The double bond content in blood serum lipoproteins. Stability of the double bonds/cholesterol ratio

2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 218
1975 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 889-895
Author(s):  
W. Scheele ◽  
S. Fleige

Abstract The results of unaccelerated and accelerated vulcanizations of ethylene-propylene terpolymers (EPDM) demonstrate that the reaction of sulfur with allyl systems (such as those which the 1,5-polyenes contain at concentrations far exceeding the quantity of sulfur introduced for crosslinking purposes) tends toward an order above unity and eventually towards second order, as the sulfur concentration and the double bond content approach the stoichiometric ratio. This could be shown with unaccelerated vulcanizations of EPDM in the absence of ZnO, as well as those accelerated by zinc mercaptobenzothiazole. This is so, in our opinion, because in the one case autocatalysis by the polysulfidic sulfur is inhibited, and in the other it becomes negligible because of the very rapid reaction rate. According to Scheele and Huischen, the reaction order for sulfur decrease for the unaccelerated vulcanization of nitrile rubber is first order, both with respect to time and (very important!) with respect to concentration (nt=no=1), and the reaction is not subject to autocatalysis because of disulfidic crosslinks. Accordingly, we arrive at the conviction, in view of the relations obtained with the EPDM rubbers, that all the rate laws determined for sulfur decrease in 1,5-polyene vulcanizations with an excess of double bonds have as their basis pseudo-reaction orders or pseudo-molecularities. In spite of these generally revealing differences in the kinetics of sulfur decrease and in its chemistry between the 1,5-polyenes with their excess of double bonds and the EPDM rubbers with double bond content that is commensurate with the sulfur concentration, the fact still remains that the reaction of sulfur with polymers containing allyl groups has all the characteristics of a multistep reaction of of catalysis by an intermediate and that these characteristics are obviously those generally found in reactions between sulfur and any kind of compound that contains allyl groups. Even the great differences observed between the chemical constitution and the macromolecular structure of the various homo- and copolymers of the 1,3-dienes (natural rubber and poly butadiene), of polypentenamer, and of the EPDM rubbers under consideration here, cannot alter that circumstance, since each situation involves an analogous reaction of sulfur with the allyl units which sulfur-crosslinkable rubbers contain. Any quantitative differences noted can be attributed to the concentration ratios of all the participating reactants as well as the chemical constitution and reactivity of the allyl units. Thus one cannot escape the conclusion that the submolecular, molecular, and supermolecular structure of the rubbers, as well as the polymerization degree and the molecular weight distribution, are of greater importance for the physical, mechanical, and technological properties of the vulcanizates than the vulcanization itself, which, incidentally, should always be carried out so as to realize optimum technological properties in order to meet the industrial technological requirements.


1990 ◽  
Vol 55 (12) ◽  
pp. 2874-2879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Ertl

Photoisomerization mechanism in model retinal-like protonated Schiff base pentadieniminium was investigated by using MNDO method with configuration interaction. Isomerizations around various double bonds were studied and twisted biradical geometries in S0 and S1 states were optimized. Photoisomerization proceeds exclusively around the central double bond where the twisted S1 state is strongly stabilized and the S0-S1 gap is minimal.


1970 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 813 ◽  
Author(s):  
AJ Birch ◽  
B McKague

An aspect of the synthesis of sterically defined trisubstituted double bonds is discussed. Metal-ammonia reductions of hydropyridinium salts such as (1 ; R, R' = H or Me) result in allylic fissions, with a considerable proportion of double bond retention in its original situation and complete retention of the original steric configuration in that position.


