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1.
The affects of lipase concentration on ring-opening bulk polymerizations of epsilon-caprolactone and trimethylene carbonate were studied by using Novozym 435 (immobilized form of lipase B from Candida antarctica) as biocatalyst. The polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone was carried out in bulk at 70 degrees C. Three lipase concentrations of 9.77, 1.80 and 0.50 mg/mmol epsilon-CL were used in the experiment. The results showed that increasing the lipase concentration used in the polymerization system resulted in an increased rate of monomer consumption. For an enzyme concentration of 9.8 mg lipase per mmol monomer, an 80% monomer conversion was achieved in a 4-h time period, while for the lower enzyme concentration of 1.8 mg lipase per mmol monomer, 48 h were needed to reach monomer conversion. Linear relationships between Mn and monomer conversions were observed in all three enzyme concentrations, suggesting that the product molecular weight may be controlled by the stoichiometry of the reactants for these systems. At the same monomer conversion level, however, Mn decreased with increasing enzyme concentration. After correcting for the amount of monomer consumed in initiation, the plot of ln[([M]o - [M]i)/([Mt] - [M]i)] versus reaction time was found to be linear, suggesting that the monomer consumption followed a first-order rate law and no chain termination occurred. For the TMC systems, the polymerization was carried out in bulk at 55 degrees C. Similar to the epsilon-CL systems, increasing the Novozym 435 concentration from 8.3 to 23.6 mg/mmol TMC increased the rate of monomer conversion. Unlike the epsilon-CL systems, however, nonlinear relationships were obtained between Mn and monomer conversion, indicating that possible chain transfer and/or slow initiation had taken place in these systems. Consistent with the above result, nonlinear behavior was observed for the plot of ln[[M]o/[M]t] versus reaction time.  相似文献   

2.
An efficient living ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of a permethoxylated epsilon-caprolactone [(OMe)CL] catalyzed by yttrium(III) isopropoxide was developed for the synthesis of degradable protein-resistant polymers [P(OMe)CL]. The lactone monomer was efficiently prepared from a reduced sugar, D-dulcitol. Kinetic studies of the ROP revealed a linear dependence of ln[M]0/[M] on polymerization time as well as a linear correlation between the number-averaged molecular weight (M(n)) and monomer conversion; both support it is a living polymerization. A series of block copolymers of our permethoxylated lactone with epsilon-caprolactone [P(OMe)CL-b-PCL] were synthesized and fully characterized. In thermal analyses only single T(g)s were observed in all the block copolymers, suggesting that P(OMe)CL and PCL blocks are fully miscible. Finally, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensograms demonstrated that both P(OMe)CL and the P(OMe)CL-b-PCL block copolymers exhibit excellent resistance to fibrinogen and lysozyme.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of epsilon-caprolactone (epsilon-CL) and L-lactide (L-LA) has been performed from cellulose fibers. The hydroxyl groups on cellulose act as initiators in the polymerization, and the polymers are covalently bonded to the cellulose fiber. As an attempt to introduce more available hydroxyl groups on the surface, and thereby obtain higher grafting efficiency in the ROP of epsilon-CL and L-LA, unmodified paper was modified with xyloglucan-bis(methylol)-2-methylpropanamide (XG-bis-MPA) and 2,2-bis(methylol)propionic acid (bis-MPA), respectively. The grafted substrates were characterized via Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), contact angle measurement, atomic force microscopy, and enzymatic degradation. The results showed a successful grafting of poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) and poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) from the cellulose fiber surfaces. Furthermore, the results showed an improved grafting efficiency after activation of the cellulose surface with bis-MPA, and showed that the amount of grafted polymer could be controlled by the ratio of added free initiator to monomer.  相似文献   

