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1.
Carbohydr Polym ; 102: 566-75, 2014 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24507320

ABSTRACT

We use Fourier Transform Infra Red (FTIR) Spectroscopy to explore the effects of water and glycerol on the hydrogen bonding of low water content maltooligomer matrices by monitoring the shifts in the position of the peak associated with the fundamental stretching vibration of the hydroxyl groups, νOH. Changes in hydrogen bonding are investigated in relation to the physical state and the molecular packing of the maltooligomer matrices, which are measured by Positron Annihilation Lifetime Spectroscopy (PALS). In the concentration range studied (0-20 wt.%), glycerol acts as an anti-plasticizer whereby it reduces the average molecular hole size, vh, while modulating the hydrogen bond network of the carbohydrate matrices. Depending on the level of hydration, water can cause anti-plasticization or plasticization of the maltooligomer-glycerol matrices. For water contents below ∼ 5 wt.%, water acts as an anti-plasticizer, whereby it reduces vh and we measure a reduction νOH. At higher water contents, water acts as a plasticizer, causing a systematic increase in vh, while νOH continues to decrease as a function of increasing water content.

2.
Biomacromolecules ; 11(12): 3237-47, 2010 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21049921

ABSTRACT

The molecular packing of amorphous maltodextrin-glycerol matrices is systematically explored by combining positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS) with thermodynamic measurements and dilatometry. Maltodextrin-glycerol matrices are equilibrated at a range of water activities between 0 and 0.54 at T = 25 °C to analyze the effect of both water and glycerol on the average molecular hole size and the specific volume of the matrices. In the glassy state, glycerol results in a systematic reduction of the average molecular hole size. In contrast, water interacts with the carbohydrate matrix in a complex way. Thermodynamic clustering theory shows that, at very low water contents the water molecules are well dispersed and are closely associated with the carbohydrate chains. In this regime water acts as an antiplasticizer, whereby it reduces the size of the molecular holes. Conversely, at higher water contents, while still in the glassy state, water acts as a plasticizer by increasing the average hole volume of the carbohydrate matrices. This plasticization-dominated mechanism is likely to be due to the interplay between the ability of water to form hydrogen bonds with the hydroxyl residues on the carbohydrate chains and its mobility, which is significantly decoupled from the bulk mobility of the matrix. Our findings are of key importance for the understanding of the effect of glycerol on the biostabilization performance of these carbohydrate matrices, as it provides a first insight on how molecular packing can relate to the dynamics in such matrices.


Subject(s)
Glycerol/chemistry , Plasticizers/chemistry , Polysaccharides/chemistry , Carbohydrates , Hydrogen Bonding , Water/chemistry
3.
J Phys Chem B ; 114(4): 1568-78, 2010 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20058888

ABSTRACT

The specific volume and the nanostructure of the free volume of amorphous blends of maltose with a narrow molecular weight distribution maltopolymer were systematically studied as a function of temperature, water content, pressure, and blend composition. Correlations between the hole free volume and the specific volume were investigated in the glassy and rubbery phases and in solution using positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS) and pressure-volume-temperature (PVT) measurements, with the aim to provide a consolidated mechanistic understanding of the relation between changes in molecular packing and at the molecular level and the behavior of the specific volume at the macrolevel. Both specific volume and hole volume show a linear dependence on the temperature, but with a slope which is higher in the rubbery state than in the glassy state. As a function of temperature, the hole volume and the specific volume are linearly related, with no discontinuity at the glass transition temperature (T(g)). In the glassy state, both the specific volume and the hole volume decrease nonlinearly with the addition of maltose to the maltopolymer matrix, due to a more efficient molecular packing. For variations in carbohydrate composition, a linear dependence between the hole volume and the specific volume was again observed. The role of water was found to be significantly more complex, with increasing water content causing an increase in density in both the glassy and rubbery phases indicating that water exists in a highly dispersed state with a significantly lower specific molar volume than in bulk water. At very low water contents, the hole volume and the specific volume both decrease with increasing water content, which suggests that water acts as both a hole filler and a plasticizer. In the glassy state at slightly higher water contents, the specific volume continues to slowly decrease, but the hole size passes through a minimum before it starts to increase. This gives rise to a negative correlation between the hole volume and the specific volume which has not previously been observed and which can be interpreted in terms of water molecules which are dispersed within the glassy carbohydrate matrix and which thereby influence the hydrogen bonding between the carbohydrate molecules.

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