Introduction to Aggregation Phenomena in Food Colloids

2005 ◽  
pp. 3-15
Author(s):  
Pieter Walstra
Author(s):  
J. Thieme ◽  
J. Niemeyer ◽  
P. Guttman

In soil science the fraction of colloids in soils is understood as particles with diameters smaller than 2μm. Clay minerals, aquoxides of iron and manganese, humic substances, and other polymeric materials are found in this fraction. The spatial arrangement (microstructure) is controlled by the substantial structure of the colloids, by the chemical composition of the soil solution, and by thesoil biota. This microstructure determines among other things the diffusive mass flow within the soils and as a result the availability of substances for chemical and microbiological reactions. The turnover of nutrients, the adsorption of toxicants and the weathering of soil clay minerals are examples of these surface mediated reactions. Due to their high specific surface area, the soil colloids are the most reactive species in this respect. Under the chemical conditions in soils, these minerals are associated in larger aggregates. The accessibility of reactive sites for these reactions on the surface of the colloids is reduced by this aggregation. To determine the turnover rates of chemicals within these aggregates it is highly desirable to visualize directly these aggregation phenomena.


2011 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 806 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca J. van Lierop ◽  
Christoph Bornschein ◽  
W. Roy Jackson ◽  
Andrea J. Robinson

Performing ring-closing metathesis on resin-bound peptides provides an expedient route to carbocyclic peptidomimetics of medicinal interest. Some sequences are highly resistant to metathesis and special strategies need to be employed to promote viable ring closure. This paper describes an on-resin, alternating solid-phase peptide synthesis-catalysis method to overcome deleterious aggregation phenomena. It can be used to promote high yielding single-ring closures and regioselective multi-ring construction in peptides.


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