4.
Yuan W  Yuan J  Zhang F  Xie X 《Biomacromolecules》2007,8(4):1101-1108
Well-defined ethyl cellulose-graft-poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (EC-g-PCL) graft copolymers were successfully synthesized via ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of epsilon-caprolactone (CL) with an ethyl cellulose (EC) initiator and a tin 2-ethylhexanoate (Sn(Oct)2) catalyst in xylene at 120 degrees C. Then, novel ethyl cellulose-graft-poly(epsilon-caprolactone)-block-poly(L-lactide) (EC-g-PCL-b-PLLA) graft-block copolymers were prepared by ROP of L-lactide (L-LA) with a hydroxyl-terminated EC-g-PCL macroinitiator and Sn(Oct)2 catalyst in bulk at 120 degrees C. Various graft and block lengths of EC-g-PCL and EC-g-PCL-b-PLLA copolymers were obtained by adjusting the molar ratios of CL monomer to EC and the L-LA monomer to CL. The thermal properties and crystalline morphologies of EC-g-PCL and EC-g-PCL-b-PLLA copolymers were different from those of linear PCL. The in vitro degradation rate of EC-g-PCL-b-PLLA was faster than those of linear PCL and EC-g-PCL due to the presence of PLLA blocks.  相似文献   

5.
Random copolymers were prepared by Candida antarctica lipase B (Novozyme-435) catalyzed copolymerization of omega-pentadecalactone (PDL) with epsilon-caprolactone (CL). Over the whole composition range PDL-CL copolymers are highly crystalline (melting enthalpy by differential scanning calorimetry, above 100 J/g; crystallinity degree by wide-angle X-ray scattering, WAXS, 60-70%). The copolymers melt at temperatures that linearly decrease with composition from that of poly(omega-pentadecalactone) (PPDL; 97 degrees C) to that of poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL; 59 degrees C). The WAXS profiles of PCL and PPDL homopolymers are very similar, except for the presence in PPDL of the (001) reflection at 2theta = 4.58 degrees that corresponds to a 19.3 angstroms periodicity in the chain direction. In PDL-CL copolymers the intensity of this reflection decreases with increasing content of CL units and vanishes at 50 mol % CL, as a result of randomization of the ester group alignment and loss of chain periodicity. PDL-CL copolymers crystallize in a lattice that gradually changes from that of one homopolymer to that of the other, owing to comonomer isomorphous substitution. Cocrystallization of comonomer units is also shown by a random PDL-CL copolymer obtained in a polymerization/transesterification reaction catalyzed by C. antarctica lipase B (Novozyme-435) starting from preformed PCL and PDL monomer.  相似文献   

6.
A series of fluorinated diblock and triblock copolymers of poly(epsilon-caprolactone) and poly(heptadecafluorodecylacrylate) were prepared by combining ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-CL and atom transfer radical polymerization of the acrylate. These copolymers with well-controlled molecular weight and composition were characterized by (1)H NMR spectroscopy and used as stabilizers for the dispersion ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-CL in supercritical carbon dioxide. The effect of composition and architecture of the polymeric stabilizers on the stabilization of PCL microspheres was investigated. Finally, purification of PCL was successfully implemented by reactive supercritical fluid extraction of the tin catalyst.  相似文献   

