Synthetic Antibodies

Thomas, Tiller [ed.]

English Monograph (Book) Scientific
Published: Springer Publishing Company; Springer US, New York City, United States of America 2017
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology 1064-3745 1940-6029, 1575
    Identifiers
    Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) gained an expansively growing interest in the past few decades. After an initial, explorative period of preparing MIPs exclusively with bulk polymerization, new polymer synthesis routes have been adapted to overcome the drawbacks of the traditional method. Among these the most appealing is precipitation polymerization that results in nano- and microspheres with narrow size distribution and makes the production of MIPs more straightforward. Here, we describe a precipitation polymerization protocol for a common small molecule template, propranolol that is carried out in the conventional way, in dilute monomer solution. Moreover, a modified precipitation polymerization protocol from concentrated monomer solution is presented for a diclofenac imprinted polymer which makes the synthesis even more versatile and circumvents the disadvantages of the dilute solution conditions. © Springer Science+Business Media LLC 2017.
    Citation styles: IEEEACMAPAChicagoHarvardCSLCopyPrint
    2025-04-13 21:24