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Applications of Diffusion NMR for Polymer Property Determination

Explore the various applications of diffusion NMR spectroscopy in polymer property determination, including size estimation, resolution based on physiochemical interactions, cleavage determination, pore size measurement, critical micelle concentration determination, and background signal elimination.

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Applications of Diffusion NMR for Polymer Property Determination

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  1. NMR DiffusionandPDI determinationA Pair of Applications of Diffusion NMR for Polymer Property Determination Sjoerd J. Rijpkema 21-11-2018

  2. Quick review of NMR basics • 1H 1D NMR • 1H – 1H COSY • 13C 1D NMR • 1H – 13C HSQC • 1H – 13C HMBC

  3. More possibilities • TOCSY – Following a spin system trail • NOESY – Through spaceinteractions • DOSY – Diffusion NMR (Determine MW and speed) • EXSY – Exchange NMR (chemical exchange or conformer changes) • Allexperimentscanbedonewith X nuclei! (1H – 15N HMBC) i.e. A NOESY between1H and19F is called a HOESY • Diffusion • Polydispersityby NMR

  4. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy • Diffusion is related to molecular shape via the Stokes-Einstein equation: • Assumptions: • Molecule behaves like a sphere • Radius α MW Important Considerations for NMR: • Temperature – ambient is best (lack of strong convection currents) • Solvent viscosity – DMSO > D2O > CDCl3 (keep in mind) • Molecular weight – too large and can’t measure D with conventional probes

  5. What we canusediffusionfor • Sizeestimation/MW determination (hard sphereassumption) & Example: D7 = 1.15 x 10-5 cm2/s D8= 1.12 x 10-5 cm2/s D9= 0.95 x 10-5cm2/s ~1.66x largerthan7 or 8 Three intermediates were observed by 1H NMR and determined to have this formula via COSY, 1H-29Si HMBC and 1H-15N HSQC: Rijpkema, S.J.; White, P.B.; Bunschoten, R.P.; Mecinovic, J. Manuscript in progress

  6. What we canusediffusionfor • Resolutionbased on physiochemicalinteractions (solute/solvent interactions; solute/gel; etc) Note: verysimilar MW Yet can all be resolved in MeOH-d4 due to differences in H-bonding to solvent (different solvates) Reile, I.; Rutjes, F. P. J. T.; et. al Magn. Reson. Chem., 2017, 55, 759-762

  7. What we canusediffusionfor • Determination of cleavage of a group PEG tail is redox cleavable – NMR can Clear similarity between post-cleavage PEG (top) and demonstrate this free PEG (bottom) Note: Stomatocyte with PEG too large to measure D (< 10-7cm2/s) Tu, Y.; Peng, F; White, P. B.; Wilson, D. A. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2017, 56, 7620-7624

  8. What we canusediffusionfor • Determination of pore size of a (hydro)gel (κ-carrageenan) Dendritic NP with 19F labels Measure D (1H, 19F) of different sized Diffusometry (Diffusion + used to probe pore-size of the dendrimers and vary carrageenan loading Relaxometry) provides additional gel to find the diameter of the pore resolution of components Lower limit determinedtobe 5 – 7 nm Van As, H.; et. al. Anal. Chem.,2014, 86, 9229-9235

  9. What we canusediffusionfor • Determination of criticalmicelleconcentration CMC = point where higher concentrations of surfactant induce micelle formation Same compound undergoes a structural transition DetectablebydiffusionNMR - individualmoleculesvsmicelles Tu, Y.; Peng, F; White, P. B.; Wilson, D. A. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2017, 56, 7620-7624

  10. What we canusediffusionfor • Looking at small molecules in the presence of large • Large molecules cause unwanted background signal • T2 filter! (large molecule short T2, small = long T2) Rastrelli, F.; et. al. J. Am. Chem. Soc.,2009, 131, 14222-14224

  11. What we canusediffusionfor • Looking at large molecules in the presence of small • Small molecules diffuse faster Apply a short diffusion element at thebeginning of the sequence to filter out small molecules, keeping large ones. Most effective when is high H2O DMSO-d5 Espinosa, J.F.; et. al. J. Org. Chem., 2006, 71, 4103-4110

