journal article text

Nanoscale Phase Separation in Mixed Poly(<i>tert</i>-butyl acrylate)/Polystyrene Brushes on Silica Nanoparticles under Equilibrium Melt Conditions

Abstract

This communication reports on the study of microphase separation of well-defined mixed poly(tert-butyl acrylate) (PtBA)/polystyrene (PS) brushes on silica nanoparticles under equilibrium melt conditions. Mixed PtBA/PS brushes were synthesized from an asymmetric, difunctional initiator-terminated self-assembled monolayer by combining atom transfer radical polymerization and nitroxide-mediated radical polymerization. Two symmetric PtBA/PS mixed brush samples with different molecular weights were used in this study and were thermally annealed in vacuum at 150 °C. For the mixed brushes with number average molecular weights (Mn) of 24 200 g/mol for PtBA and 23 000 g/mol for PS, two glass transitions were observed in the differential scanning calorimetry analysis. Transmission electron microscopy study showed that the two grafted polymers underwent a lateral microphase separation, forming a random worm-like pattern with a feature size of ∼10 nm on the silica particle surfaces. In contrast, the mixed brushes with a Mn of 10 400 g/mol for PtBA and 11 900 g/mol for PS did not microphase separate. Although the mixed brushes are on curved substrates, this work provides results consistent with the theoretical prediction that symmetric mixed homopolymer brushes undergo lateral rather than vertical phase separation under equilibrium melt conditions

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