Detail publikačního výsledku
Densitometry and ultrasound velocimetry of hyaluronan solutions in water and in sodium chloride solution
KARGEROVÁ, A.; PEKAŘ, M.
Originální název
Densitometry and ultrasound velocimetry of hyaluronan solutions in water and in sodium chloride solution
Anglický název
Densitometry and ultrasound velocimetry of hyaluronan solutions in water and in sodium chloride solution
Druh
Článek WoS
Originální abstrakt
The densities of hyaluronan solutions in water and 0.15 M NaCl were measured in the temperature range from 25 to 50 C for the hyaluronan molecular weights from 10 to 1750 kDa. The density increased linearly with concentration and decreased with temperature. The data were fitted by the equation describing the density as a linear function of concentration and a quadratic function of temperature. The effect of molecular weight was negligible and thus single equation was sufficient to describe all data. The apparent and partial specific volumes were calculated from the density data including their extrapolated values to infinite dilutions. The measurement of ultrasound speed in the same solutions under the same conditions enabled to calculate the compressibility and its dependence on concentration and temperature. The compressibility decreased with both the concentration and the temperature but the effect of the concentration was only slight mild. The compressibility was used to estimate the hydration numbers which slightly decreased with increasing temperature and concentration. The addition of NaCl changed only the numerical values of density and ultrasound velocity while not changing the character of their dependence on temperature and concentration. Measured and calculated data indicate that hyaluronan does not disturb the specific water structure in the studied concentration range and support the idea of the existence of water clusters or nanodroplets hydrating the hyaluronan chains in solution.
Anglický abstrakt
The densities of hyaluronan solutions in water and 0.15 M NaCl were measured in the temperature range from 25 to 50 C for the hyaluronan molecular weights from 10 to 1750 kDa. The density increased linearly with concentration and decreased with temperature. The data were fitted by the equation describing the density as a linear function of concentration and a quadratic function of temperature. The effect of molecular weight was negligible and thus single equation was sufficient to describe all data. The apparent and partial specific volumes were calculated from the density data including their extrapolated values to infinite dilutions. The measurement of ultrasound speed in the same solutions under the same conditions enabled to calculate the compressibility and its dependence on concentration and temperature. The compressibility decreased with both the concentration and the temperature but the effect of the concentration was only slight mild. The compressibility was used to estimate the hydration numbers which slightly decreased with increasing temperature and concentration. The addition of NaCl changed only the numerical values of density and ultrasound velocity while not changing the character of their dependence on temperature and concentration. Measured and calculated data indicate that hyaluronan does not disturb the specific water structure in the studied concentration range and support the idea of the existence of water clusters or nanodroplets hydrating the hyaluronan chains in solution.
Klíčová slova
compressibility, density, hyaluronan, hydration, ultrasound velocity
Klíčová slova v angličtině
compressibility, density, hyaluronan, hydration, ultrasound velocity
Autoři
KARGEROVÁ, A.; PEKAŘ, M.
Rok RIV
2015
Vydáno
01.04.2014
ISSN
0144-8617
Periodikum
Carbohydrate Polymers
Svazek
106
Číslo
1
Stát
Spojené království Velké Británie a Severního Irska
Strany od
453
Strany do
459
Strany počet
7
Plný text v Digitální knihovně
BibTex
@article{BUT107460,
author="Andrea {Hurčíková} and Miloslav {Pekař}",
title="Densitometry and ultrasound velocimetry of hyaluronan solutions in water and in sodium chloride solution",
journal="Carbohydrate Polymers",
year="2014",
volume="106",
number="1",
pages="453--459",
issn="0144-8617"
}