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1.
ACS Nano ; 18(32): 21376-21387, 2024 Aug 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39088237

ABSTRACT

Water under soft nanoconfinement features physical and chemical properties fundamentally different from bulk water; yet, the multitude and specificity of confining systems and geometries mask any of its potentially universal traits. Here, we advance in this quest by resorting to lipidic mesophases as an ideal nanoconfinement system, allowing inspecting the behavior of water under systematic changes in the topological and geometrical properties of the confining medium, without altering the chemical nature of the interfaces. By combining Terahertz absorption spectroscopy experiments and molecular dynamics simulations, we unveil the presence of universal laws governing the physics of nanoconfined water, recapitulating the data collected at varying levels of hydration and nanoconfinement topologies. This geometry-independent universality is evidenced by the existence of master curves characterizing both the structure and dynamics of simulated water as a function of the distance from the lipid-water interface. Based on our theoretical findings, we predict a parameter-free law describing the amount of interfacial water against the structural dimension of the system (i.e., the lattice parameter), which captures both the experimental and numerical results within the same curve, without any fitting. Our results offer insight into the fundamental physics of water under soft nanoconfinement and provide a practical tool for accurately estimating the amount of nonbulk water based on structural experimental data.

2.
Carbohydr Polym ; 260: 117830, 2021 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33712169

ABSTRACT

The manifold array of saccharide linkages leads to a great variety of polysaccharide architectures, comprising three conformations in aqueous solution: compact sphere, random coil, and rigid rod. This conformational variation limits the suitability of the commonly applied molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) as selection criteria for polysaccharide ultrafiltration membranes, as it is based on globular marker proteins with narrow Mw and hydrodynamic volume relation. Here we show the effect of conformation on ultrafiltration performance using randomly coiled pullulan and rigid rod-like scleroglucan as model polysaccharides for membrane rejection and molecular weight distribution. Ultrafiltration with a 10 kDa polyethersulfone membrane yielded significant different recoveries for pullulan and scleroglucan showing 1% and 71%, respectively. We found deviations greater than 77-fold between nominal MWCO and apparent Mw of pullulan and scleroglucan, while recovering over 90% polysaccharide with unchanged Mw. We anticipate our work as starting point towards an optimized membrane selection for polysaccharide applications.


Subject(s)
Polysaccharides/chemistry , Ultrafiltration/methods , Glucans/chemistry , Glucans/isolation & purification , Membranes, Artificial , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Weight , Polymers/chemistry , Polysaccharides/isolation & purification , Sulfones/chemistry
3.
Langmuir ; 35(16): 5663-5671, 2019 04 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30929450

ABSTRACT

The present work addresses the effect of partial equilibration and molecular partitioning on the interpretation of release experiments. In this regard, it is shown how release profiles and the values of extracted transport parameters are affected by the time protocol chosen for sample collection by considering a series of experiments where the latter is systematically varied. Caffeine is investigated as a main model drug because of its similar affinity for water and lipids, while monolinolein-based lipid cubic phases are chosen as host matrices because of their wide employment in release studies. Our findings point to a progressive decline in diffusion rate upon increasing the time step, that is, the gap in time between two consecutive pickups, which is a signature of increasing equilibration of caffeine concentration between the lipidic mesophase and the water phase. Furthermore, the amount of released molecules at the first pickup displays negligible changes for large time steps, indicating complete equilibration in such cases. A model is introduced based on Fick's diffusion which goes beyond the assumption of perfect-sink conditions, a common feature of the typical theoretical approaches hitherto developed. The model is shown to account quantitatively for the experimental data and is subsequently employed to clarify the interplay of the adopted release protocol with the various transport parameters in determining the final outcome of the release process. Particularly, two additional molecular drugs are considered, namely glucose and proflavine, which are, respectively, more hydrophilic and hydrophobic than caffeine, thus allowing elucidating the role of molecular partitioning.

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