540 Chemie
Refine
Document Type
- Journal article (90)
- Book chapter (4)
- Doctoral Thesis (4)
- Conference proceeding (3)
- Report (2)
- Book (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (104)
Institute
- Life Sciences (89)
- Texoversum (11)
- Technik (2)
- ESB Business School (1)
- Informatik (1)
Publisher
- American Chemical Society (21)
- MDPI (19)
- Wiley (17)
- Elsevier (13)
- Royal Society of Chemistry (8)
- Springer (6)
- American Institute of Physics (2)
- Deutsches Textilforschungszentrum Nord-West (2)
- The Royal Society of Chemistry (2)
- Universität Tübingen (2)
We investigate the toxicity of different types and sizes of microplastic particles (0.3–4 mm) under different conditions (new particles, aged particles with biofilm, and particles with adsorbed Tributyltin) on the freshwater amphipod Gammarus fossarum in 3-week exposures. All types of plastic particles, which were randomly taken up to a small extent, were mostly Polyphenylenoxide, Polybutylentherephthalate and Polypropylene, with particles < 1 mm in size. Plastic particles did not affect the feeding and locomotory behaviour of gammarids, and there was no strong difference between pristine plastic particles and aged particles with biofilm. Mortality tended to be higher compared with the control. Tributyltinhydride (TBTH) adsorbed to microplastic particles had no effect on uptake, survival, feeding and locomotory behaviour during the 3 weeks of exposure. Dissolved TBTH, however, was already very toxic after few days of exposure (LC50-96h < 1 ng l–1).
Recycling of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) is of crucial importance, since worldwide amounts of PETwaste increase rapidly due to its widespread applications. Hence, several methods have been developed, like energetic, material, thermo-mechanical and chemical recycling of PET. Most frequently, PET-waste is incinerated for energy recovery, used as additive in concrete composites or glycolysed to yield mixtures of monomers and undefined oligomers. While energetic and thermo-mechanical recycling entail downcycling of the material, chemical recycling requires considerable amounts of chemicals and demanding processing steps entailing toxic and ecological issues. This review provides a thorough survey of PET-recycling including energetic, material, thermo-mechanical and chemical methods. It focuses on chemical methods describing important reaction parameters and yields of obtained reaction products. While most methods yield monomers, only a few yield undefined low molecular weight oligomers for impaired applications (dispersants or plasticizers). Further, the present work presents an alternative chemical recycling method of PET in comparison to existing chemical methods.
The interfacial compatibility between polymers and nanoclay fillers as well as the thermostability of both components are important characteristics for processing them into polymer composites. While the polymer component is often grafted using common polymerization reactions, the nanoclay component is usually surface modified by surfactant treatment to improve compatibility. In the present study, the polymer ethylene vinyl alcohol and a nanoclay filler based on natural bentonite are both surface modified by different silanes, 3-glycidoxypropyltrimethoxysilane and methacryloxymethyltrimethoxysilane and their interfacial properties are investigated by inverse gas chromatography. The silane-modified samples had improved interfacial properties as reflected by a significant increase in dispersive and specific surface energies. Lewis acidities were determined using chloroform and 1,4-dioxane as polar probes and showed a good match between polymer and nanofiller interfaces. Lewis acidity was generally lower after silane-modification. Silanization yielded increased thermal stability of the treated samples. Thus, silanization led to improved compatibility and enhanced thermal stability which facilitates further processing.
The extracellular environment of vascular cells in vivo is complex in its chemical composition, physical properties, and architecture. Consequently, it has been a great challenge to study vascular cell responses in vitro, either to understand their interaction with their native environment or to investigate their interaction with artificial structures such as implant surfaces. New procedures and techniques from materials science to fabricate bio-scaffolds and surfaces have enabled novel studies of vascular cell responses under well-defined, controllable culture conditions. These advancements are paving the way for a deeper understanding of vascular cell biology and materials–cell interaction. Here, we review previous work focusing on the interaction of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and endothelial cells (ECs) with materials having micro- and nanostructured surfaces. We summarize fabrication techniques for surface topographies, materials, geometries, biochemical functionalization, and mechanical properties of such materials. Furthermore, various studies on vascular cell behavior and their biological responses to micro- and nanostructured surfaces are reviewed. Emphasis is given to studies of cell morphology and motility, cell proliferation, the cytoskeleton and cell-matrix adhesions, and signal transduction pathways of vascular cells. We finalize with a short outlook on potential interesting future studies.
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is a widely used modification for drug delivery systems. It reduces undesired interaction with biological components, aggregation of complexes and serves as a hydrophilic linker of ligands for targeted drug delivery. However, PEGylation can also lead to undesired changes in physicochemical characteristics of chitosan/siRNA nanoplexes and hamper gene silencing.
To address this conflicting issue, PEG-chitosan copolymers were synthesized with stepwise increasing degrees of PEG substitution (1.5% to 8.0%). Subsequently formed PEG-chitosan/siRNA nanoplexes were characterized physicochemically and biologically. The results showed that small ratios of chitosan PEGylation did not affect nanoplex stability and density. However, higher PEGylation ratios reduced nanoplex size and charge, as well as cell uptake and final siRNA knockdown efficiency.
Therefore, we recommend fine-tuning of PEGylation ratios to generate PEG-chitosan/siRNA delivery systems with maximum bioactivity. The degree of PEGylation for chitosan/siRNA nanoplexes should be kept low in order to maintain optimal nanoplex efficiency.
