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1.
Biomacromolecules ; 8(6): 1816-23, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17497920

ABSTRACT

A new method to form colloidally stable oligosaccharide-grafted synthetic polymer particles has been developed. The oligosaccharides, of weight-average degree of polymerization approximately 38, were obtained by enzymatic debranching of amylopectin. Through the use of a cerium(IV)-based redox initiation process, oligosaccharide chains are grafted onto a synthetic polymer colloid comprising electrostatically stabilized poly(methyl methacrylate) or polystyrene latex particles swollen with methyl methacrylate monomer. Ce(IV) creates a radical species on these oligosaccharides, which then propagates, initially with aqueous-phase monomer, then with the methyl methacrylate monomer inside the particles. Ultracentrifugation, NMR, and total starch analyses together prove that the grafting process has occurred, with at least 7.7 wt % starch grafted and a grafting efficiency of 33%. The surfactant used in latex preparation was removed by dialysis, resulting in particles colloidally stabilized with only linear starch as a steric stabilizer. The debranched starch that comprises these oligosaccharides is found to be a remarkably effective colloidal stabilizer, albeit at low electrolyte concentration, stabilizing particles with very sparse surface coverage.


Subject(s)
Chemistry/methods , Colloids/chemistry , Oligosaccharides/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Cerium/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Methacrylates/chemistry , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Models, Chemical , Models, Statistical , Oxidation-Reduction , Particle Size , Polymethyl Methacrylate/chemistry , Static Electricity
2.
Langmuir ; 22(9): 4037-43, 2006 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16618142

ABSTRACT

Anisotropic polystyrene nanoparticles of diameters below 0.5 microm were prepared by coating the surface of cross-linked polystyrene latex particles with a thin hydrophilic polymer layer prior to swelling the particles with styrene and then initiating second-stage free-radical polymerization. Conditions were found so that all particles had uniform asymmetry. The effect of surface chemistry on the development of particle anisotropy during seeded emulsion polymerization of sub-0.5 microm diameter particles was studied. The extent and uniformity of the anisotropy of the final particles depended strongly on the presence of the hydrophilic surface coating. Systematic variation of the degree of hydrophilicity of the surface coating provided qualitative insight into the mechanism responsible for anisotropy. Conditions were chosen so that the surface free energy favored the extrusion of a hydrophobic bulge of monomer on the hydrophilic surface of the particle during the swelling phase: the presence of a hydrophilic layer on the particle surface causes this asymmetry to be favored above uniform wetting of the particle surface by the monomer. Kinetic effects, arising from the finite time required for the seed to swell with the monomer, also play a role.

3.
Biomacromolecules ; 7(3): 866-76, 2006 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16529425

ABSTRACT

Cooking and sensory properties of rice are largely determined by the amylose content and structure. For relationships between functional and structural properties, a more accurate method to determine the structure of amylose is required. Here we calibrate size exclusion chromatography (SEC) columns, using Mark-Houwink parameters for linear starch and pullulan standards, to obtain the true molecular weight distribution of linear starch. When the molecular weight distribution is reported relative to pullulan, rather than the actual molecular weight which is readily obtained from universal calibration, it is seen that the molecular weights of longer amylose chains are greatly underestimated. We validate the SEC method to enable the measurement of the hydrodynamic volume distribution of the starch by examining reproducibility and recovery. Analysis of the starch in the sample pre- and post-SEC shows that 20% of the carbohydrate is not recovered. Comparison of the weight-average degree of polymerization, X(w), of (undebranched) starch of pre- and post-SEC is made using iodine binding as well as Berry plots of data from multi-angle laser light scattering (MALLS). These both show that current SEC techniques for starch analysis lead to significant loss of high molecular weight material. Indeed, for the systems studied here, the values for X(w) after SEC are about three times lower than those before SEC. Iodine-starch complexes of pre- and post-SEC samples reveals that the SEC techniques give reliable data for the amylose fraction but not for amylopectin. We address reports in the literature suggesting that the conventional isoamylase method for debranching starch would lead to incomplete debranching and thus incorrect molecular weight distributions. However, it is shown using (1)H NMR that isoamylase can completely debranch the amylose (to within the detection limit of 0.5%), and by SEC that successive incubation with isoamylase, alpha-amylase, and beta-amylase can degrade the amylose-rich fraction completely to maltose. We develop a method to obtain a hot water soluble fraction (HWSF), rich in undamaged amylose molecules, directly from rice flour, avoiding the structural degradation of previous techniques. With appropriate sample handling, the formation of associations between starch chains is minimized. With the combination of calibrated and validated SEC methods, and an improved extraction of amylose from rice, the X(w) for both HWSF and debranched HWSF are found to be much larger than has previously been reported.


Subject(s)
Amylose/chemistry , Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/methods , Oryza/metabolism , Biocompatible Materials , Calibration , Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/instrumentation , Chromatography , Flour , Isoamylase/chemistry , Macromolecular Substances/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Molecular Conformation , Molecular Weight , alpha-Amylases/chemistry , beta-Amylase/chemistry
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