11 research outputs found
Highlighting the Role of the Random Associating Block in the Self-Assembly of Amphiphilic Block–Random Copolymers
pH-sensitive
random P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>1–<i>x</i></sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub><i>x</i></sub>)<sub>100</sub> (MHx) and block–random P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>1–<i>x</i></sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub><i>x</i></sub>)<sub>100</sub>-<i>b</i>-PAA<sub>100</sub> (DHx) amphiphilic
copolymers have been synthesized, where
x stands for the molar ratios of pH-sensitive hydrophilic acrylic
acid (AA) units statistically distributed with hydrophobic <i>n</i>-butyl acrylate (<i>n</i>BA) ones within the
random block. Static and dynamic light scattering revealed that self-assembly
of the random associating block (MHx) and block–random (DHx)
copolymers is strongly affected by the pH and ionic strength of the
solution and also by the amount of AA units within the MHx blocks.
Below a characteristic pH, MHx self-assembles into finite size spherical
particles that grow in size with decreasing pH until they eventually
become insoluble. DHx self-assembles into similar spherical particles,
but the hydrophilic PAA<sub>100</sub> corona surrounding the MHx core
prevents insolubility at low pH. Self-assembly of DHx at higher pH
is fully correlated to that of the neat MHx blocks, indicating that
it is possible to control precisely the extent of self-assembly of
diblock copolymers by tuning the hydrophobic character of their associating
block. Here this was done by controlling the fraction of charged units
within the random associating block
pH-Controlled Rheological Properties of Mixed Amphiphilic Triblock Copolymers
Aqueous mixtures of pH-sensitive
block random BAB triblock copolymers
with different hydrophobic B blocks connected to the same hydrophilic
A block were studied in order to investigate comicellization and the
impact on the dynamic mechanical properties. The B blocks were statistical
copolymers of acrylic acid (AA) and <i>n</i>-butyl acrylate
(<i>n</i>BA) with varying AA contents, whereas the A block
was a pure PAA. Neat triblocks self-assembled into transient networks
for which the mechanical relaxation time depended both on the AA content
within the B blocks and on the pH, which affected the ionization of
the AA units. Static and dynamic light scattering measurements were
done on mixtures of equivalent AB diblock copolymers that showed that
comicellization occurred only at conditions at which both copolymers
considered separately self-assemble. When comicellization occurred,
the characteristic escape time of both types of B blocks from the
mixed hydrophobic cores impacted the rheological properties of the
binary triblock mixture. Using binary mixtures of BAB triblock copolymers
exhibiting pH-controlled dynamics thus allows control and fine-tuning
of the viscoelastic properties at constant pH by formulation without
the need to synthesize a large number of different polymers. Moreover,
the more dynamic B blocks were slowed down in the presence of the
less dynamic ones, and vice versa, so that a frozen network could
be transformed into a transient one by coassembly with very dynamic
chains
Progressive Freezing-in of the Junctions in Self-Assembled Triblock Copolymer Hydrogels during Aging
The evolution with time was investigated for self-assembled
networks
formed by triblock copolymers in aqueous solution. The polymers consisted
of a central hydrophilic poly(acrylic acid) block and two hydrophobic
end-blocks formed by random copolymers of 50% acrylic acid and 50% <i>n</i>-butyl acrylate units. The rheological properties of the
systems at steady state were strongly influenced by the degree of
ionization (α) and thus by the pH. This allows one to obtain
systems ranging from low viscosity solutions to hydrogels just by
varying α. However, steady state was not reached instantaneously
when α was changed, but proceeded through a slow progressive
increase of the viscosity. The rate at which the systems aged was
independent of α and of the polymer concentration and is attributed
to slow reorganization of the cores formed by the self-assembled hydrophobic
blocks
pH- and Thermoresponsive Self-Assembly of Cationic Triblock Copolymers with Controlled Dynamics
Transient hydrogels
formed by cationic BAB triblock copolymers
consisting of a hydrophilic poly(dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate)
(P(DMAEMA)) A block and amphiphilic B blocks composed of randomly
distributed DMAEMA and <i>n</i>-butyl methacrylate (<i>n</i>BMA) units were investigated. Oscillatory shear measurements
revealed formation of dynamic networks with terminal relaxation times
that can be controlled by tuning the ionization degree (α) of
the DMAEMA units or the temperature up until 50 °C. A sol–gel
transition could be induced by increasing the pH. Above 50 °C
irreversible aggregation was observed. The behavior of these pH-sensitive
cationic copolymers is compared with that of pH-sensitive anionic
copolymers, revealing that incorporating stimuli-responsive hydrophilic
