GRAFT COPOLYMERS OF STYRENE AND METHYL METHACRYLATE: PART II: VISCOSITY BEHAVIOR

1956 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1027-1036 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. H. Jones

A study of the viscosity behavior of the graft copolymers described in Part I has been made with dilute solutions in benzene at 25 °C. Although the slope constants of the Huggins equation increase with the frequency of branching when measurements are made in a capillary viscometer under 'free fall' conditions, this is shown to be attributable to the dependence of viscosity on shear gradient. At a constant shear rate, the Huggins k′ values approximate to those of linear polymers. It is suggested that the marked increase in viscosity observed with decreasing shear rate for the graft copolymers is due to molecular entanglement.

1970 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 1109-1115 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. A. Collins ◽  
T. Mass ◽  
W. H. Bauer

Abstract The flow behavior of low molecular weight liquid polybutadiene polymers was studied as a function of shear rate, temperature, and molecular structure. Measurements were made in the temperature range 15 to 50° C and shear rate range 1 to 15,000 sec−1 with a cone and plate and a capillary viscometer. Limiting low shear viscosity, flow activation energy, and critical shear rate marking onset of shear rate thinning were found to be strongly dependent upon the presence of functional groups such as hydroxyl, carboxyl, and nitrile. The modifying groups showed a greater effect than the molecular weight upon the properties measured.


Haematologica ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 0-0
Author(s):  
Thomas Hoefer ◽  
Akshita Rana ◽  
Be’eri Niego ◽  
Shweta Jagdale ◽  
Hugo J. Albers ◽  
...  

Intraluminal thrombus formation precipitates conditions such as acute myocardial infarction and disturbs local blood flow resulting in areas of rapidly changing blood flow velocities and steep gradients of blood shear rate. Shear rate gradients are known to be pro-thrombotic with an important role for the shear-sensitive plasma protein von Willebrand factor (VWF). Here, we developed a single-chain antibody (scFv) that targets a shear gradient specific conformation of VWF to specifically inhibit platelet adhesion at sites of SRGs but not in areas of constant shear. Microfluidic flow channels with stenotic segments were used to create shear rate gradients during blood perfusion. VWF-GPIbα interactions were increased at sites of shear rate gradients compared to constant shear rate of matched magnitude. The scFv-A1 specifically reduced VWF-GPIbα binding and thrombus formation at sites of SRGs but did not block platelet deposition and aggregation under constant shear rate in upstream sections of the channels. Significantly, the scFv A1 attenuated platelet aggregation only in the later stages of thrombus formation. In the absence of shear, direct binding of scFv-A1 to VWF could not be detected and scFV-A1 did not inhibit ristocetin induced platelet agglutination. We have exploited the pro-aggregatory effects of SRGs on VWF dependent platelet aggregation and developed the shear-gradient sensitive scFv-A1 antibody that inhibits platelet aggregation exclusively at sites of shear rate gradients. The lack of VWF inhibition in non-stenosed vessel segments places scFV-A1 in an entirely new class of anti-platelet therapy for selective blockade of pathological thrombus formation while maintaining normal haemostasis.


Polymer ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 35 (14) ◽  
pp. 3122-3126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yingming Yao ◽  
Lizhi Liu ◽  
Hong Li ◽  
Tianru Fang ◽  
Enle Zhou

2021 ◽  
Vol 410 ◽  
pp. 605-610
Author(s):  
Kseniya A. Timakova ◽  
Yuriy T. Panov ◽  
Evgeniy A. Timakov

The paper investigates the effect of fillers on the viscosity properties of one-pack polyurethane sealants. It is noted that with the introduction of such mineral fillers as Mikarb, Midol, MTD2 chalk and aluminum hydroxide, the dynamic viscosity of the composition increases uniformly, while when filled with chemically precipitated Calofort SV chalk and MT-GShM talc, an abnormally sharp increase in viscosity is observed. Such an increase in viscosity for Calofort SV is explained by a highly developed surface, in contrast to other fillers. Talc is characterized by a plate-like shape of particles, which leads to a complex orientation of talc particles in the composition and shear difficulties.It was found that a sealant filled with chemically precipitated chalk has more than 100 pts. wt.(parts by weight), per 100 pts. wt. of the prepolymer under the influence of shear forces (at a constant shear rate) during the first 10 minutes of exposure, a sharp decrease in viscosity is observed, which is characteristic of thixotropic compositions, reaching a constant value after 5-10 minutes. After 10 minutes, the thixotropy of the sealant is restored. Talc does not impart thixotropic properties to the sealant composition.