7.
Effects of chain-end structure and residual metal compounds on thermal degradation of poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) were investigated by means of thermogravimetric and pyrolysis-gas chromatograph mass spectrometric analyses. Four types of PCL samples with different chain-end structures (alpha-carboxylic acid-omega-hydroxyl-PCL, alpha-dodecyl ester-omega-hydroxyl-PCL, alpha-carboxylic acid-omega-acetyl-PCL, and alpha-dodecyl ester-omega-acetyl-PCL) were prepared by ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone in the presence of zinc-based catalyst and by subsequent acetylation reaction of polymers with acetic anhydride. PCL samples with different zinc contents were obtained by washing with acetic acid in chloroform solution of polymer. Thermal degradation behaviors of these PCL samples with different chain-end structures were examined under both isothermal and nonisothermal conditions. From both the isothermal and nonisothermal experiments, the thermal degradation of PCL samples containing high amounts of residual zinc compounds from synthesis process revealed the selective unzipping depolymerization step below 300 degrees C producing epsilon-caprolactone exclusively. In contrast, zinc-free PCL samples were stable at temperatures below 300 degrees C, and the thermal degradation occurred only at temperatures above 300 degrees C regardless of the chain-end structure. From (1)H NMR analysis of the residual molecules after isothermal degradation of zinc-free PCL, it was confirmed that the omega-chain-end of residual molecules was 5-hexenoic acid unit. However, the cyclic monomer and oligomers were detected as the volatile products of zinc-free PCL samples. These results suggest that the dominant reaction of thermal degradation for PCL above 300 degrees C is a competition between the random chain scission via cis elimination reaction and the cyclic rupture via intramolecular transesterification of PCL molecules.  相似文献   

8.
The copolymerization of epsilon-caprolactone (epsilon-CL) and d,l-lactide catalyzed by Candida antarctica lipase B was studied. Copolymerizations with different epsilon-CL-to-lactide ratios were carried out, and the product was monitored and characterized by MALDI-TOF MS, GPC, and (1)H NMR. The polymerization of epsilon-CL, which is normally promoted by C. antarctica lipase B, is initially slowed by the presence of lactide. During this stage, lactide is consumed more rapidly than epsilon-CL, and the incorporation occurs dimer-wise with regard to the lactic acid (LA) units. As the reaction proceeds, the relative amount of CL units in the copolymer increases. The nonrandom copolymer structure disappears with time, probably due to a lipase-catalyzed transesterification reaction. In the copolymerizations with a low content of lactide, macrocycles of poly(epsilon-caprolactone) and copolymers having up to two LA units in the ring were detected.  相似文献   

9.
Chen B  Hu J  Miller EM  Xie W  Cai M  Gross RA 《Biomacromolecules》2008,9(2):463-471
Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB) was covalently immobilized onto epoxy-activated macroporous poly(methyl methacrylate) Amberzyme beads (235 microm particle size, 220 A pore size) and nanoparticles (nanoPSG, diameter 68 nm) with a poly(glycidyl methacrylate) outer region. Amberzyme beads allowed CALB loading up to 0.16 g of enzyme per gram of support. IR microspectroscopy generated images of Amberzyme-CALB beads showed CALB is localized within a 50 microm thick loading front. IR microspectroscopy images, recorded prior to and after treatment of Amberzyme-CALB with DMSO/aqueous Triton X-100, are similar, confirming that CALB is largely chemically linked to Amberzyme. The activity of CALB immobilized on Amberzyme, Lewatit (i.e., Novozym 435 catalyst), and nanoPSG was assessed for lactone ring-opening and step-condensation polymerizations. For example, the percent conversion of -caprolactone using the same amount of enzyme catalyzed by Amberzym-CALB, Novozym 435, and nanoPSG-CALB for 20 min was 7.0, 16, and 65%, respectively. Differences in CALB reactivity were discussed based on resin physical parameters and availability of active sites determined by active site titrations. Regardless of the matrix used and chemical versus physical immobilization, -CL ring-opening polymerizations occur by a chain growth mechanism without chain termination. To test Amberzyme-CALB stability, the catalyst was reused over three reaction cycles for -CL ring-opening polymerization (70 degrees C, 70 min reactions) and glycerol/1,8-octanediol/adipic acid polycondensation reactions (90 degrees C, 64 h). Amberzyme-CALB was found to have far better stability for reuse relative to Novozym 435 for the polycondensation reaction.  相似文献   

