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Chitosan: Interactive Guide to Molecular Behavior

This interactive visual shows how varying the Molecular Weight (MW) & Degree of Deacetylation (DDA) shape chitosan’s behavior in acidic solution.

Key Definitions

  • Backbone (sugar units): The repeating “spine” of the polymer.
  • Amine groups (blue): –NH₂ on glucosamine units. In acid, these groups become positively charged –NH₃⁺.
  • Acetyl groups (green): –NHCOCH₃ on N-acetyl-glucosamine units. These bring non-polar, hydrophobic character.
  • DDA (Degree of Deacetylation): The fraction (%) of monomers that carry an amine group instead of an acetyl group.
  • MW (Molecular Weight / Chain Length): How many monomer units per polymer chain; longer chains = higher MW.
ConditionWhat happensWhat you see in the visual
Low DDA (< ~60 %)Many acetyl units → many hydrophobic patches. Chains lose charge.Polymer becomes insoluble. Chains tend to fold, aggregate, and clump together (= chitin).
High DDA (> ~60 %) in acidic pHMany amines → many positive charges. Chains repel each other electrostatically.Polymer becomes soluble. Chains form expanded, separated coils due to repulsion
Low MW (short chains)Chains are small, flexible, fewer entanglements.Low viscosity. Easy to handle, good for sprays and simple mixing.
High MW (long chains)Chains are long, overlap and entangle.High viscosity. Solution becomes thick, suitable for gels and film formation.