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Low-Vacuum Deposition of Glutamic Acid and Pyroglutamic Acid: A Facile Methodology for Depositing Organic Materials beyond Amino Acids
Author(s) -
Iwao Sugimoto,
Shunsaku Maeda,
Yoriko Suda,
Kenji Makihara,
Kazuhiko Takahashi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of amino acids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.188
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 2090-0112
pISSN - 2090-0104
DOI - 10.1155/2014/434056
Subject(s) - pyroglutamic acid , materials science , crystal (programming language) , thin film , deposition (geology) , evaporation , adsorption , intramolecular force , desorption , chemical engineering , analytical chemistry (journal) , amino acid , chemistry , organic chemistry , nanotechnology , paleontology , biochemistry , sediment , biology , physics , computer science , engineering , programming language , thermodynamics
Thin layers of pyroglutamic acid (Pygl) have been deposited by thermal evaporation of the molten L-glutamic acid (L-Glu) through intramolecular lactamization. This deposition was carried out with the versatile handmade low-vacuum coater, which was simply composed of a soldering iron placed in a vacuum degassing resin chamber evacuated by an oil-free diaphragm pump. Molecular structural analyses have revealed that thin solid film evaporated from the molten L-Glu is mainly composed of L-Pygl due to intramolecular lactamization. The major component of the L-Pygl was in β -phase and the minor component was in γ -phase, which would have been generated from partial racemization to DL-Pygl. Electron microscopy revealed that the L-Glu-evaporated film generally consisted of the 20 nm particulates of Pygl, which contained a periodic pattern spacing of 0.2 nm intervals indicating the formation of the single-molecular interval of the crystallized molecular networks. The DL-Pygl-evaporated film was composed of the original DL-Pygl preserving its crystal structures. This methodology is promising for depositing a wide range of the evaporable organic materials beyond amino acids. The quartz crystal resonator coated with the L-Glu-evaporated film exhibited the pressure-sensing capability based on the adsorption-desorption of the surrounding gas at the film surface.

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