skip to main content


Search for: All records

Creators/Authors contains: "Prud’homme, Robert K."

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. In addition to the repulsive and attractive interaction forces described by Derjaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek (DLVO) theory, many charged colloid systems are stabilized by non-DLVO contributions stemming from specific material attributes. Here, we investigate non-DLVO contributions to the stability of polymer colloids stemming from the intra-particle glass transition temperature ( T g ). Flash nanoprecipitation is used to fabricate nanoparticles (NPs) from a library of polymers and dispersion stability is studied in the presence of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic salts. When adding KCl, stability undergoes a discontinuous decrease as T g increases above room temperature, indicating greater stability of rubbery NPs over glassy NPs. Glassy NPs are also found to interact strongly with hydrophobic phosphonium cations (PR 4 + ), yielding charge inversion and intermediate aggregation while rubbery NPs resist ion adsorption. Differences in the lifetime of ionic structuration within mobile surface layers is presented as a potential mechanism underlying the observed phenomenon. 
    more » « less
  2. Functionalized cellulosics have shown promise as naturally derived thermoresponsive gelling agents. However, the dynamics of thermally induced phase transitions of these polymers at the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) are not fully understood. Here, with experiments and theoretical considerations, we address how molecular architecture dictates the mechanisms and dynamics of phase transitions for cellulose ethers. Above the LCST, we show that hydroxypropyl substituents favor the spontaneous formation of liquid droplets, whereas methyl substituents induce fibril formation through diffusive growth. In celluloses which contain both methyl and hydroxypropyl substituents, fibrillation initiates after liquid droplet formation, suppressing the fibril growth to a sub-diffusive rate. Unlike for liquid droplets, the dissolution of fibrils back into the solvated state occurs with significant thermal hysteresis. We tune this hysteresis by altering the content of substituted hydroxypropyl moieties. This work provides a systematic study to decouple competing mechanisms during the phase transition of multi-functionalized macromolecules. 
    more » « less
  3. null (Ed.)
    ABSTRACT: The dosing of peptide and protein therapeutics is complicated by rapid clearance from the blood pool and poor cellular membrane permeability. Encapsulation into nanocarriers such as liposomes or polymersomes has long been explored to overcome these limitations, but manufacturing challenges have limited clinical translation by these approaches. Recently, inverse Flash NanoPrecipitation (iFNP) has been developed to produce highly loaded polymeric nanocarriers with the peptide or protein contained within a hydrophilic core, stabilized by a hydrophobic polymer shell. Encapsulation of proteins with higher-order structure requires understanding how processing may affect their conformational state. We demonstrate a combined experimental/simulation approach to characterize protein behavior during iFNP processing steps using the Trp-cage protein TC5b as a model. Explicit-solvent fully atomistic molecular dynamics simulations with enhanced sampling techniques are coupled with two-dimensional heteronuclear multiple-quantum coherence nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2D-HMQC NMR) and circular dichroism to determine the structure of TC5b during mixed-solvent exposure encountered in iFNP processing. The simulations involve atomistic models of mixed solvents and protein to capture the complexity of the hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions between water, dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), and the protein. The combined analyses reveal structural unfolding of the protein in 11 M DMSO but confirm complete refolding after release from the polymeric nanocarrier back into an aqueous phase. 
    more » « less
  4. The properties of organic molecules can be influenced by magnetic fields, and these magnetic field effects are diverse. They range from inducing nuclear Zeeman splitting for structural determination in NMR spectroscopy to polaron Zeeman splitting organic spintronics and organic magnetoresistance. A pervasive magnetic field effect on an aromatic molecule is the aromatic ring current, which can be thought of as an induction of a circular current of π-electrons upon the application of a magnetic field perpendicular to the π-system of the molecule. While in NMR spectroscopy the effects of ring currents on the chemical shifts of nearby protons are relatively well understood, and even predictable, the consequences of these modified electronic states on the spectroscopy of molecules has remained unknown. In this work, we find that photophysical properties of model phthalocyanine compounds and their aggregates display clear magnetic field dependences up to 25 T, with the aggregates showing more drastic magnetic field sensitivities depending on the intermolecular interactions with the amplification of ring currents in stacked aggregates. These observations are consistent with ring currents measured in NMR spectroscopy and simulated in time-dependent density functional theory calculations of magnetic field-dependent phthalocyanine monomer and dimer absorption spectra. We propose that ring currents in organic semiconductors, which commonly comprise aromatic moieties, may present new opportunities for the understanding and exploitation of combined optical, electronic, and magnetic properties.

     
    more » « less