Structural complexity inherited from a microbial synthesis of glycolipids was translated into unique poly(sophorolipid) biomaterials. ROMP polymerization of natural diacetylated lactonic sophorolipids gave a high molecular weight polymer with asymmetric bola-amphiphilic repeating units. The poly(sophorolipid) chain alternates C18 oleic-like aliphatic segments (90% cis-configured double bonds) with bulky diacetylated disaccharide moieties. The solid-state properties were investigated by means of TGA, DSC, TMDSC, and variable-temperature X-ray diffraction. The poly(sophorolipid) is a solid at room temperature that undergoes the glass transition at 61 degrees C and melts at 123 degrees C. The crystal phase is associated with ordered packing of the aliphatic chain segments. The semicrystalline poly(sophorolipid) also displays a long-range order (d = 2.44 nm) involving sophorose groups that is found to persist after crystal phase melting (in high-T diffractograms) with a slightly shortened distance (2.27 nm). Upon annealing at 80 degrees C the poly(sophorolipid) recrystallizes and concomitantly the disaccharide units space out again at 2.44nm. An exothermal phenomenon that immediately follows melting and is revealed by TMDSC might be associated with the observed adjustment of sophorose units spacing in the melt. The peculiar structural organization of this novel biomaterial is discussed.

Glycolipid Biomaterials: Solid-State Properties of a Poly(sophorolipid)

Gazzano Massimo;
2008

Abstract

Structural complexity inherited from a microbial synthesis of glycolipids was translated into unique poly(sophorolipid) biomaterials. ROMP polymerization of natural diacetylated lactonic sophorolipids gave a high molecular weight polymer with asymmetric bola-amphiphilic repeating units. The poly(sophorolipid) chain alternates C18 oleic-like aliphatic segments (90% cis-configured double bonds) with bulky diacetylated disaccharide moieties. The solid-state properties were investigated by means of TGA, DSC, TMDSC, and variable-temperature X-ray diffraction. The poly(sophorolipid) is a solid at room temperature that undergoes the glass transition at 61 degrees C and melts at 123 degrees C. The crystal phase is associated with ordered packing of the aliphatic chain segments. The semicrystalline poly(sophorolipid) also displays a long-range order (d = 2.44 nm) involving sophorose groups that is found to persist after crystal phase melting (in high-T diffractograms) with a slightly shortened distance (2.27 nm). Upon annealing at 80 degrees C the poly(sophorolipid) recrystallizes and concomitantly the disaccharide units space out again at 2.44nm. An exothermal phenomenon that immediately follows melting and is revealed by TMDSC might be associated with the observed adjustment of sophorose units spacing in the melt. The peculiar structural organization of this novel biomaterial is discussed.
2008
Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattivita' - ISOF
Aliphatic chains; Amphiphilic; Diffractograms; Disaccharide units; Double bonds; Glyco lipids; Microbial synthesis; Molecular weight polymers; Room temperatures; Semicrystalline; Sophorolipids;
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/23440
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