Publications by authors named "Arno Kraft"

Undergraduate students can find some aspects of NMR Spectroscopy daunting, and difficult to understand. Due to their flexibility and ease-of-use, 'benchtop' spectrometers can help to clarify key concepts and enhance learning. Here we suggest approaches to demystifying resolution, sensitivity, magnetic field variation and its consequent impact on spectra, quantitation and mixtures.

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This account presents a general method for the construction of polymeric surface binders for digestion enzymes. Two prominent parts, namely, the modification of the copolymer composition and the screening assay for the most powerful inhibitors are both amenable to parallelization. The concept hinges on the appropriate selection of amino-acid-selective comonomers, their free radical copolymerization, and subsequent screening of the resulting copolymer library for efficient enzyme inhibition.

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A new family of linear polymers with pronounced affinity for arginine- and lysine-rich proteins has been created. To this end, N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAM) was copolymerized in water with a binding monomer and a hydrophobic comonomer using a living radical polymerization (RAFT). The resulting copolymers were water-soluble and displayed narrow polydispersities.

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Comparison is made between the preparation of trans-1,2-cyclohexanediol in standard glassware (conventional batch production) and in a microreactor (continuous flow production). The reaction sequence involved two exothermic steps where the standard procedure demands slow reagent addition and careful temperature control. In the microreactor, the reaction could be carried out safely with up to 3 times higher reagent concentration.

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Polyanionic microgels containing negatively charged tetrazole binding sites show supramolecular binding of various protonated amines (e.g. dibucaine and spermine) in a competitive aqueous medium at millimolar concentration.

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[reaction: see text] Tetrazoles frequently replace carboxylic acids in pharmaceutical drugs. However, while the binding modes of tetrazolate and carboxylate anions in amidinium complexes turns out to be similar, the association constant of the former is 2-3 orders of magnitude smaller in DMSO. Crystal structures revealed that the N.

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ESI-MS(/MS) has been used as a method which allows the fast, unambiguous and sensitive simultaneous detection and relative stability approximation of supramolecular assemblies in mixtures. In spite of the obvious fundamental differences between solution and gas phase, ESI-MS in the case of self-assembled molecular capsules has been shown to produce very similar results to single binding experiments monitored by NMR titrations as well as conformational searches performed by Monte-Carlo simulations. MS/MS experiments reveal the same relative order of gas phase stabilities as previously found in solution.

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Calix[4]arene derivatives with four anionic groups at their upper rim form discrete 1:1 complexes with complementary calix[4]arene derivatives bearing four cationic groups at their upper rim. Each cation is bound by two anions, and vice versa, in a mutual chelate arrangement, reinforced by a network of ionic hydrogen bonds. These multiple electrostatic interactions lead to the formation of highly stable capsule-like assemblies even in polar protic solvents such as methanol and water.

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We present a simple and versatile access to spheroidal molecular assemblies with pronounced stability in highly polar solvents. These complexes are composed of doubly and triply charged complementary building blocks based on ammonium or amidinium cations and phosphonate anions. Their high thermodynamic stability is best explained by the formation of a cyclic array of alternating positive and negative charges interconnected by a regular network of hydrogen bonds.

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[structure: see text] We present a novel type of molecular capsule formed by self-organization of calix[4]arenes with several oppositely charged functional groups located at their upper rims. In highly polar solvents, the complementary half-spheres form stable 1:1 complexes with association constants of up to 7 x 10(5) M(-)(1) in methanol. The cavity inside the capsules is large enough for the inclusion of small aliphatic or (hetero)aromatic guest molecules.

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The crystal structure of the title 2:1 salt of tetrazole and a substituted terephthalamidine, C(16)H(28)N(4)(2+).2CHN(4)(-), contains an infinite network of hydrogen bonds, with short N.N distances of 2.

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A new exciting interdisciplinary research field has evolved following the discovery that conjugated polymers can emit light when put into light-emitting diodes. A myriad of light-emitting polymers (examples of which are shown below) shining in various colors have been developed through chemical intuition and structural design.

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