Publications

Detailed Information

Development of Thermo-Responsive Materials and Their Potential Application of Osmotic Control : 온도응답성 물질의 개발 및 삼투조절로의 응용

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisor이 연-
dc.contributor.authorMinwoo Noh-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-14T05:57:09Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-14T05:57:09Z-
dc.date.issued2016-02-
dc.identifier.other000000133040-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/125307-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 화학부 생화학 전공, 2016. 2. 이연.-
dc.description.abstractSmart materials response to not only the physical signals such as temperature, light, and magnetic field but also chemical signals such as ionic concentration, glutathione concentration, and pH, etc. Among them temperature has some advantages. Temperature could be easily applied to biosystem by heat pad or near-infrared illumination. It can be also cooled or heated reversibly.
Thermoresponsive materials which consist of two or more components change physical or chemical properties by mild temperature changes. Among them I have more interested in water-soluble thermoresponsive materials. The water is not only present in a large amount enough to covers approximately 71% of the earth surface but also forming the body fluids of all living organisms on the earth. Therefore, water-soluble thermoresponsive materials could be applicate for biomedical application as well as water purification. In practice, these materials have been extensively researched in various applications such as cell culture dishes, chromatography, temperature-triggered drug release, or targeted drug delivery.
Thermoresponsive materials in aqueous solution could be classified into two and the phase transition behavior in water could be explained by simplified thermodynamic equation.

(The Gibbs free energy of mixing: ΔGm, The enthalpy of mixing: ΔHm, The entropy of mixing: ΔSm, Temperature
-
dc.description.abstractT)
Materials that can mix in solvent below a certain temperature and abruptly phase separate from solution above a certain temperature are referred as the lower critical solution temperature (LCST). Representative LCST materials are poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) of which structure harmoniously consist of hydrophilic moiety and hydrophobic moiety. In aqueous solutions of these polymers, ΔHm is negative due to strong interaction between water and polymer molecules and ΔSm is also negative because the hydrophobic moieties(isopropyl) of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) are captured in ordered form of water molecules which actually existed in disordered form. Therefore, at a given composition and pressure, LCST phase separation occurs when ΔGm becomes zero as the negative TΔSm becomes dominant over the negative ΔHm upon reaching a specific temperature.
On the contrary to LCST pahse transition, materials which are miscible in solvent above a certain temperature and abruptly phase separate from solution below a certain temperature are referred as the upper critical solution temperature (UCST). Representative UCST materials are poly(3-dimethyl(methacryloyloxyethyl) ammonium propane sulfonate which has both positively charged ammonium moiety and negatively charged sulfonate in every repeating unit, which can strongly interact with each other by electrostatic interaction generating positive value of ΔHm . Therefore, UCST phase separation occurs when temperature reaches below a certain temperature to give rise to zero value of ΔGm as the positive ΔHm becomes dominant over the positive TΔSm upon reaching a specific temperature.
In order to synthesize the thermoresponsive materials previously, monomer should be synthesized and then polymerized through multiple steps. I have been focusing on researches for synthesizing water-soluble thermoresponsive materials in a simple way comparing to conventional methods in this work. In order to achieve above goal I purchased the commercially available amine rich polymer, branched polyethylenimine (b-PEI) which can be easily modified through simple reaction such as acylation, ring opening reaction, or methylation for synthesizing LCST materials or UCST materials.
LCST properties were introduced into b-PEI by simple acylation. The resulting N-acylated b-PEI have similar structure with poly(N-isopropylacrylamide). The phase transition temperature of N-acylated b-PEI in aqueous solution can be controlled by the hydrophobicity of acyl group, degree of acylation, concentration, and pH in the range of 10-90 °C
UCST properties were introduce into b-PEI by ring-opening reaction resulting in N-sulfopropylated b-PEI which has similar structure with poly(3-dimethyl(methacryloyloxyethyl) ammonium propane sulfonate. The phase transition temperature of N-sulfopropylated b-PEI in aqueous solution can be controlled by degree of acylation, molecular weight, concentration, and pH in the range of 10-90 °C
Another way to introduce the UCST properties into b-PEI is to simply mix with hydrogen halide or by methylation of b-PEI. Although halide salts of b-PEI exhibited the UCST properties in water, the pH of solution is too low to apply for practical application. However, methylated b-PEI (MPEI) derivatives which possess 35-38% quaternary ammoniums with hydrophobic counter anions such as iodide (I-)or tetrafluoroborate(BF4-) exhibited UCST in mild pH range because of strong electrostatic interaction and hydrophobic interaction. Methylated b-PEI with more hydrophilic anion such as Cl- and Br- did not show UCST properties because the hydrophobicity of anions is not enough to have strong interaction with MPEI. The dependence of salt effect and molecular weight on phase transition temperature is also investigated.
The new application such as a draw solute for forward osmosis (FO) is possible thanks to easy introduction of thermoresponsiveness into amine-rich polymer by above methods. The FO method is to draw fresh water from feed solution to a draw solution (Higher concentration than feed solution) by spontaneous osmosis through a semipermeable membrane. Following the Vant hoff equation,

