Nanogels are very promising biomedical nanodevices. The classic "radiation chemistry-based" approach to synthetize nanogels consists in the irradiation with pulsed electron beams of dilute, N2O-saturated, aqueous solutions of water-soluble polymers of the "crosslinking type". Nanogels with controlled size and properties are produced in a single irradiation step with no recourse to initiators, organic solvents and surfactants. This paper combines experimental syntheses, performed with two e-beam irradiation setups and dose-ranges, starting from poly(N-vinyl pyrrolidone) solutions of various concentrations, both in N2O-saturated and air-saturated initial conditions, with the numerical simulations of the radiation chemistry of aqueous solutions of a radical scavanger exposed to the same irradiation conditions used in the experiments. This approach provides a methodology to predict the impact of system and irradiation conditions on the water radiation chemistry, which in turn affect the nanogel features in terms of molecular and physico-chemical properties. In particular, the crucial role of initial and transient concentration of molecular oxygen is revealed. This work also proposes a very simple and effective methodology to quantitatively measure the double bonds formed in the systems from disporportionation and chain scission reactions, competing with inter-/infra-molecular crosslinking.

The role of molecular oxygen in the formation of radiation-engineered multifunctional nanogels

Dispenza C;
2019

Abstract

Nanogels are very promising biomedical nanodevices. The classic "radiation chemistry-based" approach to synthetize nanogels consists in the irradiation with pulsed electron beams of dilute, N2O-saturated, aqueous solutions of water-soluble polymers of the "crosslinking type". Nanogels with controlled size and properties are produced in a single irradiation step with no recourse to initiators, organic solvents and surfactants. This paper combines experimental syntheses, performed with two e-beam irradiation setups and dose-ranges, starting from poly(N-vinyl pyrrolidone) solutions of various concentrations, both in N2O-saturated and air-saturated initial conditions, with the numerical simulations of the radiation chemistry of aqueous solutions of a radical scavanger exposed to the same irradiation conditions used in the experiments. This approach provides a methodology to predict the impact of system and irradiation conditions on the water radiation chemistry, which in turn affect the nanogel features in terms of molecular and physico-chemical properties. In particular, the crucial role of initial and transient concentration of molecular oxygen is revealed. This work also proposes a very simple and effective methodology to quantitatively measure the double bonds formed in the systems from disporportionation and chain scission reactions, competing with inter-/infra-molecular crosslinking.
2019
Istituto di Biofisica - IBF
Inglese
114
164
175
12
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0014305718318469?via%3Dihub
Water radiolysis
Nanogel
Crosslinking
Kinetic modeling
Mechanism
0
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Ditta LA; Dahlgren B; Sabatino MA; Dispenza C; Jonsson M
01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/390268
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