Abstract

Acrylamide (AM) was first graft-polymerized on the surface of crosslinked polyvinyl alcohol (CPVA) microspheres by initiating of cerium salt, and then the grafted polyacrylamide (PAM) was transformed to polyvinylamine (PVAm) via Hofmann degradation reaction, resulting in the grafted microspheres PVAm/CPVA. By adopting the novel surface molecular imprinting technique put forward by us, cholic acid molecule-imprinted material MIP-PVAm/CPVA was prepared with glutaraldehyde as crosslinking agent The binding character of MIP-PVAm/CPVA towards cholic acid molecules was studied in depth with both batch and column methods and using cholesterol as a contrast compound whose chemical structure is similar with cholic acid to a certain extent. The experimental results show that the surface-imprinted material MIP-PVAm/CPVA has excellent binding affinity and recognition selectivity for the template molecule, cholic acid. The selectivity coefficient of PVAm/CPVA microspheres (non-imprinting material) for cholic acid relative to cholesterol is only 1.314, displaying very poor recognition selectivity for cholic acid. However, after imprinting, the selectivity coefficient of MIP-PVAm/CPVA for cholic acid in respect to cholesterol is remarkably enhanced to 11.231, displaying the excellent recognition selectivity and binding affinity towards cholic acid molecules. Besides, MIP-PVAm/CPVA microspheres have fine desorption property, and by using a mixture of ethanol and NaOH aqueous solution as an eluent, the desorption ratios can reach 99.73% as the effluent amount gets up to 20 bed volumes (BV).

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