(π: osmotic pressure, c: molarity of concentration, R: gas constant, T: temperatrure, V: volume, M, molecular weight, w: solute weight)
thermoresponsive materials with low molecular weight are needed for inducing high osmotic pressure. Therefore, nBu-TAEA with low molecular weight, 356g/mol, was synthesized, which exhibited 20-30 ℃ phase transition temperature at 2.2 M in water. After phase separation at 55 ℃, the effective osmotic pressure of nBu-TAEA solution became lower than 0.15 M equivalent to physiological saline. Therefore, after fresh water could be drawn from 0.60 M NaCl solution equivalent to seawater, to 2.2 M of nBu-TAEA solution below phase transition temperature, the obtained fresh water in nBu-TAEA solution was released into 0.15 M equivalent to physiological saline above phase transition temperature. The thermoresponsive materials as a draw solute for forward osmosis could be energy efficient method for obtaining fresh water from seawater.
-
dc.description.tableofcontentsPart Ⅰ. Novel lower critical solution temperature phase transition materials effectively control osmosis by mild temperature changes 1
1. Abstract 1
2. Introduction 2
3. Materials and Methods 5
3.1. Materials 5
3.2. Synthesis of acylated TAEA 5
3.3. Characterization of thermosensitive solutes 6
3.4. Analysis of osmotic flow 6
4. Results and Discussion 8
4.1. Synthesis and solubility of acyl-TAEA 8
4.2. LCST transition behavior of acyl-TAEA in water 8
4.3. Temperature-dependent osmotic flux of nBu-TAEA 9
4.4. Possibility as draw solutes for a forward osmosis (FO) 11
5. Conclusions 13
6. References 14

Part Ⅱ. Introduction of pH-sensitive upper critical solution temperature (UCST) properties into branched polyethylenimine 25
1. Abstract 25
2. Introduction 26
3. Materials and Methods 30
3.1. Materials 30
3.2. Synthesis of N-sulfopropylated polyethylenimine 30
3.3. Measurement of UCST phase transition 31
3.4. Titration of N-sulfopropylated polyethylenimine 31
3.5. Cytotoxicity assay 32
4. Results and Discussion 33
4.1. Synthesis of N-sulfopropylated-polyethylenimine 33
4.2. Phase transition behavior of N-sulfopropylated-polyethylen-imine in water 34
4.3. Ionic strength-UCST relationship of N-sulfopropylated-pol-yethylenimineI 37
4.4. pH-UCST relationship of N-sulfopropylated-polyethylenimi-ne 38
4.5. Cytotoxicity assay 40
5. Conclusions 42
6. References 43

Part Ⅲ. Upper critical solution temperature (UCST) phase transition of halide salts of branched polyethylenimine and methylated branched polyethylenimine in aqueous solutions 57
1. Abstract 57
2. Introduction 58
3. Materials and Methods 60
3.1. Materials 60
3.2. Synthesis of methylated polyethylenimine halide 60
3.3. Measurement of the UCST phase transition 61
4. Results and Discussion 62
4.1. Phase transition behavior of various polyethylenimine halid-esalts 62
4.2. Preparation of methylated polyethylenimine halide 63
4.3. Phase transition behavior of methylated PEI halide 64
4.4. Effect of counter ions in methylated polyethylenimine back-bone 65
5. Conclusions 68
6. References 69

Figure and Table 72

List of publications 79

Abstract in Korean (국문초록) 81
-
dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent5710822 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectThermoresponsive materials-
dc.subjectLower critical solution temperature(LCST)-
dc.subjectUpper critical solution temperature (UCST)-
dc.subjectForward osmosis (FO)-
dc.subjectBranched polyethylenimine (b-PEI)-
dc.subject.ddc540-
dc.titleDevelopment of Thermo-Responsive Materials and Their Potential Application of Osmotic Control-
dc.title.alternative온도응답성 물질의 개발 및 삼투조절로의 응용-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthor노민우-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pages102-
dc.contributor.affiliation자연과학대학 화학부-
dc.date.awarded2016-02-
Appears in Collections:
Files in This Item:

Altmetrics

Item View & Download Count

  • mendeley

Items in S-Space are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Share