Bioinspired insights into silicic acid stabilization mechanisms: The dominant role of polyethylene glycol-induced hydrogen bonding

Preari M, Spinde K, Lazic J, Brunner E, Demadis KD (2014)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2014

Journal

Book Volume: 136

Pages Range: 4236-4244

Journal Issue: 11

DOI: 10.1021/ja411822s

Abstract

Mono- and disilicic acids were stabilized by uncharged polyethylene glycols (PEGs) in silica-supersaturated solutions (the starting solution contained 500 ppm/8.3 mM sodium orthosilicate, Na2SiO3·5H 2O, expressed as SiO2) at pH = 7, most likely by hydrogen bonding between the silanol groups and -CH2-CH2-O-ether moieties. The stabilization was monitored by measuring molybdate-reactive silica and also by a combination of liquid- and solid-state 29Si NMR spectroscopy. It depends on PEG concentration (20-100 ppm) and molecular weight (1550-20 000 Da). Two narrow 29Si NMR signals characteristic for monosilicic acid (Q0) and disilicic acid (Q1) can be observed in 29Si NMR spectra of solutions containing PEG 10000 with intensities distinctly higher than the control, that is, in the absence of PEG. Silica-containing precipitates are observed in the presence of PEG, in contrast to the gel formed in the absence of PEG. These precipitates exhibit similar degrees of silica polycondensation as found in the gel as can be seen from the 29Si MAS NMR spectra. However, the 2D HETCOR spectra show different 1H NMR signal shifts: The signal due to H-bonded SiOH/H2O, which is found at 6 ppm in the control, is shifted to ∼7 ppm in the PEG-containing precipitate. This indicates the formation of slightly stronger H-bonds than in the control sample, most likely between PEG and the silica species. The presence of PEG in these precipitates is unequivocally proven by 13C CP MAS NMR spectroscopy. The 13C signal of PEG significantly shifts and is much narrower in the precipitates as compared to the pristine PEG, indicating that PEG is embedded into the silica or at least bound to its surface (or both), and not phase separated. FT-IR spectra corroborate the above arguments. The H-bonding between silanol and ethereal O perturbs the band positions attributed to vibrations involving the O atom. This work may invoke an alternative way to envision silica species stabilization (prior to biosilica formation) in diatoms by investigating possible scenarios of uncharged biomacromolecules playing a role in biosilica synthesis. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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How to cite

APA:

Preari, M., Spinde, K., Lazic, J., Brunner, E., & Demadis, K.D. (2014). Bioinspired insights into silicic acid stabilization mechanisms: The dominant role of polyethylene glycol-induced hydrogen bonding. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 136(11), 4236-4244. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja411822s

MLA:

Preari, Melina, et al. "Bioinspired insights into silicic acid stabilization mechanisms: The dominant role of polyethylene glycol-induced hydrogen bonding." Journal of the American Chemical Society 136.11 (2014): 4236-4244.

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