Hi folks, I have a little bit of a puzzling issue in the lab. I have been working with a carboxymethyl dextran polymer (which gives great results in my experiments) that we get from a supplier who has stopped selling it. (Cue "FFFFUUUUUUUU..!!!!")
This polymer has a DS (degree of substitution) of 41%, which should be slightly more than one carboxymethyl group per glucose repeat unit. (Right? Since there are three free -OH groups on each repeat unit, a fully substituted polymer would have three COOH groups per repeat unit, and have DS = 100%)
I bought a high-quality CMD from a new supplier to see if it would work in place of the stuff I was using. (Dun dun DUNNNN...) It doesn't. The bottle on the new stuff doesn't list a degree of substitution, though, it just gives "0.1 mmol COOH/gram."
The thing is, if I'm calculating correctly that is a TERRIBLE degree of substitution. A DS = 33.3% polymer should have a repeat unit weight of 220 g/mol and a 1:1 stoichiometry of repeat units to COOH groups, meaning that it has 1g/220g = 4.54 mmol COOH/gram. Interpolating, that means that the stuff with only 0.1 mmol/gram has a DS of less than 1%. Furthermore, every other supplier I've been able to find sells similarly low-substitution stuff.
Am I making a really dumb mistake here, or is it just that no one sells the good stuff any more? I'm in the process of trying to make some high-substitution stuff by reacting dextran with a large excess of bromoacetic acid in NaOH, but it would be nice to be able to just buy a starting material.