10.
2-Hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) was used as initiator for the enzymatic ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of omega-pentadecalactone (PDL) and epsilon-caprolactone (CL). The lipase B from Candida antarctica was found to catalyze the cleavage of the ester bond in the HEMA end group of the formed polyesters, resulting in two major transesterification processes, methacrylate transfer and polyester transfer. This resulted in a number of different polyester methacrylate structures, such as polymers without, with one, and with two methacrylate end groups. Furthermore, the 1,2-ethanediol moiety (from HEMA) was found in the polyester products as an integral part of HEMA, as an end group (with one hydroxyl group) and incorporated within the polyester (polyester chains acylated on both hydroxyl groups). After 72 h, as a result of the methacrylate transfer, 79% (48%) of the initial amount of the methacrylate moiety (from HEMA) was situated (acylated) on the end hydroxyl group of the PPDL (PCL) polyester. In order to prepare materials for polymer networks, fully dimethacrylated polymers were synthesized in a one-pot procedure by combining HEMA-initiated ROP with end-capping using vinyl methacrylate. The novel PPDL dimethacrylate (>95% incorporated methacrylate end groups) is currently in use for polymer network formation. Our results show that initiators with cleavable ester groups are of limited use to obtain well-defined monomethacrylated macromonomers due to the enzyme-based transesterification processes. On the other hand, when combined with end-capping, well-defined dimethacrylated polymers (PPDL, PCL) were prepared.  相似文献   

11.
Wu R  Al-Azemi TF  Bisht KS 《Biomacromolecules》2008,9(10):2921-2928
Enantiomerically pure functional polycarbonate was synthesized from a novel seven-membered cyclic carbonate monomer derived from naturally occurring L-tartaric acid. The monomer was synthesized in three steps and screened for polymerization with four commercially available lipases from different sources at 80 degrees C, in bulk. The ring-opening polymerization (ROP) was affected by the source of the enzyme; the highest number-average molecular weight, M(n) = 15500 g/mol (PDI = 1.7; [alpha]D(20) = +77.8, T(m) = 58.8 degrees C) optically active polycarbonate was obtained with lipase Novozyme-435. The relationship between monomer conversion, reaction time, molecular weight, and molecular weight distribution were investigated for Novozyme-435 catalyzed ROP. Deprotection of the ketal groups was achieved with minimal polymer chain cleavage (M(n) = 10000 g/mol, PDI = 2.0) and resulted in optically pure polycarbonate ([alpha]D(20) = +56) bearing hydroxy functional groups. Deprotected poly(ITC) shows T(m) of 60.2 degrees C and DeltaH(f) = 69.56 J/g and similar to that of the poly(ITC), a glass transition temperature was not found. The availability of the pendant hydroxyl group is expected to enhance the biodegradability of the polymer and serves in a variety of potential biomedical applications such as polymeric drug delivery systems.  相似文献   

