This project is focused on producing mesogenic polyesters containing isosorbide. The work has taken two approaches: (1) Introducing isosorbide into known LCP backbone as a "disruptor" for brick dust LCPs such as poly (p-hydroxybenzoic acid); and (2) As part of a hydroxyacid mesogen formed by reacting isosorbide with a suitable mesogen. The mechanism of water uptake in isosorbide compounds was investigated and control of water uptake in these compounds was demonstrated. A result of these studies on how to design hydrophobic isosorbide compounds is a similar understanding of the structure of isosorbide compounds with high and controlled hydrophilicity. This has led to the identification, synthesis and characterization of highly hydrophilic, glycerol linked isosorbide oligomers and polymers as effective replacements for the commonly utilized poly (ethylene glycol, PEG) as a humectant in many personal care, cosmetic and biomedical products.

Currently, ethylene glycol and its polymeric forms is an industrial staple. A dominant use is as a reactant, making hydrophobic chemicals hydrophilic. The major forms are polyethylene glycols (PEG) as solvents, emulsifiers, and to enable greater water miscibility(surfactants). Principal markets of use are pharmacy, personal care, paints and inks, oil extraction and grain products (de-dusting). In recent years the trend toward PEG-free products has grown rapidly. Currently a PEG-free solubilization alternative, composed of pentylene glycol with surfactants, is available to help to dissolve lipophilic substances such as perfume, essential oils, active ingredients and vitamins in pure aqueous and aqueous/alcoholic formulations. The isosorbide derivative this project focuses on is a renewable corn-derived material that will perform similarly, but will open a new field of hydrophilicity chemistry because of the unique stereo chemical make-up of this new oligomer.

Project Report

Summary Sweet Water ICORPS - Michael Jaffe, PI The Sweet Water project was originally defined as the replacement of Poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) with a proprietary, sustainable isosorbide based humectant of superior properties. Our original target was to replace PEG in medical devices. Initial ICORPS exercises quickly taught us that a new medical material was an unrealistic goal and the program was refocused on humectants for the cosmetic and personal care industries. Interviews with over 50 potential end-use customers suggested that the product could be successful but that a source of materials supply would need to be in place. Supply and distribution chain analysis suggested that a small business producing the isosorbide humectant in liter to ten liter quantities could be successful and upon completion of the ICORPS workshops our team plan was to write an SBIR proposal to obtain the necessary funding. In the months following this decision, several personal care supply companies showed strong interest in partnering with us to move the Sweet Water product toward commercialization and this route forward is now also under strong consideration by the team. Key lesson learned through ICORPS was the importance of understanding the product focus and customer base,, achieving balance between technical uniqueness and market need and the need to rigorously define product value

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Industrial Innovation and Partnerships (IIP)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
1261924
Program Officer
Rathindra DasGupta
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2012-10-01
Budget End
2013-03-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$50,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Rutgers University
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Newark
State
NJ
Country
United States
Zip Code
07102