Browsing by Subject "materials"
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Item Open Access Learning to glue underwater: Inspiration from the decorator worm(2016-04-28) Diana, ZoieThe decorator worm, a sedentary predator, builds a micro-reef on the portion of its tube above the sediment, which attracts prey. When tube tops are clipped in the lab, the worm rebuilds compulsively. Glass beads and antifouling materials were used as decoration substrates to characterize bioadhesive biochemistry and adhesion to antifouling substrate. Decorator worm adhesive was largely proteinaceous with phosphate presence and a lack of glycoprotein. The Introduction explains the scientific context for studying natural underwater adhesives, including efforts to understand conserved molecular mechanisms in underwater adhesion to further fouling prevention on boat hulls or medical implants and biomimicking natural glues for industrial or biomedical applications. The Methods provides detailed steps to test decorator worm adhesive for protein, phosphoprotein, and glycoprotein presence. This section also provides details on how to make worms decorate with antifouling substrates. The Results section shows that decorator worm bioadhesive is highly proteinaceous and has higher phosphate presence in the tube as compared to glue on glass beads. The adhesive did not contain significant glycoprotein. The decorator worm adheres mixed ion exchange resin, synthetic ion exchange resin, strongly basic anion exchange resin, aminopropyl silane modified glass particles (.5-10 μm), imitation seagrass, plastic zip ties, iPhone cases, silicone, silicone infused with octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4) and silicone infused with decamethylcyclopentasiloxane (D5) to its tube. This report details findings on the decorator worm as a novel system for studying adhesive and antifouling materials: • Adhesive shows high protein content • Tube adhesive shows higher phosphoprotein than adhesive on glass beads • Adhesive shows little to no glycoprotein presence • Decorator worms adheres all materials tested to their tubes • Decorator worms relatively large size and readiness to adhere any material to the exterior tubes make them excellent candidates to testing antifoul release materialsItem Open Access Mechanochemical Reaction Development for Addition, Elimination, and Isomerization(2022) Wang, LiqiIt is now well appreciated that coupled mechanical forces can influence the rates and outcomes of covalent chemical reactions in isolated polymers and in bulk polymeric materials. Mechanochemical reactions have been widely used in mechanocatalysis, release of small molecules and protons, biasing and probing reaction pathways, stress reporting, stress strengthening and degradable polymers. Mechanochemical reactions involve much more than simply breaking of bonds, and there exist rich opportunities for new reactions to be developed for a wide range of potential applications. In this dissertation, we report new mechanochemical reactions of three types: addition, elimination, and isomerization.Mechanical forces have been used previously to activate latent catalysts by accelerating dissociation of an inhibiting ligand, but tuning catalytic activity by force remains limited to a single demonstration of force-dependent enantioselectivity of Heck and Trost reactions. Chapter 2 describes how force affects the rate of oxidative addition, often the first step within a catalytic cycle. We study the effect of force applied to the biaryl backbone of a bisphosphine ligand on the rate of oxidative addition of bromobenzene to a ligand-coordinated palladium center. Local compressive and tensile forces on the order of 100 pN are generated using a stiff stilbene force probe. We find that a compressive force increases the rate of oxidative addition, whereas a tensile force decreases the rate, relative to that of the parent complex of strain-free ligand. Rates vary by a factor of ~6 across ~340 pN of force applied to the complexes. The applied forces exert an opposite effect on oxidative addition relative to that for reductive elimination, laying the groundwork for mechanically switchable catalysts that can be optimized for individual steps within a closed catalyst cycle. Chapter 3 demonstrates a new mechanochemical elimination reaction, namely the mechanical release of hydrogen fluoride, and its application to triggered polymer degradation. As a versatile reagent for material remodeling, hydrogen fluoride has applications in self-immolative polymers, remodeled siloxanes, and degradable polymers. The responsive, in situ generation of HF in materials therefore holds promise for new classes of adaptive material systems. We achieve the mechanochemically coupled generation of HF from 2-methoxy-gem-difluorocyclopropane (MeO-gDFC) mechanophores in polymers. Pulsed ultrasonication of a MeO-gDFC containing polymer leads to one equivalent of HF release per MeO-gDFC activation. We further quantify the mechanochemical reactivity of MeO-gDFC by single molecule force spectroscopy, and force-coupled rate constants for ring opening reach ~36 s-1 at a force of ~890 pN, 400 pN lower than is required in dialkyl gDFC mechanophores that lack the methoxy substituent. The SMFS and sonication results suggest that MeO-gDFC is a more efficient mechanophore source of HF than its 2-methoxy-gem-dichlorocyclopropane analog is of HCl, in contrast to expectations based on trends in force-free reactivity. We apply the mechanical release of HF to accelerate the degradation of a copolymer containing both MeO-gDFC (3 mol%) and an HF-cleavable silyl ether (25 mol%). The mechanochemical reaction of MeO-gDFC thus provides a mechanically coupled mechanism of releasing HF for polymer remodeling pathways that complements previous thermally driven mechanisms. Finally, in Chapter 4, we report the mechanically driven isomerization of cubane, a compound of longstanding fascination to chemists due to its structure, symmetry, and strain. The mechanical coupling is explored at three regiochemical dispositions: ortho, meta and para. In contrast to the fact that all compounds can be activated thermally, cubane is mechanically activated only when coupled at ortho positions. Through mechanical activation, cubane reacts to form a thermally inaccessible syn-tricyclooctadiene product, in comparison to cyclooctatetraene, which is observed in thermal rearrangements of cubane. Pulsed ultrasonication of such cubane-containing polymer leads to efficient isomerization (57% activation after 4 h sonication). We further quantify the mechanochemical reactivity of cubane by single molecule force spectroscopy, and force-coupled rate constants for ring opening reach ~33 s-1 at a force of ~1.55 nN, lower than required forces of cyclobutanes which are typically 1.8-2.0 nN.