12.
Enzymatic ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone by various lipases was investigated in toluene at various temperatures. The determination of molecular weight and structural identification was carried out with gel permeation chromatography and proton NMR, respectively. Among the various lipases employed, an immobilized lipase from Candida antartica B (Novozym 435) showed the highest catalytic activity. The polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone by Novozym 435 showed an optimal temperature of 65 degrees C and an optimum toluene content of 50/50 v/v of toluene and epsilon-caprolactone. As lipases can degrade polyesters, a maximum in the molecular weight with time was obtained due to the competition of ring opening polymerization and degradation by specific chain end scission. The optimum temperature, toluene content, and the variation of molecular weight with time are consistent with earlier observations. A comprehensive model based on continuous distribution kinetics was developed to model these phenomena. The model accounts for simultaneous polymerization, degradation and enzyme deactivation and provides a technique to determine the rate coefficients for these processes. The dependence of these rate coefficients with temperature and monomer concentration is also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Dai S  Li Z 《Biomacromolecules》2008,9(7):1883-1893
Enzymatic modification of a microbial polyester was achieved by the ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone (CL) with low-molecular weight telechelic hydroxylated poly[( R)-3-hydroxybutyrate] (PHB-diol) as initiator and Novozym 435 (immobilized Candida antarctica Lipase B) as catalyst in anhydrous 1,4-dioxane or toluene. The ring-opening polymerization was investigated at different conditions with two different types of PHB-diols: PHB-diol(P), containing a primary OH and a secondary OH end groups, and PHB-diol(M), consisting of 91% PHB-diol(P) and 9% PHB-diol containing two secondary OH end groups. The reactions were followed by GPC analyses of the resulting polymers at different time points, and the optimal conditions were established to be 70 degrees C at a weight ratio of CL/enzyme/solvent of 8:1:24. The ring-opening polymerization of CL with PHB-diol(M) (Mn of 2380, NMR) at the molar ratio of 50:1 under the optimal conditions in 1,4-dioxane gave the corresponding poly[HB(56 wt %)-co-CL(44 wt %)] with Mn (NMR) of 3900 in 66% yield. Polymerization of CL and PHB-diol(P) ( Mn of 2010, NMR) at the same condition in toluene gave the corresponding poly[HB(28 wt %)-co-CL(72 wt %)] with Mn (NMR) of 7100 in 86% yield. Both polymers were characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR and IR analyses as di-block copolyesters containing a PHB block with a secondary OH end group and a poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) block with a primary OH end group. NMR analyses and control experiments suggested no formation of random copolymers and no change of the PHB block during the reaction. The enzymatic ring-opening polymerization was selectively initiated by the primary OH group of PHB-diol, whereas the secondary OH group remained as an end group in the final polymers. The thermal properties of the di-block poly(HB-co-CL)s were analyzed by DSC, with excellent T g values for the elastomer domain: poly[HB(56 wt %)- co-CL(44 wt %)] with M n (NMR) of 3900 demonstrated a T g of -57 degrees C, Tm of 145, 123, and 53 degrees C; and poly[HB(28wt%)-co-CL(72wt%)] with Mn (NMR) of 7100 gave a Tg of -60 degrees C, Tm of 147 and 50 degrees C. Thus, the selective enzymatic ring-opening polymerization with PHB-diol as macro-initiator provides a new method for the preparation of PHB-based block copolymers as biomaterials with good thermoplastic properties and novel structures containing functional end groups.  相似文献   

14.
The amino poly(trimethylene carbonate)-NHt-Boc (PTMC-NHt-Boc) and poly(epsilon-caprolactone)-NH -Boc (PCL-NHt-Boc) were synthesized by ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of TMC or CL and subsequently deprotected into the corresponding PTMC-NH2 and PCL-NH2. These functional homopolymers were used as macroinitiators for the ROP of gamma-benzyl-L-glutamate N-carboxyanhydride (BLG), consequently, giving the respective diblock copolymers PTMC-b-PBLG and PCL-b-PBLG in almost quantitative yields. The (co)polymers have been characterized by NMR and SEC analyses. DSC and IR studies confirmed the block structure of the copolymers and highlighted a phase separation between the rigid peptide (alpha-helix conformation) and the more flexible polyester segments. The self-assembly and the degradation behaviors of the copolymers depended on the nature of the polyester block and on the copolymer composition. Nanoparticles obtained from PBLG block copolymers were twice smaller ( RH < 100 nm) than those formed from PTMC and PCL homopolymers. Finally, their enzymatic degradation revealed that PTMC nanoparticles degraded faster than those made of PCL.  相似文献   

