Huub P. C. van Kuringen
Eindhoven University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Huub P. C. van Kuringen.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2012
Meta M. Bloksma; Renzo M. Paulus; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Friso van der Woerdt; Hanneke M. L. Lambermont-Thijs; Ulrich S. Schubert; Richard Hoogenboom
The monomers 2-methyl-2-oxazine (MeOZI), 2-ethyl-2-oxazine (EtOZI), and 2-n-propyl-2-oxazine (nPropOZI) were synthesized and polymerized via the living cationic ring-opening polymerization (CROP) under microwave-assisted conditions. pEtOZI and pnPropOZI were found to be thermoresponsive, exhibiting LCST behavior in water and their cloud point temperatures (T(CP)) are lower than for poly(2-oxazoline)s with similar side chains. However, comparison of poly(2-oxazine) and poly(2-oxazoline)s isomers reveals that poly(2-oxazine)s are more water soluble, indicating that the side chain has a stronger impact on polymer solubility than the main chain. In conclusion, variations of both the side chains and the main chains of the poly(cyclic imino ether)s resulted in a series of distinct homopolymers with tunable T(CP).
Macromolecular Bioscience | 2012
Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Joke Lenoir; Els Adriaens; Johan Bender; Bruno G. De Geest; Richard Hoogenboom
The hydrolysis of PEtOx is studied to evaluate the potential toxicity of partially hydrolyzed polymers that might interfere with its increasing popularity for biomedical applications. The hydrolysis of PEtOx is studied in the presence of digestive enzymes (gastric and intestinal) and at 5.8 M hydrochloric acid as a function of temperature (57, 73, 90, and 100 °C). It is found that PEtOx undergoes negligible hydrolysis at 37 °C and that thermal and solution properties are not altered when up to 10% of the polymer backbone is hydrolyzed. Mucosal irritation and cytotoxicity is also absent up to 10% hydrolysis levels. In conclusion, PEtOx will not decompose at physiological conditions, and partial hydrolysis will not limit its biomedical applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Debarshi Dasgupta; Ivelina K. Shishmanova; Amparo Ruiz-Carretero; Kangbo Lu; Martinus Verhoeven; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Giuseppe Portale; Philippe Leclère; Cees W. M. Bastiaansen; Dirk J. Broer; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning
A nanoporous smectic liquid crystalline polymer network has been exploited to fabricate photo patternable organic-inorganic hybrid materials, wherein, the nanoporous channels control the diameter and orientational order of the silver nanoparticles.
Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2012
Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Victor Retamero De La Rosa; Martin W. M. Fijten; Johan P. A. Heuts; Richard Hoogenboom
The ability of merging the properties of poly(2-oxazoline)s and poly(ethylene imine) is of high interest for various biomedical applications, including gene delivery, biosensors, and switchable surfaces and nanoparticles. In the present research, a methodology for the controlled and selective hydrolysis of (co)poly(2-oxazoline)s is developed in an ethanol-water solvent mixture, opening the path toward a wide range of block poly(2-oxazoline-co-ethylene imine) (POx-PEI) copolymers with tunable properties. The unexpected influence of the selected ethanol-water binary solvent mixture on the hydrolysis kinetics and selectivity is highlighted in the pursue of well-defined POx-PEI block copolymers.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Ting Liang; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Dirk J. Mulder; Shuai Tan; Yong Wu; Zandrie Borneman; Kitty Nijmeijer; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning
In this work, the decisive role of rigidity, orientation, and order in the smectic liquid crystalline network on the anisotropic proton and adsorbent properties is reported. The rigidity in the hydrogen-bonded polymer network has been altered by changing the cross-link density, the order by using different mesophases (smectic, nematic, and isotropic phases), whereas the orientation of the mesogens was controlled by alignment layers. Adding more cross-linkers improved the integrity of the polymer films. For the proton conduction, an optimum was found in the amount of cross-linker and the smectic organization results in the highest anhydrous proton conduction. The polymer films show anisotropic proton conductivity with a 54 times higher conductivity in the direction perpendicular to the molecular director. After a base treatment of the smectic liquid crystalline network, a nanoporous polymer film is obtained that also shows anisotropic adsorption of dye molecules and again straight smectic pores are favored over disordered pores in nematic and isotropic networks. The highly cross-linked films show size-selective adsorption of dyes. Low cross-linked materials do not show this difference due to swelling, which decreases the order and creates openings in the two-dimensional polymer layers. The latter is, however, beneficial for fast adsorption kinetics.
RSC Advances | 2016
Yifei Xu; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Dirk J. Mulder; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk
The poly(aspartic acid) (pAsp) assisted infiltration of a nanoporous smectic liquid crystalline network with CaCO3 yields only ∼1 nm thick crystalline nanolayers. This bioinspired strategy opens the way to new functional materials based on solution-grown quasi 2D crystals of only a few unit cells thick.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017
A. Longo; Dirk-Jan Mulder; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Daniel Hermida-Merino; Dipanjan Banerjee; Debarshi Dasgupta; Ivelina K. Shishmanova; Ab Anne Spoelstra; Dirk J. Broer; Albert P. H. J. Schenning; Giuseppe Portale
Abstract Thermotropic smectic liquid crystalline polymers were used as a scaffold to create organic/inorganic hybrid layered nanomaterials. Different polymers were prepared by photopolymerizing blends of a hydrogen bonded carboxylic acid derivative and a 10 % cross‐linker of variable length in their liquid crystalline phase. Nanopores with dimensions close to 1 nm were generated by breaking the hydrogen bonded dimers in a high pH solution. The pores were filled with positively charged silver (Ag) ions, resulting in a layered silver(I)‐polymeric hybrid material. Subsequent exposure to a NaBH4 reducing solution allowed for the formation of supported hybrid metal/organic films. In the bulk of the film the dimension of the Ag nanoparticles (NPs) was regulated with subnanometer precision by the cross‐linker length. Ag nanoparticles with an average size of 0.9, 1.3, and 1.8 nm were produced inside the nanopores thanks to the combined effect of spatially confined reduction and stabilization of the nanoparticles by the polymer carboxylic groups. At the same time, strong Ag migration occurred in the surface region, resulting in the formation of a nanostructured metallic top layer composed of large (10–20 nm) NPs.
Hydrogen Bonded Supramolecular Materials | 2015
Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning
This chapter provides an overview of the use of hydrogen bonds for the construction of nanoporous materials. These materials attract a great deal of interest because of their large surface area to volume ratio and their applications in areas such as filtration, separation, adsorption, catalysis, and ion conduction. Organic materials are especially appealing for these applications, because their properties can be tailored. The use of supramolecular interactions is required to control the organization of materials at the molecular level. Hydrogen bonds are ideal supramolecular interactions for the construction of these nanoporous materials, thanks to their directionality and reversibility. The directionality causes the positioning molecules in such a way that voids have been created in between the molecules, such as in two- and three-dimensional hydrogen bonded organic frameworks. In a second approach, hydrogen bonded template molecules have been removed from a polymer to create pores. This method is successfully applied to hydrogen bonded block copolymers and liquid crystalline polymers.
Advanced Functional Materials | 2014
Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Geert M. Eikelboom; Ivelina K. Shishmanova; Dirk J. Broer; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning
Polymers | 2010
Hanneke M. L. Lambermont-Thijs; Huub P. C. van Kuringen; Jeroen P. W. van der Put; Ulrich S. Schubert; Richard Hoogenboom