Publications by authors named "Regina Wyrwich"

In the development of a pharmaceutical drug product packaging, an important step is to demonstrate acceptable levels of leachable impurities migrating from the packaging material into the drug product during its shelf life and therapeutic use. Such migration processes can be quantified either by analytical methods (which is often challenging and labor intensive) or (in many cases) through theoretical modeling, which is a reliable, quick, and cost-effective method to forecast the level of leachable impurities in the packaged drug when the diffusion and partition coefficients are known. In the previous part, it was shown how these parameters can be determined experimentally, and subsequent theoretical fitting of the results for a series of low- and high-molecular-weight organic compounds (known leachables) in a series of polyolefin materials was performed.

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An important step in the development of a pharmaceutical drug product is to demonstrate acceptable levels of leachable impurities during the shelf-life and therapeutic use of the drug product. If the diffusion and partition coefficients are known, the concentration profile of a leachable impurity in the drug product can be predicted theoretically at a given temperature and time. With this objective in mind, kinetic experiments were performed to study the migration of low- to high-molecular-weight organic compounds from mono- and multilayer polyolefin films.

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Carbon dots (CDs) are an intriguing fluorescent material; however, due to a plethora of synthesis techniques and precursor materials, there is still significant debate on their structure and the origin of their optical properties. The two most prevalent mechanisms to explain them are based on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon domains and small molecular fluorophores, for instance, citrazinic acid. Yet, how these form and whether they can exist simultaneously is still under study.

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Carbon dots (CDs) are a versatile nanomaterial with attractive photoluminescent and photocatalytic properties. Here we show that these two functionalities can be easily tuned through a simple synthetic means, using a microwave irradiation, with citric acid and varying concentrations of nitrogen-containing branched polyethyleneimine (BPEI) as precursors. The amount of BPEI determines the degree of nitrogen incorporation and the different inclusion modes within the CDs.

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Copper(I)-based catalysts, such as Cu2S, are considered to be very promising materials for photocatalytic CO2 reduction. A common synthesis route for Cu2S via cation exchange from CdS nanocrystals requires Cu(I) precursors, organic solvents, and neutral atmosphere, but these conditions are not compatible with in situ applications in photocatalysis. Here we propose a novel cation exchange reaction that takes advantage of the reducing potential of photoexcited electrons in the conduction band of CdS and proceeds with Cu(II) precursors in an aqueous environment and under aerobic conditions.

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Photocatalytic conversion of solar energy to fuels, such as hydrogen, is attracting enormous interest, driven by the promise of addressing both energy supply and storage. Colloidal semiconductor nanocrystals have been at the forefront of these efforts owing to their favourable and tunable optical and electronic properties as well as advances in their synthesis. The efficiency of the photocatalysts is often limited by the slow transfer and subsequent reactions of the photoexcited holes and the ensuing high charge recombination rates.

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