units within the hydrophobic blocks of amphiphilic block copolymers
may be a general way to control the exchange dynamics of the latter
Ionization Of Amphiphilic Acidic Block Copolymers
The ionization behavior of an amphiphilic diblock copolymer
poly(<i>n</i>-butyl acrylate<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-acrylic
acid<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub>-<i>block</i>-poly(acrylic
acid)<sub>100</sub> (P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub>-<i>b</i>-PAA<sub>100</sub>, DH50) and of its equivalent triblock copolymer P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub>-<i>b</i>-PAA<sub>200</sub>-<i>b</i>-P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub> (TH50) were studied by potentiometric titration
either in pure water or in 0.5 M NaCl. These polymers consist of a
hydrophilic acidic block (PAA) connected to a hydrophobic block, P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub>, whose hydrophobic character has been mitigated by
copolymerization with hydrophilic units. We show that all AA units,
even those in the hydrophobic block could be ionized. However, the
AA units within the hydrophobic block were less acidic than those
in the hydrophilic block, resulting in the preferential ionization
of the latter block. The preferential ionization of PAA over that
of P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub> was stronger at higher ionic strength. Remarkably,
the covalent bonds between the PAA and P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub> blocks
in the diblock or the triblock did not affect the ionization of each
block, although the self-association of the block copolymers into
spherical aggregates modified the environment of the PAA blocks compared
to when PAA was molecularly dispersed
Synthesis of Amphiphilic Poly(acrylic acid)‑<i>b</i>‑poly(<i>n</i>‑butyl acrylate-<i>co</i>-acrylic acid) Block Copolymers with Various Microstructures via RAFT Polymerization in Water/Ethanol Heterogeneous Media
The
batch copolymerization of <i>n</i>-butyl acrylate
(50 mol %) and acrylic acid (50 mol %)two monomers with close
reactivity but with very different water solubilitywas performed
under RAFT (reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer)
control, in heterogeneous conditions in water or water/ethanol mixtures.
The polymerizations were conducted in the presence of poly(acrylic
acid) end-capped with a trithiocarbonate reactive group, serving as
a control agent, a precursor for the in situ synthesis of amphiphilic
block copolymers and a stabilizer for the formed particles. Good control
over the polymerization and stable colloidal suspensions were achieved
under such conditions. The kinetic study demonstrated that the polymerization
rates of each monomer varied upon a change of the water/ethanol volumetric
ratios and of the overall comonomer concentrations. The compositional
microstructure of the copolymers was characterized by NMR analysis
and by potentiometric titration. This work demonstrates that the distribution
of the comonomer units in a copolymer formed under heterogeneous conditions
can be controlled by the solubility of the monomers in the medium,
hence leading to various types of compositional gradient structures
Viscoelastic Properties of Hydrogels Based on Self-Assembled Multisticker Polymers Grafted with pH-Responsive Grafts
Graft copolymers
consisting of a poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) backbone
and random grafts of <i>n</i>-butyl acrylate and acrylic
acid, P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub>, were synthesized by free radical polymerization
of the backbone followed by ATRP polymerization of the grafts via
a grafting-from approach. The rheological properties of their aqueous
solutions were measured by oscillatory shear measurements at different
temperatures, pHs, and concentrations. All graft copolymers formed
transient networks above their percolation concentrations with pH-dependent
relaxation times. These results implied that incorporation of hydrophilic
AA units within the hydrophobic grafts allowed controlling their exchange
dynamics in a pH-dependent way, leading to viscoelastic fluids with
a pH-tunable terminal relaxation time. Provided that the grafting
density remained low, the rheological properties of the graft copolymers
were very similar to those of model BAB triblock copolymers consisting
of a PAA central block and P(<i>n</i>BA<sub>50%</sub>-<i>stat</i>-AA<sub>50%</sub>)<sub>100</sub> lateral blocks
Patchy Supramolecular Bottle-Brushes Formed by Solution Self-Assembly of Bis(urea)s and Tris(urea)s Decorated by Two Incompatible Polymer Arms
In
an attempt to design urea-based Janus nanocylinders through
a supramolecular approach, nonsymmetrical bis(urea)s and tris(urea)s
decorated by two incompatible polymer arms, namely, poly(styrene)
(PS) and poly(isobutylene) (PIB), were synthesized using rather straightforward
organic and polymer chemistry techniques. Light scattering experiments
revealed that these molecules self-assembled in cyclohexane by cooperative
hydrogen bonds. The extent of self-assembly was limited for the bis(urea)s.
