Poloxamer

General structure
with a = 2–130 and b = 15–67

Poloxamers are nonionic triblock copolymers composed of a central hydrophobic chain of polyoxypropylene (poly(propylene oxide)) flanked by two hydrophilic chains of polyoxyethylene (poly(ethylene oxide)). The word poloxamer was coined by BASF inventor, Irving Schmolka, who received the patent for these materials in 1973.[1] Poloxamers are also known by the trade names Pluronic,[2] Kolliphor (pharma grade),[3] and Synperonic.[4]

Because the lengths of the polymer blocks can be customized, many different poloxamers exist that have slightly different properties. For the generic term poloxamer, these copolymers are commonly named with the letter P (for poloxamer) followed by three digits: the first two digits multiplied by 100 give the approximate molecular mass of the polyoxypropylene core, and the last digit multiplied by 10 gives the percentage polyoxyethylene content (e.g. P407 = poloxamer with a polyoxypropylene molecular mass of 4000 g/mol and a 70% polyoxyethylene content). For the Pluronic and Synperonic tradenames, coding of these copolymers starts with a letter to define its physical form at room temperature (L = liquid, P = paste, F = flake (solid)) followed by two or three digits, The first digit (two digits in a three-digit number) in the numerical designation, multiplied by 300, indicates the approximate molecular weight of the hydrophobe; and the last digit x 10 gives the percentage polyoxyethylene content (e.g., L61 indicates a polyoxypropylene molecular mass of 1800 g/mol and a 10% polyoxyethylene content). In the example given, poloxamer 181 (P181) = Pluronic L61 and Synperonic PE/L 61.

  1. ^ US 3740421, Schmolka IR, "Polyoxyethylene-polyoxypropylene aqueous gels", published 1973-06-19, assigned to BASF Wyandotte Corp. 
  2. ^ "BASF - Product information the chemicals catalog - Pluronics". BASF Corporation Website. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  3. ^ "Poloxamers". BASF Pharma Solutions.
  4. ^ "Synperonic". Croda.