1998
DOI: 10.1002/chin.199839313
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ChemInform Abstract: NMR Studies of Cyclodextrins and Cyclodextrin Complexes

Abstract: organic chemistry, review organic chemistry, review Z 0200 39 -313 NMR Studies of Cyclodextrins and Cyclodextrin Complexes -[323 refs.]. -(SCHNEIDER, H.-J.; HACKET, F.; RUEDIGER, V.; IKEDA, H.; Chem. Rev. (Washington, D. C.) 98 (1998) 5, 1755-1785; Fachrichtung Org.

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“…Illustratively, while supramolecular hydrogels made from polymers with pendant macrocyclic host groups and pendant guest molecules are a promising class of soft materials that exhibit shear-thinning flow, self-healing, and stress relaxation, the commonly exploited cyclodextrin-adamantane motif exhibits a binding affinity constant on the order of 10 5 M −1 , which, though relatively modest, is among the highest obtainable with cyclodextrin cavitands. 9 Binding affinity constants are estimated under idealized conditions, typically as free guest molecules and free host groups in water or phosphate buffered saline (PBS) using isothermal titration calorimetry or nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which enable isolation of the inclusion interaction, [10][11][12] and likely overestimate cross-link affinity in hydrogels, where interactions with media components and the polymeric backbone reduce the thermodynamic driving forces associated with guest inclusion. 13,14 Accordingly, 10 5 M −1 currently serves as an upper bound on binding affinity for most supramolecular biomaterials.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Illustratively, while supramolecular hydrogels made from polymers with pendant macrocyclic host groups and pendant guest molecules are a promising class of soft materials that exhibit shear-thinning flow, self-healing, and stress relaxation, the commonly exploited cyclodextrin-adamantane motif exhibits a binding affinity constant on the order of 10 5 M −1 , which, though relatively modest, is among the highest obtainable with cyclodextrin cavitands. 9 Binding affinity constants are estimated under idealized conditions, typically as free guest molecules and free host groups in water or phosphate buffered saline (PBS) using isothermal titration calorimetry or nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which enable isolation of the inclusion interaction, [10][11][12] and likely overestimate cross-link affinity in hydrogels, where interactions with media components and the polymeric backbone reduce the thermodynamic driving forces associated with guest inclusion. 13,14 Accordingly, 10 5 M −1 currently serves as an upper bound on binding affinity for most supramolecular biomaterials.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%