  12. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – Hardware requirements 1) An NMR 2) A gradientprobe/gradientchannel - Any probe that autoshims = gradients! BBFO: Standard probe for 400 (and 500) Gradientcapability: 5 G/cm/A Max Gradient: 50 G/cm @ 10 A Limit: Stomatocytes too big (as measured) Diff30 or Diff50 probe: Special designeddiffusionprobes Gradient capability: 30 G/cm/A (diff30) or 50 G/cm/A (diff50) Max Gradient: 1800 G/cm @ 60 A; 3000 G/cm @ 60 A Limit: < 10-12m2/s (nanoparticles)

  13. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – GradientLabeling • Simplest Pulse Sequence – Pulse-Field Gradient Spin-Echo • Intensity of signal during acquisition is given by the Stejskal-Tanner expression • D = D20 = Diffusion time • = P30*2 = length of gradient pulse • D1 + AQ > 3*T1 D = Diffusion constant g = gyromagnetic ratio g = gradient strength

  14. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – GradientLabeling First (windup) gradient labels the nuclei spatially along the z-axis of the tube

  15. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – GradientLabeling Second (unwind) gradient unlabels the nuclei spatially along the z-axis of the tube If all the nuclei “echo” perfectly, there is no dephasing of magnetization/loss of signal

  16. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – GradientLabeling Second (unwind) gradient unlabels the nuclei spatially along the z-axis of the tube If the nuclei DO NOT “echo” perfectly, there IS a dephasing of magnetization/loss of signal

  17. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – MeasuringDiffusion The molecules diffuse inside the tube, precessing at the frequency that was imposed upon them during the gradient pulse

  18. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – MeasuringDiffusion The fast-diffusing one moves the most thus does not “echo” perfectly and dephases, resulting in lower % peak intensity. Slow molecule hardly moves, “echoes” more perfectly, has larger % peak intensity

  19. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – Obtaining information D = Diffusion constant g = gyromagnetic ratio g = gradient strength • Two ways: • Vary the diffusion time at constant gradient strength Problem!Longer diffusion times  more relaxation (T2) problems and convection. • Vary the gradient strength at constant diffusion time No more convection and T2 problems. Limit to the gradient strength! Low Gradient – Lots of space between spin regimes, slow diffusing molecules don’t change much High Gradient – Less space between spin regimes, slow diffusing molecules change more

  20. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – VaryingGradientStrength 5 G Weak gradient = weak response to diffusion

  21. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – VaryingGradientStrength 5 G 18 G Stronger gradient = stronger response to diffusion

  22. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – VaryingGradientStrength 5 G 18 G 38 G Even stronger gradient = very strong response to diffusion

  23. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – VaryingGradientStrength 100 G 5 G 18 G 38 G

  24. NMR Diffusion – PNIPAM 2K Jiawei Sun

  25. Diffusion NMR spectroscopy – 1D vs DOSY Pseudo-2D technique: Not a real 2D technique because there is no indirect FID to transform. Can be applied to other parameters besides D (like rate constants!)

  26. Radboud NMRs • Bruker400 (Ascend)

  27. …ABABAB… vs …ABAABAA… NMR in Polymer Chemistry • Formula/functionalizationdetermination • Branching, substitution, tacticity • Insight into the mechanism of polymerization • Time-dependentstructuralisomerism • Averagemolecularweight (Mn) • Polydispersity/MW distribution • Structuralproperties • 3D structure (e.g. proteins) • Aggregration/CMC (micelleformation) • Solid-phasestructureanddynamics • Degreeof crystallinity • Muchmuch more… Donovan, K. J.; Griffin, R. G.; et. al J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2016, 138, 9663--9674

  28. Properties of Polymers – IdentificationandQuantification X = 45 Y = 54 Z = 15 From NMR integration • Identity and quantification of Monomer repeating units • Distinct ranges of chemical shifts • “Easily” calculate number-average value of groups • Broad lines due to size (T2) and distribution of shifts Huang, X.; et. al. Sci. Rep. 2016, 6, 39504