2009 ◽  
Vol 50 ◽  
pp. 1004
Author(s):  
Simon Higgins ◽  
Gregory J Sheard ◽  
Andreas Fouras ◽  
Kerry Hourigan

Blood ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 130 (Suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 964-964
Author(s):  
Erdem Kucukal ◽  
Jane A. Little ◽  
Umut A. Gurkan

Abstract The pathophysiology of sickle cell disease (SCD) involves altered biophysical properties of red blood cells (RBCs) and increased cellular adhesion, which can synergistically trigger recurrent and painful vaso-occlusive events in the microcirculatory network. RBC adhesion to the endothelial wall is heterogeneous and may initiate such occlusions by disrupting the local flow thus activating platelets and promoting subsequent cell-cell interactions. Moreover, these episodic events take place within a wide range of dynamically changing shear rates at the microscale. In order to better understand the role of shear rate on this process, we quantified shear-dependent RBC adhesion to endothelial proteins fibronectin (FN) and laminin (LN) utilizing a microfluidic system that can simulate physiologically relevant shear gradients of microcirculatory blood flow at a single flow rate. Whole blood samples were collected from 20 patients (10 males and 10 females) with homozygous SCD (HbSS). Samples were perfused through FN and LN immobilized shear-gradient microchannels (Fig. 1A) in which the shear rate continuously changes along flow direction. Computational simulations characterized the flow dynamics near the adherent RBCs (Fig. 1B). Based on the numerical results, a rectangular "field of interest (FOI)", along which the shear rate dropped approximately three-fold, was chosen for quantification of shear-dependent RBC adhesion. We observed changes in RBC adhesion to LN and FN in the shear gradient flow. Figure 1C and 1D show typical adhesion curves of surface adherent RBCs for an individual SCD sample within the FOI. To assess patient specific shear-dependent adhesion, we defined a parameter, "shear dependent adhesion rate (SDAR)", which is the slope of the adhesion curves based on normalized RBC adhesion numbers. A higher SDAR value was indicative of marked numbers of adherent RBCs that detach at higher shear rates whereas the effect of shear rate on RBC detachment was less for a lower SDAR. We observed an inverse relationship between SDAR and number of persistently adherent RBCs at high shear rates. Shear-dependent RBC adhesion to LN was heterogeneous among SCD patients. Patients with higher WBC counts constituted the low SDAR population with a threshold SDAR value of 60 (Fig. 1E, p=0.005, ANOVA). WBCs from patients with higher SDARs (and fewer persistently adhered cells) were all within the normal range. Patients in the low SDAR group also had significantly elevated absolute neutrophil counts (Fig. 1F, p=0.006, ANOVA), and ferritin levels (Fig. 1G, p=0.007, ANOVA). The mean ferritin level of those with low SDAR was nearly ten times greater than normal (mean= [3272.3 ± 791.9] μg/L vs. [784.5±219.6] μg/L). No white blood cell (WBC) adhesion was observed in the experiments. Here, we report a novel shear dependent adhesion ratio of sickle RBCs utilizing LN and FN functionalized microchannels. The approach presented here enabled us to create a shear gradient throughout the channel which may simulate the physiological flow conditions in the post-capillary venules. We further analyzed shear-dependent RBC adhesion in a patient specific manner and identified patient groups with low and high SDAR. The findings also suggested a link between lower shear dependent sickle RBC adhesion to LN and patient clinical phenotypes including inflammation and iron overload. Acknowledgments: This work was supported by grant #2013126 from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, National Heart Lung and Blood Institute R01HL133574, and National Science Foundation CAREER Award 1552782. Figure 1: Shear-dependent sickle RBC adhesion in microscale flow. (A) Macroscopic image of the shear-gradient microchannel with the arrow indicating flow direction. (B) Velocity and shear rate contours on a 2D plane above the bottom surface. The dashed rectangular area indicates the field of interest (FOI) where the experimental data were obtained. (C, D) Typical distribution of adherent deformable and non-deformable RBCs in LN and FN functionalized microchannels with the shear gradient. Dashed lines represent the adhesion curves and the corresponding equations were used to quantify shear dependent adhesion data. Shear-dependent RBC adhesion was lower (nSDAR<60) in patients with elevated white blood cell counts (E), absolute neutrophil counts (F), and serum ferritin levels (G). The dashed rectangles indicate the normal clinical values. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Little: Hemex Health: Equity Ownership. Gurkan: Hemex Health: Employment, Equity Ownership.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document