24 research outputs found

    Kinetics and solvent effects in the synthesis of ionic liquids: imidazolium

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    This is the published version. Copyright 2009 Royal Society of ChemistryIonic liquids (ILs) are being considered as a promising class of potentially environmentally-friendly (“green”) solvents and materials for use in a variety of applications. However, ionic liquids are conventionally synthesized by batch, without known kinetics, in non-sustainable solvents. For ILs to be a truly “green” technology for widespread use, they must themselves be made in a correspondingly benign manner for low cost, as enabled by process development. This investigation will illustrate the kinetics and large solvent effects in the synthesis of 1-hexyl-3-methyl-imidazolium bromide in 10 different solvents: acetone, acetonitrile, 2-butanone, chlorobenzene, dichloromethane, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), ethyl formate, ethyl lactate, methanol, and cyclopentanone. The kinetic rate constant for the synthesis in DMSO is over an order-of-magnitude larger than that in methanol. While the kinetic rate of these type of SN2 reactions is generally known to increase with solvent “polarity”, multi-parameter solvent descriptors, e.g. of Kamlet and Taft, are required to quantify these effects in a Linear Solvation Energy Relationship. These relationships are used with environmental and toxicity databases, such as the Rowan Solvent Selection Table, to rapidly optimize the solvent for favorable kinetics and minimal human and environmental impact

    Reversible and Non-Reactive Cellulose Separations from Ionic Liquid Mixtures with Compressed Carbon Dioxide

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    A novel physical (non-reactive) separation of cellulose from an ionic liquid (IL) / cosolvent mixture by compressed carbon dioxide is presented. The precipitation is completely reversible and rapid within small changes of pressure i.e. liquid phase CO2 composition. High pressure phase equilibrium, high pressure NMR, and solid state NMR have been utilized to understand the separation phenomena

    High-pressure phase equilibria with compressed gases

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    This is the published version. Copyright 2007 American Institute of Physics.An apparatus is described that is capable of determining high-pressure vapor-liquid equilibrium, liquid-liquid equilibrium, solid-liquid-vapor equilibrium, vapor-liquid-liquid equilibrium, and mixture critical points and transitions. The device is capable of temperatures to 150°C and pressures to 300bars (higher with slight modifications). The construction and operation are described in detail and do not require the use of mercury. This method requires very low sample volumes and no analytical equipment nor system-specific calibration. The apparatus was verified by comparison with literature data for the decane-CO2 mixture and CO2-ionic liquid [1-hexyl-3-methyl-imidazolium bis(trifyl)imide)] systems. The experimental data have excellent agreement with the literature data that used different experimental methods. A rigorous error analysis of the system is also presented

    Subcritical CO2 Sintering of Microspheres of Different Polymeric Materials to Fabricate Scaffolds for Tissue Engineering

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    The aim of this study was to use CO2 at sub-critical pressures as a tool to sinter 3D, macroporous, microsphere-based scaffolds for bone and cartilage Tissue Engineering Porous scaffolds composed of ~200 µm microspheres of either poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) or polycaprolactone (PCL) were prepared using dense phase CO2 sintering, which were seeded with rat bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (rBMSCs), and exposed to either osteogenic (PLGA, PCL) or chondrogenic (PLGA) conditions for 6 weeks. Under osteogenic conditions, the PLGA constructs produced over an order of magnitude more calcium than the PCL constructs, whereas the PCL constructs had far superior mechanical and structural integrity (125 times stiffer than PLGA constructs) at week 6, along with twice the cell content of the PLGA constructs. Chondrogenic cell performance was limited in PLGA constructs, perhaps as a result of the polymer degradation rate being too high. The current study represents the first long-term culture of CO2-sintered microsphere-based scaffolds, and has established important thermodynamic differences in sintering between the selected formulations of PLGA and PCL, with the former requiring adjustment of pressure only, and the latter requiring the adjustment of both pressure and temperature. Based on more straightforward sintering conditions and more favorable cell performance, PLGA may be the material of choice for microspheres in a CO2 sintering application, although a different PLGA formulation with the encapsulation of growth factors, extracellular matrix-derived nanoparticles, and/or buffers in the microspheres may be advantageous for achieving a more superior cell performance than observed here

    Microsphere-Based Scaffolds for Cartilage Tissue Engineering: Using Sub-critical CO2 as a Sintering Agent

