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A universal calibration for gel permeation chromatography

Z. Grubisic, +2 more
- 01 Sep 1967 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 9, pp 753-759
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TLDR
In this paper, the relationship between elution volume and molecular weight has been investigated, and it has been shown that the relationship depends on the contour length of the molecular chain rather than the radius of gyration of the polymer molecules.
Abstract
Gel permeation chromatography is one of the most powerful techniques for characterizing the polydispersity of polymeric materials. A versatile commercial apparatus has been used successfully in numerous laboratories on various problems of molecular weight distributions. But one of the difficulties still unsolved is the problem of calibration, i.e., the relation between elution volume and molecular weight. Some authors have assumed that retention time depends on the contour length of the molecular chain. Others think that it is more reasonable to use the radius of gyration or some average volume of the polymer molecule as the calibration parameter. In a recent paper we have reported GPC retention times of a series of polystyrenes exhibiting different molecular structures: linear, star-shaped, and comb-like. All were of known molecular weight and of low polydispersity. Obviously the conventional calibration method, where the logarithm of molecular weight is plotted against elution volume, does not ...

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Hyperbranched and highly branched polymer architectures--synthetic strategies and major characterization aspects.

TL;DR: The challenging synthesis of the dendrimers attracted especially scientists with a strong organic chemistry background and led to beautifully designed macromolecules, which allowed a deeper insight into the effect of branching and functionality.
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Methods of isolating extracellular vesicles impact down-stream analyses of their cargoes

Douglas D. Taylor, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2015 - 
TL;DR: While each method purifies exosomal material, there are pros and cons of each and there are critical issues linked with centrifugation-based methods, including co-isolation of non-exosomal materials, damage to the vesicle's membrane structure and non-standardized parameters leading to qualitative and quantitative variability.
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Poly (glycolic acid-co-dl-lactic acid): diffusion or degradation controlled drug delivery?

TL;DR: The mechanism of drug release from poly(glycolic acid-co-dl-lactic acid), PGLA, was investigated in this paper, where a 1:1 copolymer was either solvent-cast or prepared by compression of micronized powders, and water content, glass transition temperature, hydrolytic chain scission, and weight loss of PGLAs were measured as a function of time in deionized (DI) water and phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4, at 37°C.