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Dive into the research topics where Sofia Andersson is active.

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Featured researches published by Sofia Andersson.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Polylactide Stereocomplexation Leads to Higher Hydrolytic Stability but More Acidic Hydrolysis Product Pattern

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Saara Inkinen; Anders Södergård; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Poly-l-lactide/poly-d-lactide (PLLA/PDLA) stereocomplex had much higher hydrolytic stability compared to plain PLLA, but at the same time shorter and more acidic degradation products were formed. Both materials were subjected to hydrolytic degradation in water and in phosphate buffer at 37 and 60 degrees C, and the degradation processes were monitored by following mass loss, water uptake, thermal properties, surface changes, and pH of the aging medium. The degradation product patterns were determined by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The high crystallinity and strong secondary interactions in the stereocomplex prevented water uptake and resulted in lower mass loss and degradation rate. However, somewhat surprisingly, the pH of the aging medium decreased much faster in the case of PLLA/PDLA stereocomplex. In accordance, the ESI-MS results showed that hydrolysis of PLLA/PDLA resulted in shorter and more acidic degradation products. This could be explained by the increased intermolecular crystallization due to stereocomplexation, which results in an increased number of tie chains. Because mainly these short tie chains are susceptible to hydrolysis this leads to formation of shorter oligomers compared to hydrolysis of regular PLLA.


Biomacromolecules | 2012

Customizing the Hydrolytic Degradation Rate of Stereocomplex PLA through Different PDLA Architectures

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Saara Inkinen; Anders Södergård; Ann-Christine Albertsson

Stereocomplexation of poly(L-lactide) (PLLA) with star shaped D-lactic acid (D-LA) oligomers with different architectures and end-groups clearly altered the degradation rate and affected the degradation product patterns. Altogether, nine materials were studied: standard PLLA and eight blends of PLLA with either 30 or 50 wt % of four different D-LA oligomers. The influence of several factors, including temperature, degradation time, and amount and type of D-LA oligomer, on the hydrolytic degradation process was investigated using a fractional factorial experimental design. Stereocomplexes containing star shaped D-LA oligomers with four alcoholic end-groups underwent a rather slow hydrolytic degradation with low release of degradation products. Materials with linear D-LA oligomers exhibited similar mass loss but released higher concentrations of shorter acidic degradation products. Increasing the fraction of D-LA oligomers with a linear structure or with four alcoholic end-groups resulted in slower mass loss due to higher degree of stereocomplexation. The opposite results were obtained after addition of D-LA oligomers with carboxylic chain-ends. These materials demonstrated lower degree of stereocomplexation and larger mass and molar mass loss, and also the release of degradation products increased. Increasing the number of alcoholic chain-ends from four to six decreased the degree of stereocomplexation, leading to faster mass loss. The degree of stereocomplexation and degradation rate were customized by changing the architecture and end-groups of the D-LA oligomers.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2008

Biofilm formation and interactions of bacterial strains found in wastewater treatment systems

Sofia Andersson; Gunaratna Kuttuva Rajarao; Carl Johan Land; Gunnel Dalhammar

Biofilm formation and adherence properties of 13 bacterial strains commonly found in wastewater treatment systems were studied in pure and mixed cultures using a crystal violet microtiter plate assay. Four different culture media were used, wastewater, acetate medium, glucose medium and diluted nutrient broth. The medium composition strongly affected biofilm formation. All strains were able to form pure culture biofilms within 24 h in at least one of the tested culture media and three strains were able to form biofilm in all four culture media, namely Acinetobacter calcoaceticus ATCC 23055, Comamonas denitrificans 123 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa MBL 0199. The adherence properties assessed were initial adherence, cell surface hydrophobicity, and production of amyloid fibers and extracellular polymeric substances. The growth of dual-strain biofilms showed that five organisms formed biofilm with all 13 strains while seven formed no or only weak biofilm when cocultured. In dual-strain cultures, strains with different properties were able to complement each other, giving synergistic effects. Strongest biofilm formation was observed when a mixture of all 13 bacteria were grown together. These results on attachment and biofilm formation can serve as a tool for the design of tailored systems for the degradation of municipal and industrial wastewater.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Tuning the polylactide hydrolysis rate by plasticizer architecture and hydrophilicity without introducing new migrants.