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    Shape-specific, macroporous tissue engineering scaffolds were fabricated and homogeneously seeded with cells in a single step. This method brings together CO2 polymer processing and microparticle-based scaffolds in a manner that allows each to solve the key limitation of the other. Specifically, microparticle-based scaffolds have suffered from the limitation that conventional microsphere sintering methods (e.g., heat, solvents) are not cytocompatible, yet we have shown that cell viability was sustained with sub-critical (i.e., gaseous) CO2 sintering of microspheres in the presence of cells at near-ambient temperatures. On the other hand, the fused microspheres provided the pore interconnectivity that has eluded supercritical CO2 foaming approaches. Here, fused poly(lactide-co-glycolide) microsphere scaffolds were seeded with human umbilical cord mesenchymal stromal cells to demonstrate the feasibility of utilizing these matrices for cartilage regeneration. We also demonstrated that the approach may be modified to produce thin cell-loaded patches as a promising alternative for skin tissue engineering applications

    Effect of different sintering methods on bioactivity and release of proteins from PLGA microspheres

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    Macromolecule release from poly(d,l-lactide-co-glycolide) (PLGA) microspheres has been well-characterized, and is a popular approach for delivering bioactive signals from tissue-engineered scaffolds. However, the effect of some processing solvents, sterilization, and mineral incorporation (when used in concert) on long-term release and bioactivity has seldom been addressed. Understanding these effects is of significant importance for microsphere-based scaffolds, given that these scaffolds are becoming increasingly more popular, yet growth factor activity following sintering and/or sterilization is heretofore unknown. The current study evaluated the 6-week release of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β3 and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2 from PLGA and PLGA/hydroxyapatite (HAp) microspheres following exposure to ethanol (EtOH), dense phase carbon dioxide (CO2), or ethylene oxide (EtO). EtO was chosen based on its common use in scaffold sterilization, whereas EtOH and CO2 were chosen given their importance in sintering microspheres together to create scaffolds. Release supernatants were then used in an accelerated cell stimulation study with human bone marrow stromal cells (hBMSCs) with monitoring of gene expression for major chondrogenic and osteogenic markers. Results indicated that in microspheres without HAp, EtOH exposure led to the greatest amount of delivery, whilst those treated with CO2 delivered the least growth factor. In contrast, formulations with HAp released almost half as much protein, regardless of EtOH or CO2 exposure. Notably, EtO exposure was not found to significantly affect the amount of protein released. Cell stimulation studies demonstrated that eluted protein samples performed similarly to positive controls in PLGA-only formulations, and ambiguously in PLGA/HAp composites. In conclusion, the use of EtOH, subcritical CO2, and EtO in microsphere-based scaffolds may have only slight adverse effects, and possibly even desirable effects in some cases, on protein availability and bioactivity

    Tailoring of processing parameters for sintering microsphere-based scaffolds with dense phase carbon dioxide

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    Jeon, J. H., Bhamidipati, M., Sridharan, B., Scurto, A. M., Berkland, C. J. and Detamore, M. S. (2013), Tailoring of processing parameters for sintering microsphere-based scaffolds with dense-phase carbon dioxide. J. Biomed. Mater. Res., 101B: 330–337. doi:10.1002/jbm.b.32843Microsphere-based polymeric tissue-engineered scaffolds offer the advantage of shape-specific constructs with excellent spatiotemporal control and interconnected porous structures. The use of these highly versatile scaffolds requires a method to sinter the discrete microspheres together into a cohesive network, typically with the use of heat or organic solvents. We previously introduced subcritical CO2 as a sintering method for microsphere-based scaffolds; here we further explored the effect of processing parameters. Gaseous or subcritical CO2 was used for making the scaffolds, and various pressures, ratios of lactic acid to glycolic acid in poly(lactic acid-co-glycolic acid), and amounts of NaCl particles were explored. By changing these parameters, scaffolds with different mechanical properties and morphologies were prepared. The preferred range of applied subcritical CO2 was 15–25 bar. Scaffolds prepared at 25 bar with lower lactic acid ratios and without NaCl particles had a higher stiffness, while the constructs made at 15 bar, lower glycolic acid content, and with salt granules had lower elastic moduli. Human umbilical cord mesenchymal stromal cells (hUCMSCs) seeded on the scaffolds demonstrated that cells penetrate the scaffolds and remain viable. Overall, the study demonstrated the dependence of the optimal CO2 sintering parameters on the polymer and conditions, and identified desirable CO2 processing parameters to employ in the sintering of microsphere-based scaffolds as a more benign alternative to heat-sintering or solvent-based sintering methods

    Ionic liquids

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