consensus on the value of the average release time of their entanglements, τobs, which fixes the timescale of the CRR relaxation. Therefore, the first objective of the present work is to discuss the different approaches proposed to determine this time and compare them to a large set of experimental viscoelastic data, either newly measured (poly(methyl-)methacrylate and 1,4-polybutadiene blends) or coming from the literature (polystyrene and polyisoprene blends). Based on this large set of data, it is found that with respect to the molar mass of the short chain matrix, τobs follows a power law with an exponent close to 2.5, rather than 3 as previously proposed. While this slight change in the power law exponent does not strongly affect the values of the constraint release times, the results obtained suggest the universality of the CRR process. Finally, we propose a new description of τobs, which is implemented in a tube-based model. The accurate description of the experimental data obtained provides a good starting point to extend this approach to self-entangled binary blends.
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In this article, a new system employing an ultrasonic microreactor coupled with a tubular reactor is presented for the continuous generation of polymer nanoparticles. The continuous generation of cross-linked polymer nanoparticles utilizing the monomer butyl methacrylate and the cross-linker ethylene glycol dimethacrylate is demonstrated. Firstly, the miniemulsion polymerization of a monomer-in-water miniemulsion is studied in a batch system. Secondly, a coiled tubular reactor is employed for the continuous polymerization of the miniemulsion generated by an ultrasonic microreactor. Finally, the influence of monomer volume fraction and surfactant concentration on the synthesized polymer nanoparticles is studied. Polymer particles in a size range of 50-250 nm are synthesized and a high polymerization conversion is achieved utilizing the system demonstrated in this article.
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Quantum dots (QDs) are semiconductor nanocrystals that are used in optoelectronic applications. Most modern QDs are based on toxic metals, for example Cd, and do not comply with the European Restriction of Hazardous Substances regulation of the European Union. Latest promising developments focus on safer QD alternatives based on elements from the III-V group. However, the InP-based QDs lack an overall photostability under environmental influences. One design path of achieving stability is through encapsulation in cross-linked polymer matrices with the possibility to covalently link the matrix to surface ligands of modified core-shell QDs. The work focuses on the formation of polymer microbeads suitable for InP-based QD encapsulation, allowing for an individual protection of QDs and an improved processibility via this particle-based approach. For this, a microfluidic based method in the co-flow regime is used that consists of an oil-in-water droplet system in a glass capillary environment. The generated monomer droplets are polymerized in-flow into poly(LMA-co-EGDMA) microparticles with embedded InP/ZnSe/ZnS QDs using a UV initiation. They demonstrate how a successful polymer microparticle formation via droplet microfluidics produces optimized matrix structures leading to a distinct photostability improvement of InP-based QDs compared to nonprotected QDs.
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The hydrophilic nature of graphene oxide sheets can be tailored by varying the carbon to oxygen ratio. Depending on this ratio, the particles can be deposited at either a water-air or a water-oil interface. Upon compression of thus-created Langmuir monolayers, the sheets cover the entire interface, assembling into a strong, compact layer of tiled graphene oxide sheets. With further compression, the particle layer forms wrinkles that are reversible upon expansion, resembling the behavior of an elastic membrane. In the present work, we investigate under which conditions the structure and properties of the interfacial layer are such that free-standing films can be obtained. The interfacial rheological properties of these films are investigated using both compressional experiments and shear rheometry. The role of surface rheology in potential applications of such tiled films is explored. The rheological properties are shown to be responsible for the efficiency of such layers in stabilizing water-oil emulsions. Moreover, because of the mechanical integrity, large-area monolayers can be deposited by, for example, Langmuir-Blodgett techniques using aqueous subphases. These films can be turned into transparent conductive films upon subsequent chemical reduction.
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A simple and versatile method for making chemically patterned anisotropic colloidal particles is proposed and demonstrated for two different types of patterning. Using a combination of thermo/mechanical stretching followed by a wet chemical treatment of a sterically stabilized latex, both patchy ellipsoidal particles with sticky interactions near the tips as well as particles with tunable fluorescent patterns could be easily produced. The potential of such model colloidal particles is demonstrated, specifically for the case of directed self-assembly.