Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review

Also recognized as carbohydrate liquid crystals, glycolipids are amphiphiles whose basic unit comprises of a sugar group attached to an alkyl chain. Glycolipids are amphitropic, which means these materials form liquid crystal self-assemblies when dry (thermotropic) as well as when dissolved in solve...

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Published in:Journal of Oleo Science
Main Author: Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
Format: Review
Language:English
Published: Japan Oil Chemists Society 2018
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85048027256&doi=10.5650%2fjos.ess17261&partnerID=40&md5=3cc91c20a98a44fa4bd012cc1df30ad6
id 2-s2.0-85048027256
spelling 2-s2.0-85048027256
Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
2018
Journal of Oleo Science
67
6
10.5650/jos.ess17261
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85048027256&doi=10.5650%2fjos.ess17261&partnerID=40&md5=3cc91c20a98a44fa4bd012cc1df30ad6
Also recognized as carbohydrate liquid crystals, glycolipids are amphiphiles whose basic unit comprises of a sugar group attached to an alkyl chain. Glycolipids are amphitropic, which means these materials form liquid crystal self-assemblies when dry (thermotropic) as well as when dissolved in solvents (lyotropic/surfactants) such as water. Many glycolipids are also naturally derived since these can be found in cell membranes. Their membrane and surfactant functions are largely understood through their lyotropic properties. While glycolipids are expected to play major roles as eco-friendly surfactants in the global surfactant market, their usefulness as thermotropic liquid crystal material is, to date, unknown, due to relatively lack of research performed and data reported in the literature. Understandably since glycolipids are hygroscopic with many hydroxy groups, removing the last trace water is very challenging. In recent time, with careful lyophilization and more consistent characterization technique, some researchers have attempted serious studies into “dry” or anhydrous glycolipids. Motivated by possible developments of novel thermotropic applications, some results from these studies also provide surprising new understanding to support conventional wisdom of the lyotropic systems. Here we review the dry state of glycosides, a family of glycolipids whose sugar headgroup is linked to the lipid chain via a glycosidic oxygen linker. The structure property relationship of both linear and anhydrous Guerbet glycosides will be examined. In particular, how the variation of sugar stereochemistry (e.g. anomer vs. epimer), the chain length and chain branching affect the formation of thermotropic liquid crystals phases, which not only located under equilibrium but also far from equilibrium conditions (glassy phase) are scrutinized. The dry glycolipid assembly has been subjected to electric and magnetic fields and the results show interesting behaviors including a possible transient current generation. © 2018 by Japan Oil Chemists’ Society.
Japan Oil Chemists Society
13458957
English
Review
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
spellingShingle Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
author_facet Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
author_sort Hashim R.; Zahid N.I.; Velayutham T.S.; Aripin N.F.K.; Ogawa S.; Sugimura A.
title Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
title_short Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
title_full Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
title_fullStr Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
title_full_unstemmed Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
title_sort Dry thermotropic glycolipid self-assembly: A review
publishDate 2018
container_title Journal of Oleo Science
container_volume 67
container_issue 6
doi_str_mv 10.5650/jos.ess17261
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85048027256&doi=10.5650%2fjos.ess17261&partnerID=40&md5=3cc91c20a98a44fa4bd012cc1df30ad6
description Also recognized as carbohydrate liquid crystals, glycolipids are amphiphiles whose basic unit comprises of a sugar group attached to an alkyl chain. Glycolipids are amphitropic, which means these materials form liquid crystal self-assemblies when dry (thermotropic) as well as when dissolved in solvents (lyotropic/surfactants) such as water. Many glycolipids are also naturally derived since these can be found in cell membranes. Their membrane and surfactant functions are largely understood through their lyotropic properties. While glycolipids are expected to play major roles as eco-friendly surfactants in the global surfactant market, their usefulness as thermotropic liquid crystal material is, to date, unknown, due to relatively lack of research performed and data reported in the literature. Understandably since glycolipids are hygroscopic with many hydroxy groups, removing the last trace water is very challenging. In recent time, with careful lyophilization and more consistent characterization technique, some researchers have attempted serious studies into “dry” or anhydrous glycolipids. Motivated by possible developments of novel thermotropic applications, some results from these studies also provide surprising new understanding to support conventional wisdom of the lyotropic systems. Here we review the dry state of glycosides, a family of glycolipids whose sugar headgroup is linked to the lipid chain via a glycosidic oxygen linker. The structure property relationship of both linear and anhydrous Guerbet glycosides will be examined. In particular, how the variation of sugar stereochemistry (e.g. anomer vs. epimer), the chain length and chain branching affect the formation of thermotropic liquid crystals phases, which not only located under equilibrium but also far from equilibrium conditions (glassy phase) are scrutinized. The dry glycolipid assembly has been subjected to electric and magnetic fields and the results show interesting behaviors including a possible transient current generation. © 2018 by Japan Oil Chemists’ Society.
publisher Japan Oil Chemists Society
issn 13458957
language English
format Review
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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