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Abstract(s)
The current work reports on the Pb(II) complexes formed with oligomeric uronic acids (carboxylated saccharide residues)
found polymerized in the cell walls and envelopes of algae and bacteria alike. The application of partial acid hydrolysis, sizeexclusion chromatography (SEC), 1H NMR, and scanned deposition stripping chronopotentiometry (SSCP) has permitted
the determination of stability constants for Pb(II) with both mannuronic (M) and guluronic (G) acid oligomers ranging from
the dimer to the pentamer. The determined logarithm of the stability constants range between 4.11 ( 0.05 and 5.00 ( 0.04 mol-1 ·dm3 for the eight oligomers studied (pH 6; I ) 0.1 mol ·dm-3). Additional experiments under the same experimental conditions employing galacturonic and glucuronic acid
oligomers yielded slightly lower values (2.19 ( 0.10 to 4.02 ( 0.07 mol-1 ·dm3) that were expected based on their structure,
whereby the monomers which were not included in the alginate oligomer series (unavailable by SEC), yielded the lowest stability constants. Thisworkdemonstrates the applicability of the SSCP technique for the determination of stability constants for metal–ligand complexes in which the ligands
display relatively low molecular mass. Previous studies on heavy metal interaction with the matrix polysaccharide alginate
have largely been restricted to the whole polymer that forms a gel upon binding to network bridging ions such as calcium. The
results will be discussed in this context with the emphasis being placed on the relevance of these findings to processes
occurring at the biointerface and results from the relevant literature.
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Citation
Davis, T. A.; Pinheiro, J. P.; Grasdalen, H.; Smidsrød, O.; Van Leeuwen, H. P. Stability of lead(II) complexes of alginate oligomers, Environmental Science and Technology, 42, 5, 1673-16, 2008.
Publisher
American Chemical Society