Salt Effects in Mucin Lubrication

1969 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. McCutchen ◽  
J. F. Wilkins

Animal joints are lubricated by two complementary mechanisms. Weeping lubrication carries most of the joint load hydrostatically, leaving only a small fraction of the total to be carried by rubbing of the solid “skeletons” of the two cartilages. This rubbing is, in turn, lubricated by the synovial mucin; i.e., by long chain polymer molecules dissolved in the joint fluid. There is good evidence that the mucin molecules adsorb to the surfaces and provide boundary lubrication. In this paper we examine further this adsorption processs using a bearing whose two surfaces are rubber and glass, respectively. It is found that the lubricating ability of the mucin is good if it is applied to the bearing in a solution with about physiological salt concentration. At higher salt concentrations the lubrication is comparatively poor, while at zero salt concentration it is very bad indeed. If, on the other hand, the mucin is applied at physiological salt concentration, and then the salt and unadsorbed mucin are washed away with distilled water the lubrication remains good, and has, on occasion, even improved. Once the mucin has been adsorbed the entire range of salt concentration can be explored, with the lubrication becoming worse at high salt concentration and then recovering in greater or lesser degree when the salt is washed off. It seems, then, that the salt concentration affects lubrication in two ways. It can upset the adsorption of the lubricating film, and it can change the lubricating effectiveness of the film once it is adsorbed.

1958 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 88-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. L. Bhatnagar ◽  
A. B. Biswas ◽  
M. K. Gharpurey

Long-chain polymer molecules are approximated by a model consisting of isodimensional segments which tend to arrange themselves in co-linear succession. A fraction f of the bonds is assumed to be ‘bent’ out of the co-linear direction of preceding segments. The fact that the free energy of solution derived using the lattice model separates into (a) a mixing term dependent only on the concentration, and (b) a disorientation term depending on f but not on the concentration, leads to the concept of an equilibrium ‘flexibility’ f which is characteristic of the polymer chain at a given temperature. This f must exceed a specified critical value, which decreases with dilution, if the disordered phase usually considered to occur is to be more stable than an ordered one in which the chains assume their preferred rod-like form and lie parallel to one another. Transition between the two states should be co-operative, and should involve a latent heat (owing to the change in intramolecular configurational energy) even in the absence of a change in the intermolecular energy. The concept of a phase transition due solely to intramolecular forces thus arises. Configurational dimensions of various polymers are such as to suggest that inflexibility may be a dominant factor in causing them to crystallize. This is certainly true for cellulose derivatives, probably also for polytetrafluoroethylene, and possible for polymethylene as well. Intramolecular forces favouring the rod-like form are, doubtless of major importance also in bringing about crystallization of proteins in the α-form.


Author(s):  
Shitanshu Devrani ◽  
Rahul Kumar Tiwari ◽  
Rajat Sharma ◽  
Mathur P. Rajesh ◽  
Ashish Kapoor

RSC Advances ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
pp. 13908-13915 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Wen

A facile “one-pot” synthetic route is used to modify SiO2 nanoparticles with a long-chain polymer, and to prepare high-performance poly(l-lactide) nanocomposites.


1985 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 119
Author(s):  
Jan Wilmshurst

Esso Australia Ltd (on behalf of the Esso/BHP joint venture) operates a crude oil and natural gas processing system based on the offshore fields in Bass Strait.Crude oil is discharged from the offshore fields via a 132-km pipeline to the crude stabilization plant at Longford. A 187-km pipeline is then used to transfer stabilized crude to Long Island Point, where the oil is held in storage prior to discharge to Australian refineries and to export.Without the use of drag reducer chemical, Bass Strait crude production is limited by pipeline hydraulic capacity. Since the last quarter of 1983, drag reducer has been injected at both Halibut platform and Longford as required to meet the demand for crude oil. As a result, daily production rates have been increased by more than ten per cent.Drag reducer chemical is a long chain polymer which acts to reduce the extent of turbulence in the flowing oil stream. The chemical is highly viscous, and specifically designed gear pumps are required to achieve satisfactory injection into the pipeline systems.


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