15.
Candida antarctica Lipase B (CALB), a metal-free enzyme, was successfully employed as catalyst for ring-opening copolymerization of omega-pentadecalactone (PDL) with p-dioxanone (DO) under mild reaction conditions (<80 degrees C, atmospheric pressure). Poly(PDL-co-DO) with high molecular weight (Mw > 30 000) and a wide range of comonomer contents was synthesized using various PDL/DO feed ratios. During the copolymerization reaction, large ring PDL was found to be more reactive than its smaller counterpart DO, resulting in higher PDL/DO unit ratios in polymer chains than the corresponding PDL/DO monomer ratios in the feed. The copolymers were typically isolated in 50-90 wt % yields as the monomer conversion was limited by the equilibrium between monomers and copolymer. 1H and 13C NMR analysis on poly(PDL-co-DO) formed by CALB showed that the copolymers contain nearly random sequences of PDL and DO units with a slight tendency toward alternating arrangements. Copolymerization with PDL was found to remarkably enhance PDO thermal stability. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) results demonstrate high crystallinity in all copolymers over the whole range of compositions. Depending on copolymer composition, the crystal lattice of either PDO or PPDL hosts units of the other comonomer, a behavior typical of an isodimorphic system. In poly(PDL-co-DO), both melting temperature and melting enthalpy display a minimum at 70 mol % DO, that is, at the pseudoeutectic composition. WAXS diffractograms show one crystal phase (that of either PPDL or PDO) on either side of the pseudoeutectic and coexistence of PPDL and PDO crystals at the pseudoeutectic.  相似文献   

16.
Several aliphatic polyesters have been synthesized until now using enzyme-catalyzed ring-opening polymerization (ROP) of different lactones, although their molecular weight, hence mechanical strength, was not sufficient enough to fabricate porous scaffolds from them. To achieve this target, 1,5-dioxepan-2-one (DXO) and epsilon-caprolactone (CL) were polymerized in bulk with Lipase CA as catalyst at 60 degrees C, and porous scaffolds were prepared from the polymers obtained thereof using a salt leaching technique. The CL/DXO molar feed ratio was varied from 1.5 to 10, and the reactivity ratios of CL and DXO were determined using the Kelen-Tudos method under such conditions of polymerization. NMR results showed a slightly lower CL/DXO molar ratio in the copolymers than in the feed due to high reactivity of DXO toward Lipase CA catalysis. The crystallinity of the PCL segment of the copolymers was affected by the presence of soft and amorphous DXO domains. The copolymers having high CL content were thermally more stable. The porosity of the scaffolds was in the range 82-88%, and the SEM analysis showed interconnected pores in the scaffolds. Of the two parameters which could affect the mechanical properties, viz., the copolymer composition and the scaffold pore size, the pore size showed a significant effect on the mechanical properties of the scaffolds. The porous scaffolds developed in this way for tissue engineering are free from toxic organometallic catalyst residues, and they are highly suitable for biomedical applications.  相似文献   

17.
Lipase-catalyzed polymerization of caprolactone (CL) in toluene with methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol) (MPEG) and water as initiators was characterized in detail for mechanistic insight. (1)H NMR analysis of polycaprolactone chains (PCL), dicaprolactone, degree of esterification of MPEG, and fractions of PCL chains initiated by MPEG and water were used to follow the reactions. The data were analyzed with the kinetic scheme involving formation of the acylenzyme and its consequent reaction with MPEG, water, or PCL to yield the MPEG- or water-initiated PCL chains, or increase in PCL length. A limit for MPEG initiator esterification in lipase-catalyzed CL polymerization was observed and was explained by preferential reaction of PCL propagation over MPEG esterification at long reaction times and low MPEG concentrations. Slower monomer conversion in concentrated monomer solutions was explained by decreased partitioning of PCL between the solvent and the enzyme. This effect resulted in inhibition of the lipase by the reaction product, PCL chains, and/or insufficient diffusion of monomer to the enzyme active site. High monomer/initiators ratio in these solutions did not yield longer polymer chains due to decreased monomer conversion and the corresponding decrease in product yields; lower yields were also observed for chain initiation by MPEG and water. A shift in the reaction rate-limiting step from formation of acylenzyme in dilute CL solutions to its deacylation in concentrated CL solutions yielded higher PCL polydispersity due to increased initiation by water. Enhanced intramolecular cyclization was also observed. Endgroup composition of PCL chains was influenced by the concentration of monomer, ratio of initiators (MPEG and water), and reaction time, yielding PCL chains initiated exclusively by MPEG at "infinite reaction times."  相似文献   

