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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 524: 399-408, 2018 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29674284

ABSTRACT

This study focuses on the influence of hydrophilic groups and metal-ion loading on adsorbent polymer conformation, which controls access to adsorption sites and may limit adsorption capacity. Gaining a better understanding of the factors that influence conformation may yield higher-capacity adsorbents. Polyamidoxime (PAO), deuterated-PAO polyacrylic acid diblock copolymers (d-PAO-b-PAA), and randomly configured copolymers (PAO-co-PAA) were synthesized and characterized by neutron reflectometry in air and D2O. For d-PAO-b-PAA, characterization was also performed after alkali conditioning and in simulated seawater. PAO and PAO-co-PAA, with similar molecular weight and grafting density, extended from 95-Å thickness in air to 180 and 280-Å in D2O, respectively. This result suggests that polymer swelling may cause the additional adsorption capacity observed when polymer hydrophilicity increases. Two d-PAO-b-PAA samples, A and B, with a d-PAO thickness of 55-Å swelled to 110-Å and 140-Å, respectively, with an overall thickness increase of ∼160% in D2O. After alkali conditioning, molecular interactions increased the density of PAA near the PAO-PAA interface, while the d-PAO thickness only decreased by ∼10 Å. The d-PAO thickness of both samples declined to ∼90-Å after adsorption in simulated seawater due to polymer-chain crosslinking. These results are expected to aid in improving adsorbent synthesis to increase uranium capacity.

2.
ACS Nano ; 8(4): 3181-91, 2014 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24601564

ABSTRACT

In this work, we establish fundamental differences between the structure and packing of lipids in monolayers, supported bilayers, and multilayer films. High resolution grazing incidence X-ray diffraction reveals that monolayer structure is largely retained upon deposition onto substrates with the area per molecule controlled by deposition pressure. Such structural changes are consistent with a quenched rather than equilibrated supported membrane structure. Supported bilayers formed by vesicle fusion exhibit structural similarity to bilayers deposited at 38 mN/m, whereas packing in lipid multilayers more closely resembled bilayers deposited below 30 mN/m. At the molecular level, coupling between opposing lipid acyl chains is observed for all deposition pressures with the outer leaflet templating on the inner leaflet. Leaflet coupling induces a small condensation in the area per lipid molecule and a surprising increase in acyl chain tilt. Moreover, supported lipid bilayers exhibit preferential acyl chain alignment: the system cannot be modeled with freely rotating acyl chains as in free-standing lipid monolayers. Such acyl chain alignment is consistent with orientational texture of lipid tilt directors at larger length scales. These findings clearly demonstrate that supported, gel-phase bilayer membrane structure can be controlled and maintained by deposition onto solid supports and that increasing surface pressure induces preferential alignment of the acyl chains both within and between membrane leaflets.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , 1,2-Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine/chemistry , Air , Membrane Microdomains/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Water/chemistry , X-Ray Diffraction
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