  29. Properties of Polymers – Polydispersity • Polydispersity/Distribution of Chain Lengths (PDI) • Calculatedby: Ð = Mw/Mn Mw= Weight-AverageMolecularWeight Mn = Number-AverageMolecularWeight Multiply the MW of each chain length by the number of times it is present; divide by total number of molecules Multiply the MW of each chain length by the weight/mass fraction it represents; divide by sum of weight fractions (usually 1) If all polymers were of identical length then the PDI (Ð) = 1.0 - monodisperse For Ð > 1.0, sample is more heterogeneous http://www.open.edu/openlearn/science-maths-technology/science/chemistry/introduction-polymers/content-section-2.6; En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersity; http://www.pslc.ws/macrog/average.htm

  30. Polydispersity by NMR 1D NMR can also be used to calculate Mn: 1) ID the end group 2) Normalize the integrals to # of 1Hs m = 86.41/4 1Hs = 21.6 units n = 180/1 1H = 180 units Mn= 21.6*MWPEG+ 180*MWPLA+ 32 (CH3+H+O) = 13,942.4 Da Mwnotdeterminable fromintegrals

  31. Properties of Polymers – Polydispersity Mass percent Mn = 2150830/3795 = 566.75 Mw= 601.50/1.00 = 601.50 PDI = 601.50/566.75= 1.061 http://www.open.edu/openlearn/science-maths-technology/science/chemistry/introduction-polymers/content-section-2.6; En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersity; http://www.pslc.ws/macrog/average.htm

  32. Polydispersityby GPC (andOthers) • Polydispersity/Distribution of Chain Lengths (PDI) • Measured typically by GPC, MALDI or DLS • GPC –Gel PermeationChromatography • size-exclusionchromatographytechnique • small molecules are retained longer than larger ones • All information in one-go and already calculated PDI • Limited by requiring an internal standard very similar to your polymer (complex polymers are difficult) Median MW SharinBouwman

  33. Polydispersityby NMR Is there a technique within NMR that can calculate PDI? YES NMR is all-powerful and unstoppable (as you should know by now)

  34. Polydispersityby NMR ILT = inverse Laplace transform – used to process non-uniform exponential decay (distribution of compounds) • PDI byusingDiffusion:  <DW> = diff. coefficient of polymer body from ILT analysis <DN> = diff. coefficient of polymer ends from ILT analysis df= fractal dimension relatedto polymer-solvent interaction Diffusion of body weighted by mass of molecules Diffusion of ends weighted by # of molecules Delsuc, M. A.; et. al. J. Magn. Reson., 2011, 212, 169-173

  35. Polydispersityby NMR • Fractal dimension (df) describesthepolymer-solvent interaction Infiniterod df = 1 Polymers in good solvent df = 1.7 Polymers in solvent df = 2 Polymer-polymerinteractions = solvent-polymerinteractions Sphere (solvent excluded) df = 3 Delsuc, M. A.; et. al. J. Phys. Chem. B, 2009, 113, 1914-1918

  36. Polydispersityby NMR • Typically determined via SANS or SAXS experiments • Can also be determined via plotting relative diffusion constant vs MW of compound • best if monodisperse (and similarly shaped) Delsuc, M. A.; et. al. J. Phys. Chem. B, 2009, 113, 1914-1918

  37. Polydispersityby NMR • Now we can determine the PDI by diffusion NMR <DW> = diff. coefficient of polymer body <DN> = diff. coefficient of polymer ends df= 1.86 was experimentally determined for PEG samples in D2O Delsuc, M. A.; et. al. J. Magn. Reson., 2011, 212, 169-173

  38. Polydispersityby NMR - Limits • Method is quite accurate except when PDItrue>> 1 • Need to measure or use an estimate for the fractal dimension (df) - But has minor impact on PDI < 2 PDI < 2: accurate results PDI > 2: large deviations Delsuc, M. A.; et. al. J. Magn. Reson., 2011, 212, 169-173

  39. Acknowledgements • Prof. Dr. Daniela Wilson • Dr. Paul White • JiaweiSun

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