Hyperspectral imaging opens a wide field of applications. It is a well established technique in agriculture, medicine, mineralogy and many other fields. Most commercial hyperspectral sensors are able to record spectral information along one spatial dimension in a single acquisition. For the second spatial dimension a scan is required. Beside those systems there is a novel technique allowing to sense a two dimensional scene and its spectral information within one shot. This increases the speed of hyperspectral imaging, which is interesting for metrology tasks under rough environmental conditions. In this article we present a detailed characterization of such a snapshot sensor for later use in a snapshot full field chromatic confocal system. The sensor (Ximea MQ022HG-IM-SM5X5-NIR) is based on the so called snapshot mosaic technique, which offers 25 bands mapped to one so called macro pixel. The different bands are realized by a spatially repeating pattern of Fabry-Pèrot flters. Those filters are monolithically fabricated on the camera chip.
Clinical development is historically the phase in which a potential new medicine is being tested in phase 2 and phase 3 patient trials to demonstrate the new molecules' efficacy and safety to support the regulatory approval of drugs by health authorities. This relatively focused approach has been considerably expanded by a number of forces from within the pharmaceutical industry and equally important by changes in the healthcare systems. The need to identify the optimal patient population, showstoppers leading to discontinuation of clinical programs, the silent but constant removal of surrogate endpoints for registration, and the increased demand for real-life data which are used to demonstrate the patients' benefit and which have an ever-increasing role for pricing and reimbursement negotiations are today an integral part of this phase.
This chapter will review both the nuts and bolts of clinical development but also recent developments in this area which shape the environment and how the different players have reacted and what options might need to be explored in the future.
Cancer cells invade confined microchannels via a self-directed mesenchymal-to-amoeboid transition
(2019)
Cancer cell invasion through physical barriers in the extracellular matrix (ECM) requires a complex synergy of traction force against the ECM, mechanosensitive feedback, and subsequent cytoskeletal rearrangement. PDMS microchannels were used to investigate the transition from mesenchymal to amoeboid invasion in cancer cells. Migration was faster in narrow 3 μm-wide channels than in wider 10 μm channels, even in the absence of cell-binding ECM proteins. Cells permeating narrow channels exhibited blebbing and had smooth leading edge profiles, suggesting an ECM-induced transition from mesenchymal invasion to amoeboid invasion. Live cell labeling revealed a mechanosensing period in which the cell attempts mesenchymal-based migration, reorganizes its cytoskeleton, and proceeds using an amoeboid phenotype. Rho/ROCK (amoeboid) and Rac (mesenchymal) pathway inhibition revealed that amoeboid invasion through confined environments relies on both pathways in a time- and ECM dependent manner. This demonstrates that cancer cells can dynamically modify their invasion programming to navigate physically confining matrix conditions.
Der ultraschnelle Mechanismus der Alken-Hydrosylilierung lässt sich von den Flüssigsiliconen (LSRs) auf VNB-EPDM-Mischungen übertragen. In der Verarbeitung würde diese für VNB-EPDM die Wettbewerbsfähigkeit hinsichtlich realisierbarer kürzester Zykluszeiten und neue Marktsegmente alternativ zu den LSR-Materialien eröffnen, u.a. in speziellen Dichtungsanwendungen. Peroxidisch vernetzte EPDM-Mischungen können in wässrig-sauren und wässrig-alkalischen Medien eine bessere chemische Beständigkeit als LSR-Materialien bieten. Sie sind duch die radikalische Vernetzung in der Kinetik aber im Vergleich zu additionsvernetzbaren Elastomeren als deutlich träger einzustufen. Ein weiterer Aspekt ist die Permeationsbeständigkeit gegenüber Gasen und Lösemitteldämpfen, die in dieser Arbeit näher untersucht worden ist. In dieser Eigenschaft unterscheiden sich VNB-EPDM und LSR deutlich voneinander. Mit der Bestimmung von zeit- und temperaturabhängigen Permeationsraten von n-Hexan-Lösemitteldämpfen erfolgt ein Vergleich beider Elastomerklassen. Auf die Theorie der Gaspermeation und der sogenannten Pervaporation wird grundlegend eingegangen und zusätzlich der weitere Einfluss von Rezepturbestandteilen beleuchtet. Des Weiteren werden stationäre Permeationskoeffizienten für die Lösemittel-Dampf-Evaporation berechnet, indem die Ausprägung des Quelldrucks im Inneren der Elastomerwerkstoffe durch signifikante Volumenquellungen als eigentliche Triebkraft herangeszogen wird.
Kostenkalkulation im Anlagenbau: Modell zur Bewertung der Konkurrenzfähigkeit im Entwicklungsstadium
(2020)
Während Grundchemikalien größtenteils im industriellen Maßstab mittels verfahrenstechnisch optimierter Großanlagen hergestellt werden, entwickeln Forschungsinstitute biobasierte Prozesse zur Herstellung von Plattformchemikalien im Labor- und Pilotmaßstab. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wird ein Kostenkalkulationsmodell zur Abschätzung der Investitions- und Betriebskosten verfahrenstechnischer Anlagen vorgestellt, auf dessen Basis die ökonomische Konkurrenzfähigkeit in der Entwicklung befindlicher Verfahren ermittelt werden kann. Das Modell ist fur Anwendungen im industriellen Maßstab
geeignet.