683 research outputs found
Evidence of Overcharging in the Complexation between Oppositely Charged Polymers and Surfactants
We report on the complexation between charged-neutral block copolymers and
oppositely charged surfactants studied by small-angle neutron scattering. Two
block copolymers/surfactant systems are investigated, poly(acrylic
acid)-b-poly(acrylamide) with dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide and
poly(trimethylammonium ethylacrylate methylsulfate)-b-poly(acrylamide) with
sodium dodecyl sulfate. The two systems are similar in terms of structure and
molecular weight but have different electrostatic charges. The neutron
scattering data have been interpreted in terms of a model that assumes the
formation of mixed polymer-surfactant aggregates, also called colloidal
complexes. These complexes exhibit a core-shell microstructure, where the core
is a dense coacervate microphase of micelles surrounded by neutral blocks.
Here, we are taking advantage of the fact that the complexation results in
finite-size aggregates to shed some light on the complexation mechanisms. In
order to analyze quantitatively the neutron data, we develop two different
approaches to derive the number of surfactant micelles per polymer in the mixed
aggregates and the distributions of aggregation numbers. With these results, we
show that the formation of the colloidal complex is in agreement with the
overcharging predictions. In both systems, the amount of polyelectrolytes
needed to build the core-shell colloids always exceeds the number that would be
necessary to compensate the charge of the micelles. For the two
polymer-surfactant systems investigated, the overcharging ratios are 0.66 and
0.38.Comment: 20 pages, 7 Figures, 6 Table
Using Dynamic Covalent Chemistry To Drive Morphological Transitions: Controlled Release of Encapsulated Nanoparticles from Block Copolymer Vesicles
Dynamic covalent chemistry is exploited to drive morphological orderâorder transitions to achieve the controlled release of a model payload (e.g., silica nanoparticles) encapsulated within block copolymer vesicles. More specifically, poly(glycerol monomethacrylate)âpoly(2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate) (PGMAâPHPMA) diblock copolymer vesicles were prepared via aqueous polymerization-induced self-assembly in either the presence or absence of silica nanoparticles. Addition of 3-aminophenylboronic acid (APBA) to such vesicles results in specific binding of this reagent to some of the pendent cis-diol groups on the hydrophilic PGMA chains to form phenylboronate ester bonds in mildly alkaline aqueous solution (pH ⌠10). This leads to a subtle increase in the effective volume fraction of this stabilizer block, which in turn causes a reduction in the packing parameter and hence induces a vesicle-to-worm (or vesicle-to-sphere) morphological transition. The evolution in copolymer morphology (and the associated solâgel transitions) was monitored using dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, oscillatory rheology, and small-angle X-ray scattering. In contrast to the literature, in situ release of encapsulated silica nanoparticles is achieved via vesicle dissociation at room temperature; moreover, the rate of release can be fine-tuned by varying the solution pH and/or the APBA concentration. Furthermore, this strategy also works (i) for relatively thick-walled vesicles that do not normally exhibit stimulus-responsive behavior and (ii) in the presence of added salt. This novel molecular recognition strategy to trigger morphological transitions via dynamic covalent chemistry offers considerable scope for the design of new stimulus-responsive copolymer vesicles (and hydrogels) for targeted delivery and controlled release of cargoes. In particular, the conditions used in this new approach are relevant to liquid laundry formulations, whereby enzymes require protection to prevent their deactivation by bleach
Solvent Mediated Assembly of Nanoparticles Confined in Mesoporous Alumina
The controlled self-assembly of thiol stabilized gold nanocrystals in a
mediating solvent and confined within mesoporous alumina was probed in situ
with small angle x-ray scattering. The evolution of the self-assembly process
was controlled reversibly via regulated changes in the amount of solvent
condensed from an undersaturated vapor. Analysis indicated that the
nanoparticles self-assembled into cylindrical monolayers within the porous
template. Nanoparticle nearest-neighbor separation within the monolayer
increased and the ordering decreased with the controlled addition of solvent.
The process was reversible with the removal of solvent. Isotropic clusters of
nanoparticles were also observed to form temporarily during desorption of the
liquid solvent and disappeared upon complete removal of liquid. Measurements of
the absorption and desorption of the solvent showed strong hysteresis upon
thermal cycling. In addition, the capillary filling transition for the solvent
in the nanoparticle-doped pores was shifted to larger chemical potential,
relative to the liquid/vapor coexistence, by a factor of 4 as compared to the
expected value for the same system without nanoparticles.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, appeared in Phys. Rev.
Time Resolved Correlation measurements of temporally heterogeneous dynamics
Time Resolved Correlation (TRC) is a recently introduced light scattering
technique that allows to detect and quantify dynamic heterogeneities. The
technique is based on the analysis of the temporal evolution of the speckle
pattern generated by the light scattered by a sample, which is quantified by
, the degree of correlation between speckle images recorded at
time and . Heterogeneous dynamics results in significant
fluctuations of with time . We describe how to optimize TRC
measurements and how to detect and avoid possible artifacts. The statistical
properties of the fluctuations of are analyzed by studying their
variance, probability distribution function, and time autocorrelation function.
We show that these quantities are affected by a noise contribution due to the
finite number of detected speckles. We propose and demonstrate a method to
correct for the noise contribution, based on a extrapolation
scheme. Examples from both homogeneous and heterogeneous dynamics are provided.
