6 research outputs found

    Controlling Polymerization Initiator Concentration in Mesoporous Silica Thin Films

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    We present a strategy toward controlled polymer density in mesopores by specifically adjusting the local amount of polymerization initiator at the pore wall. The polymerization initiator concentration as well as the polymer functionalization has a direct impact on mesoporous membrane properties such as ionic permselectivity. Mesoporous silica-based thin films were prepared with specifically adjusted amount of polymerization initiator (4-(3-triethoxysilyl)propoxybenzophenone (BPSilane)) or initiator binding functions ((3-aminopropyl)triethoxysilane (APTES)), directly and homogeneously incorporated into the silica wall pursuing a sol-gel-based co-condensation approach. The amount of polymerization initiator was adjusted by varying its concentration in the sol-gel precursor solution. The surface chemistry, porosity, pore accessibility, and reactivity of the surface functional groups were investigated by using infrared spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray reflectometry, ellipsometry, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. We could gradually modify the amount of reactive polymerization initiators in these mesoporous membranes. Mesopores were maintained for APTES containing films for all tested ratios up to 25 mol % and for BPSilane containing films up to 15 mol %. These films showed accessible and charge-dependent ionic permselectivity and an increasing degree of functionalization with increasing precursor ratio. This approach can directly result in control of polymer grafting density in mesoporous films and thus has a direct impact on applications such as the control of ionic transport through mesoporous silica membranes

    Structure Formation of Metallopolymer-Grafted Block Copolymers

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    Microphase separation drives the structure formation in block copolymers. Here, functional metallopolymer-grafted diblock copolymers consisting of polystyrene-<i>block</i>-polyisoprene (PS-<i>b</i>-PI) as polymer backbone featuring low molar mass poly­ferrocenyl­dimethyl­silane (PFS) and polyvinyl­ferrocene (PVFc) are synthesized via an iterative anionic grafting-to polymerization strategy. PS-<i>b</i>-PI block copolymers having about 30 mol % 1,2-polyisoprene moieties are subjected to platinum-catalyzed hydrosilylation reaction for the introduction of chlorosilane groups. The Si–Cl moieties are shown to efficiently react with the active metallopolymers yielding block-selective metallopolymer-grafted copolymers with 34 vol % PVFc and 43 vol % PFS as evidenced by <sup>1</sup>H NMR spectroscopy as well as size exclusion chromatography. The microphase separation of the functional metallopolymer-grafted block copolymers is evidenced via TEM measurements revealing fascinating morphologies. The structure formation of the PVFc-grafted block copolymers is studied in more detail by TEM, small-angle X-ray scattering, wide-angle X-ray scattering, and atomic force microscopy measurements evidencing a lamellar morphology featuring a spherical substructure for the PVFc segments inside the polyisoprene lamellae

    Controlling Polymerization Initiator Concentration in Mesoporous Silica Thin Films

    No full text
    We present a strategy toward controlled polymer density in mesopores by specifically adjusting the local amount of polymerization initiator at the pore wall. The polymerization initiator concentration as well as the polymer functionalization has a direct impact on mesoporous membrane properties such as ionic permselectivity. Mesoporous silica-based thin films were prepared with specifically adjusted amount of polymerization initiator (4-(3-triethoxysilyl)­propoxybenzophenone (BPSilane)) or initiator binding functions ((3-aminopropyl)­triethoxysilane (APTES)), directly and homogeneously incorporated into the silica wall pursuing a sol–gel-based co-condensation approach. The amount of polymerization initiator was adjusted by varying its concentration in the sol–gel precursor solution. The surface chemistry, porosity, pore accessibility, and reactivity of the surface functional groups were investigated by using infrared spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, X-ray reflectometry, ellipsometry, atomic force microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. We could gradually modify the amount of reactive polymerization initiators in these mesoporous membranes. Mesopores were maintained for APTES containing films for all tested ratios up to 25 mol % and for BPSilane containing films up to 15 mol %. These films showed accessible and charge-dependent ionic permselectivity and an increasing degree of functionalization with increasing precursor ratio. This approach can directly result in control of polymer grafting density in mesoporous films and thus has a direct impact on applications such as the control of ionic transport through mesoporous silica membranes
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