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Ann-Christine Albertsson

The possibility to tune the hydrolytic degradation rate of polylactide by plasticizer architecture and hydrophilicity without introduction of new degradation products was investigated by subjecting polylactide with cyclic oligolactide and linear oligolactic acid additives to hydrolytic degradation at 37 and 60 °C for up to 39 weeks. The more hydrophilic oligolactic acid plasticizer led to larger water uptake and rapid migration of plasticizer from the films into the aging water. This resulted in a porous material more susceptible to further hydrolysis. During hydrolysis at 37 °C the mass loss was generally 10-20% higher for the material containing linear oligolactic acid plasticizers. The hydrolysis accelerating effect of the linear oligolactic acid is probably counteracted by the higher degree of crystallinity in the films containing oligolactic acid additives. The degradation process was monitored by measurements of mass loss, water uptake, molar mass changes, material composition changes, surface changes, and thermal properties. The water-soluble degradation products were analyzed by following pH changes and identified by electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). The time frame for formation of water-soluble products was influenced by the architecture and hydrophilicity of the plasticizer. Furthermore, the advantage with oligolactide and oligolactic acid plasticizers was clearly demonstrated as they do not introduce any new migrants into the degradation product patterns.


Microbiological Research | 2011

Influence of microbial interactions and EPS/polysaccharide composition on nutrient removal activity in biofilms formed by strains found in wastewater treatment systems

Sofia Andersson; Gunnel Dalhammar; Gunaratna Kuttuva Rajarao

The study of biofilm function, structure and microbial interactions might help to improve our understanding of biofilm wastewater treatment processes. However, few reports specifically address the influence of interactions within multispecies biofilms on microbial activity and biofilm composition. Thus, the relationship between biofilm formation, denitrification activity, phosphorus removal and the composition of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), exopolysaccharides and the bacterial community was investigated using biofilms of denitrifying and phosphorus removing strains Comamonas denitrificans 110, Brachymonas denitrificans B79, Aeromonas hydrophila L6 and Acinetobacter calcoaceticus ATCC23055. Denitrification activity within the biofilms generally increased with the amount of biofilm while phosphorus removal depended on bacterial growth rate. Synergistic effects of co-growth on denitrification (B. denitrificans B79 and A. hydrophila L6) and phosphorus removal (C. denitrificans 110 with either A. calcoaceticus or A. hydrophila L6) were observed. B. denitrificans B79 was highly affected by interspecies interactions with respect to biofilm formation, denitrification activity and EPS composition, while C. denitrificans 110 remained largely unaffected. In some of the dual and quadruple strain biofilms new exopolysaccharide monomers were detected which were not present in the pure strain samples.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2009

Characterization of extracellular polymeric substances from denitrifying organism Comamonas denitrificans

Sofia Andersson; Gunnel Dalhammar; Carl Johan Land; Gunaratna Kuttuva Rajarao


Polymer | 2013

Stereocomplexation between PLA-like substituted oligomers and the influence on the hydrolytic degradation

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Ann-Christine Albertsson


Vatten | 2008

Assessment of carrier materials for biofilm formation and denitrification

Sofia Andersson; Mirja Nilsson; Gunnel Dalhammar; Gunaratna Kuttuva Rajarao


Polymer Degradation and Stability | 2012

Long-term properties and migration of low molecular mass compounds from modified PLLA materials during accelerated ageing

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Ann-Christine Albertsson


244th National Fall Meeting of the American-Chemical-Society (ACS), AUG 19-23, 2012, Philadelphia, PA | 2012

PLA stereocomplexation governs the hydrolytic degradation process

Sofia Andersson; Minna Hakkarainen; Ann-Christine Albertsson

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Gunnel Dalhammar

Royal Institute of Technology

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Minna Hakkarainen

Royal Institute of Technology

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Carl Johan Land

Royal Institute of Technology

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