scholarly journals NMR analysis and triad sequence distributions of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate)

2020 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 106754
Author(s):  
H.N. Cheng ◽  
Atanu Biswas ◽  
Karl Vermillion ◽  
Beatriz Melendez-Rodriguez ◽  
Jose Maria Lagaron
1967 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 1200-1211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Virgil D. Mochel

Abstract High resolution NMR spectroscopy has been shown to be a most useful tool for elucidation of compositions and structures of polymers. It is a rapid, accurate method of analysis and requires no external calibration. This technique of composition analysis can be applied to any copolymer, terpolymer, or homopolymer with various structural isomers, provided a suitable number of resonance peaks can be unambiguously assigned to at least one proton of each of the structures present. Accuracy depends upon the relative isolation of these selected peaks. The method was applied to butadiene styrene and butadiene isoprene copolymers. Equations developed previously for both systems were extended and modified to give better accuracy. In the former copolymer the NMR analysis for block styrene agreed very well with the chemical oxidative degradation method over the range 0-20 per cent. It is believed that sequence lengths smaller than five styrene units can be observed as block styrene by NMR. It was also shown that there is a sequence distribution effect in the 1,2 addition butadiene olefinic resonance region of the spectrum. This effect is also observed in polybutadienes and in the butadiene isoprene copolymers. Further study of this might be fruitful. Accuracy of the NMR method was demonstrated in the butadiene isoprene case by study of four high conversion, emulsion copolymers and six blends of butadiene and isoprene homopolymers. In all samples except one the total isoprene content found by either the detailed NMR analysis or the much more simplified NMR analysis agreed within 2 per cent of that known to be present. Accuracy is greatest for those copolymers or blends which have relatively low 1,2 addition butadiene contents, such as with butyllithium-catalyzed polymers. Accuracy is poor when the copolymer or blend has an isoprene content less than 10 per cent along with a high 1,2 addition butadiene content. Composition analysis of copolymers by NMR will become increasingly important since it often provides a direct, simple fingerprint of the various structures. However, NMR will probably make its most significant contributions in stereochemical studies of tacticities, sequence distributions, and orientation, such as head-to-head or tail-to-tail linkages. In these problems deuteration techniques, double resonance techniques, and higher field strengths play an indispensable role.


1971 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 1015-1024 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. J. Gardner ◽  
C. Cozewith ◽  
G. Ver Strate

Abstract Carbon-14 labeled ethylene and propylene were used to synthesize a series of copolymers of known composition to serve as standards for copolymer analyses. Polymers with broad and narrow compositional distributions and differing sequence distributions were produced by varying the catalyst system. Solution and combustion counting techniques were used to determine sample composition and then infrared calibration curves were determined on pressed polymer films utilizing several different infrared peaks. 1. Within the ranges systematically varied neither compositional nor sequence distributions affect the peak ratios studied. 2. No isotope effects exist in the polymerizations. 3. NMR analysis yields the same results as 14C analysis. 4. Use of the 1378 cm−1 methyl band as calibrated with atactic polypropylene yields agreement with the 14C data if the average of polypropylene and copolymer results is used. 5. We amend the results previously published by our laboratory.


2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (10) ◽  
pp. 1470-1483 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Šaman ◽  
Pavel Kratina ◽  
Jitka Moravcová ◽  
Martina Wimmerová ◽  
Zdeněk Wimmer

Glucosylation of the cis- and trans-isomers of 2-(4-methoxybenzyl)cyclohexan-1-ol (1a/1b, 2a/2b, 1a or 2a) was performed to prepare the corresponding alkyl β-D-glucopyranosides, mainly to get analytical data of pure enantiomers of the glucosides (3a-6b), required for subsequent investigations of related compounds with biological activity. One of the employed modifications of the Koenigs-Knorr synthesis resulted in achieving 85-95% yields of pure β-anomers 3a/3b, 4a/4b, 3a or 4a of protected intermediates, with several promoters and toluene as solvent, yielding finally the deprotected products 5a/5b, 6a/6b, 5a or 6a as pure β-anomers. To obtain enantiomerically pure β-anomers of the target structure (3a, 4a, 5a and 6a) for unambiguous structure assignment, an enzymic reduction of 2-(4-methoxybenzyl)cyclohexan-1-one by Saccharomyces cerevisiae whole cells was performed to get (1S,2S)- and (1S,2R)-enantiomers (1a and 2a) of 2-(4-methoxybenzyl)cyclohexan-1-ol. The opposite enantiomers of alkyl β-D-glucopyranosides (5b and 6b) were obtained by separation of the diastereoisomeric mixtures 5a/5b and 6a/6b by chiral HPLC. All stereoisomers of the products (3a-6b) were subjected to a detailed 1H NMR and 13C NMR analysis.


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