On the contrary, reasonably anisotropic 1D structures (small nanocylinders)
could be obtained with the tris(urea)s (<i>N</i><sub>agg</sub> ∼ 50) which developed six cooperative hydrogen bonds per
molecule. <sup>1</sup>H transverse relaxation measurements and NOESY
NMR experiments in cyclohexane revealed that perfect Janus nanocylinders
with one face consisting of only PS and the other of PIB were not
obtained. Nevertheless, phase segregation between the PS and PIB chains
occurred to a large extent, resulting in patchy cylinders containing
well separated domains of PIB and PS chains. Reasons for this behavior
were proposed, paving the way to improve the proposed strategy toward
true urea-based supramolecular Janus nanocylinders
Self-Assembly and Critical Solubility Temperature of Supramolecular Polystyrene Bottle-Brushes in Cyclohexane
The formation of polystyrene (PS)
supramolecular bottle-brushes
by self-assembly in cyclohexane of hydrogen-bonding tris(urea) units
decorated by PS chains was investigated using light and neutron scattering.
Atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) was used to control the
length of the PS side-chains and allowed the straightforward synthesis
of the targeted tris(urea)s. It was shown that their extent of self-assembly
strongly depended on the degree of polymerization and chemical nature
of the polymer side chains, in contrast with what was previously observed
with cyclic oligopeptides, another type of self-assembling units.
With sufficiently short PS side-chains, anisotropic supramolecular
bottle-brushes could be obtained. Their critical solubility temperature, <i>T</i><sub>c</sub>, was measured in cyclohexane, proving experimentally
for the first time that densely grafted PS bottle-brushes exhibit
a much lower <i>T</i><sub>c</sub> than linear PS or even
star-shaped PS of similar molecular weight
Competition Between Steric Hindrance and Hydrogen Bonding in the Formation of Supramolecular Bottle Brush Polymers
The formation of supramolecular bottle-brush
polymers consisting
of a noncovalent backbone assembled through directional hydrogen bonds
and of poly(isobutylene) (PIB) side-chains was investigated in cyclohexane
by light scattering. Two limiting cases were observed depending on
the balance between the favorable formation of hydrogen bonds and
the unfavorable stretching of the PIB chains within the supramolecular
bottle-brushes, in agreement with a theoretical model developed by
Wang et al. On one hand, a bisurea self-assembling unit able to form
four cooperative hydrogen bonds per molecule led to relatively short
supramolecular bottle-brushes, the length of which could be varied
by modifying steric hindrance or by using solvent mixtures. On the
other hand, supramolecular bottle-brush polymers exhibiting persistent
lengths of more than 300 nm could be obtained by using trisureas that
are able to form six hydrogen bonds per molecule. Their easy synthesis
and the fact that it is possible to control their self-assembly into
long supramolecular bottle-brush polymers make polymer-decorated bisureas
and trisureas an attractive alternative to cyclopeptides and shape-persistent
rings for the creation of supramolecular nanostructures