18.
Rong G  Deng M  Deng C  Tang Z  Piao L  Chen X  Jing X 《Biomacromolecules》2003,4(6):1800-1804
A biodegradable two block copolymer, poly(epsilon-caprolactone)-b- poly(gamma-benzyl-L-glutamic acid) (PCL-PBLG) was synthesized successfully by ring-opening polymerization of N-carboxyanhydride of gamma-benzyl-L-glutamate (BLG-NCA) with aminophenyl-terminated PCL as a macroinitiator. The aminophenethoxyl-terminated PCL was prepared via hydrogenation of a 4-nitrophenethoxyl-terminated PCL, which was novelly obtained from the polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone (CL) initiated by amino calcium 4-nitrobenzoxide. The structures of the block copolymer and its precursors from the initial step of PCL were confirmed and investigated by 1H NMR, FT-IR, GPC, and FT-ICRMS analyses and DSC measurements.  相似文献   

19.
A series of biodegradable amphiphilic graft polymers were successfully synthesized by grafting poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) sequences onto a water-soluble poly-alpha,beta-[N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-L-aspartamide] (PHEA) backbone. The graft copolymers were prepared through the ring-opening polymerization of epsilon-caprolactone (CL) initiated by the macroinitiator PHEA with pendant hydroxyl groups without adding any catalyst. By controlling the feed ratio of the macroinitiator to the monomer, the copolymers with different branch lengths and properties can be obtained. The successful grafting of PCL sequences onto the PHEA backbone was verified by FTIR, 1H NMR, and combined size-exclusion chromatography and multiangle laser light scattering (SEC-MALLS) analysis. The hydrolytic degradation and enzymatic degradation of these graft copolymers were investigated. The results show the hydrolytic degradation rate increases with increasing content of hydrophilic PHEA backbone. While the enzymatic degradation rate is affected by two competitive factors, the catalytic effect of Pseudomonas cepacia lipase on the degradation of PCL branches and the hydrophilicity which depends on the copolymer composition. In situ observation of the degradation under polarizing light microscope (PLM) demonstrates the different degradation rates of different regions in the polymer samples.  相似文献   

20.
Glycopolymer-polypeptide triblock copolymers of the structure, poly(l-alanine)-b-poly(2-acryloyloxyethyl-lactoside)-b-poly(l-alanine) (AGA), have been synthesized by sequential atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) and ring-opening polymerization (ROP). Controlled free radical polymerization of 2-O-acryloyl-oxyethoxyl-(2,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-beta-d-galactopyranosyl)-(1-4)-2,3,6-tri-O-acetyl-beta-d-glucopyranoside (AEL) by ATRP with a dibromoxylene (DBX)/CuBr/bipy complex system was used to generate a central glycopolymer block. Telechelic glycopolymers with diamino end groups were obtained by end group transformation and subsequently used as macroinitiators for ROP of l-alanine N-carboxyanhydride monomers (Ala-NCA). Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy analysis demonstrated that copolymer molecular weight and composition were controlled by both the molar ratios of the Ala-NCA monomer to macroinitiator and monomer conversion and exhibited a narrow distribution (Mw/Mn = 1.06-1.26). FT-IR spectroscopy of triblock copolymers revealed that the ratio of alpha-helix/beta-sheet increased with poly(l-alanine) block length. Of note, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) demonstrated that selected amphiphilic glycopolymer-polypeptide triblock copolymers self-assemble in aqueous solution to form nearly spherical aggregates of several hundreds nanometer in diameter. Significantly, the sequential application of ATRP and ROP techniques provides an effective method for producing triblock copolymers with a central glycopolymer block and flanking polypeptide blocks of defined architecture, controlled molecular weight, and low polydispersity.  相似文献   

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