Connections with recent numerical and analytical works on heterogeneous glassy
dynamics are briefly discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures. Submitted to PR
Time-Resolved SAXS Studies of the Kinetics of Thermally Triggered Release of Encapsulated Silica Nanoparticles from Block Copolymer Vesicles
Silica-loaded poly(glycerol monomethacrylate)-poly(2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate) diblock copolymer vesicles are prepared in the form of concentrated aqueous dispersions via polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA). As the concentration of silica nanoparticles present during the PISA synthesis is increased up to 35% w/w, higher degrees of encapsulation of this component within the vesicles can be achieved. After centrifugal purification to remove excess non-encapsulated silica nanoparticles, SAXS, DCP, and TGA analysis indicates encapsulation of up to hundreds of silica nanoparticles per vesicle. In the present study, the thermally triggered release of these encapsulated silica nanoparticles is examined by cooling to 0 °C for 30 min, which causes in situ vesicle dissociation. Transmission electron microscopy studies confirm the change in diblock copolymer morphology and also enable direct visualization of the released silica nanoparticles. Time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering is used to quantify the extent of silica release over time. For an initial silica concentration of 5% w/w, cooling induces a vesicle-to-sphere transition with subsequent nanoparticle release. For higher silica concentrations (20 or 30% w/w) cooling only leads to perforation of the vesicle membranes, but silica nanoparticles are nevertheless released through the pores. For vesicles prepared in the presence of 30% w/w silica, the purified silica-loaded vesicles were cooled to 0 °C for 30 min, and SAXS patterns were collected every 15 s. A new SAXS model has been developed to determine both the mean volume fraction of encapsulated silica within the vesicles and the scattering length density. Satisfactory data fits to the experimental SAXS patterns were obtained using this model
Phase behavior of symmetric linear multiblock copolymers
Molecular dynamics simulations are used to study the phase behavior of a
single linear multiblock copolymer with blocks of A- and B-type monomers under
poor solvent conditions, varying the block length , number of blocks ,
and the solvent quality (by variation of the temperature ). The fraction
of A-type monomers is kept constant and equal to 0.5, and always the lengths of
A and B blocks were equal (), as well as the number of blocks
(). We identify the three following regimes where: (i) full
microphase separation between blocks of different type occurs (all blocks of
A-type monomers form a single cluster, while all blocks of B-type monomers form
another), (ii) full microphase separation is observed with a certain
probability, and (iii) full microphase separation can not take place. For very
high number of blocks and very high (not accessible to our simulations)
further investigation is needed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Europhys. Let
ABC Triblock Copolymer Worms: Synthesis, Characterization, and Evaluation as Pickering Emulsifiers for Millimeter-Sized Droplets
Polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA) is used to prepare linear poly(glycerol monomethacrylate)âpoly(2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate)âpoly(benzyl methacrylate) [PGMAâPHPMAâPBzMA] triblock copolymer nano-objects in the form of a concentrated aqueous dispersion via a three-step synthesis based on reversible additionâfragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. First, GMA is polymerized via RAFT solution polymerization in ethanol, then HPMA is polymerized via RAFT aqueous solution polymerization, and finally BzMA is polymerized via âseededâ RAFT aqueous emulsion polymerization. For certain block compositions, highly anisotropic worm-like particles are obtained, which are characterized by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The design rules for accessing higher order morphologies (i.e., worms or vesicles) are briefly explored. Surprisingly, vesicular morphologies cannot be accessed by targeting longer PBzMA blocksâinstead, only spherical nanoparticles are formed. SAXS is used to rationalize these counterintuitive observations, which are best explained by considering subtle changes in the relative enthalpic incompatibilities between the three blocks during the growth of the PBzMA block. Finally, the PGMAâPHPMAâPBzMA worms are evaluated as Pickering emulsifiers for the stabilization of oil-in-water emulsions. Millimeter-sized oil droplets can be obtained using low-shear homogenization (hand-shaking) in the presence of 20 vol % n-dodecane. In contrast, control experiments performed using PGMAâPHPMA diblock copolymer worms indicate that these more delicate nanostructures do not survive even these mild conditions
Analysis of Granular Packing Structure by Scattering of THz Radiation
Scattering methods are widespread used to characterize the structure and
constituents of matter on small length scales. This motivates this introductory
text on identifying prospective approaches to scattering-based methods for
granular media. A survey to light scattering by particles and particle
ensembles is given. It is elaborated why the established scattering methods
using X-rays and visible light cannot in general be transferred to granular
media. Spectroscopic measurements using Terahertz radiation are highlighted as
they to probe the scattering properties of granular media, which are sensitive
to the packing structure. Experimental details to optimize spectrometer for
measurements on granular media are discussed. We perform transmission
measurements on static and agitated granular media using Fourier-transform
spectroscopy at the THz beamline of the BessyII storage ring. The measurements
demonstrate the potential to evaluate degrees of order in the media and to
track transient structural states in agitated bulk granular media.Comment: 12 Pages, 9 Figures, 56 Reference
The restructuring of schooling in England: the responses of well-positioned Headteachers
Research to date about the English governmentâs policy to make schools independent of local authorities (LAs) has looked at the âmacroâ level of national policy and at the âmicroâ level of the institution. The study of which this article is a part, explores changes at the âmesoâ level â the locality. The article analyses interviews in three LAs with 15 headteachers whose schools were well positioned locally. We sought to understand how and why they responded to the changing policy environment. We applied Bourdieuâs concepts of forms of capital to model the relationships between schools and to ground explanations of their responses as positioning themselves in the local field. The article develops this general approach by identifying the varieties of capital available and actually possessed. The most important was categorization as a result of the inspection process. Many of the headteachers felt impelled to lead their schools into various associations with other schools. Some individuals were becoming notably more powerful in their competition arenas. The power of these elite schools to further accumulate advantage and the withdrawal of the LA role as an arbiter of conflict between schools in the interests of the whole community are discussed
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