2 research outputs found
Regulating Underwater Oil Adhesion on Superoleophobic Copper Films through Assembling <i>n</i>‑Alkanoic Acids
Controlling
liquid adhesion on special wetting surface is significant
in many practical applications. In this paper, an easy self-assembled
monolayer technique was advanced to modify nanostructured copper substrates,
and tunable adhesive underwater superoleophobic surfaces were prepared.
The surface adhesion can be regulated by simply varying the chain
length of the <i>n</i>-alkanoic acids, and the tunable adhesive
properties can be ascribed to the combined action of surfaces nanostructures
and related variation in surface chemistry. Meanwhile, the tunable
ability is universal, and the oil-adhesion controllability is suitable
to various oils including silicon oil, <i>n</i>-hexane,
and chloroform. Finally, on the basis of the special tunable adhesive
properties, some applications of our surfaces including droplet storage,
transfer, mixing, and so on are also discussed. The paper offers a
novel and simple method to prepare underwater superoleophobic surfaces
with regulated adhesion, which can potentially be applied in numerous
fields, for instance, biodetection, microreactors, and microfluidic
devices
Discovery of 2‑Alkyl-1-arylsulfonylprolinamides as 11β-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1 Inhibitors
On the basis of scaffold hopping, a novel series of 2-alkyl-1-arylsulfonylprolinamides
was discovered as 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11β-HSD-1)
inhibitors. A representative compound <b>4ek</b>, obtained through
SAR and structure optimization studies, demonstrates excellent in
vitro potency against 11β-HSD-1 and dose-dependent in vivo inhibition
of 11β-HSD-1 in a prednisone/prednisolone transformation biomarker
study in mice