1953 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 902-911 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. S. Ramakrishnan ◽  
D. Raghunath ◽  
J. B. Pande

Abstract The chlorination of rubber solutions by gaseous chlorine was followed by isolating the partially chlorinated products and preparing their ozonides. The ozonides were hydrolyzed, and the acids and aldehydes formed on hydrolysis were determined. By a comparison with the amounts of acids and aldehydes obtained from ozonides of unreacted rubber, the amount of residual isoprenic double bonds present was found. The loss of double bonds attending the introduction of chlorine atoms into the molecule of rubber indicates four definite stages in chlorination : (1) initial substitutive attack by chlorine, with concomitant cyclization, resulting in a loss of one double bond between two isoprenic units, (2) substitution, (3) additive reaction, and (4) essentially substitution. Chlorination of aged rubber solutions differs from the above in that the cyclization reaction (stage 1) seems to be absent.


1943 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 841-847
Author(s):  
A. Gantmacher ◽  
S. Medvedev

Abstract 1. When chloroprene and isoprene polymerize, besides the frequency characterizing the conjugate double bond in the monomer, there appears a higher frequency corresponding to the isolated double bond in the polymer. In the polymerization process, the intensity of the frequency of the conjugate double bond decreases and the intensity of the frequency of the isolated double bond increases. Because of the increase in the number of single bonds in the polymer, the intensity of the frequency of the single bond 1005 in the polymer is considerably greater than in the monomer. 2. Even in the case of the samples with high polymer contents (greater than 50 per cent), the intensity of the frequency of the conjugate double bond is considerably greater than the intensity of the frequency of the isolated double bond. This is attributable to the fact that part of double bonds disappear during polymerization. 3. The Raman spectra of the chloroprene and isoprene polymers differ essentially from those of the monomers. To characterize the frequencies of vibration in the polymer molecule, it is essential to investigate its Raman spectrum in a medium free of the monomer. 4. The formation of highly polymeric molecules on polymerization does not result in an increase in the intensity of the continuous background in spectrograms.


1987 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 1777 ◽  
Author(s):  
AF Hegarty ◽  
P Rigopoulos ◽  
JE Rowe

Rate data for the reaction of a series of benzohydrazonoyl halides with pyrrolidine and butan- 1-amine at 303 K are presented. Linear Hammett plots were obtained with each amine. The mechanism of the reactions and the stereochemical outcome of these displacements at the carbon-nitrogen double bond are discussed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 591-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mihail Ionescu ◽  
Zoran Petrovic

Novel bio-based compounds containing phenols suitable for the synthesis of polyurethanes were prepared. The direct alkylation of phenols with different vegetable oils in the presence of superacids (HBF4, triflic acid) as catalysts was studied. The reaction kinetics was followed by monitoring the decrease of the double bond content (iodine value) with time. In order to understand the mechanism of the reaction, phenol was alkylated with model compounds. The model compounds containing one internal double bond were 9-octadecene and methyl oleate and those with three double bonds were triolein and high oleic safflower oil (82% oleic acid). It was shown that the best structures for phenol alkylation are fatty acids with only one double bond (oleic acid). Fatty acids with two double bonds (linoleic acid) and three double bonds (linolenic acid) lead to polymerized oils by a Diels Alder reaction, and to a lesser extent to phenol alkylated products. The reaction product of direct alkylation of phenol with vegetable oils is a complex mixture of phenol alkylated with polymerized oil (30-60%), phenyl esters formed by transesterification of phenol with triglyceride ester bonds (<10 %) and unreacted oil (30%). The phenolated vegetable oils are new aromatic-aliphatic bio-based raw materials suitable for the preparation of polyols (by propoxylation, ethoxylation, Mannich reactions) for the preparation of polyurethanes, as intermediates for phenolic resins or as bio-based antioxidants.


1964 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Ackman

Consideration of recent analytical data supports the conclusion that the longer-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids of marine origin are all structurally homogeneous in that the double bonds are cis, the double bonds methylene interrupted, and that, with the exception of the C16 chain length, the ultimate double bond will normally be three, six or nine carbon atoms removed from the terminal methyl group.


2016 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 243-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
By Beatriz Dom�nguez ◽  
Ursula Schell ◽  
Serena Bisagni ◽  
Thomas Kalthoff

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