Rayleigh Instability Induced Cylinder-to-Sphere Transition
in Block Copolymer Micelles: Direct Visualization of the Kinetic Pathway
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Abstract
Direct visualization of morphological
evolution remains extremely
challenging despite its critical importance to understand the basic
fundamentals behind the transition. Here we report on the detailed
observation of a spontaneous cylinder-to-sphere morphological transformation
of amphiphilic poly(2-vinylpyridine)-<i>b</i>-poly(ethylene
oxide) (P2VP-<i>b</i>-PEO) diblock copolymer micelles in
aqueous solution, which first provides experimental evidence that
the fragmentation pathway is driven by Rayleigh instability showing
the distinctive signatures during the transition. Owing to the instability
of cylindrical micelles and the fluidity of micellar cores, our results
show that the cylindrical micelles spontaneously undulate and transform
into spherical micelles through distinct intermediate states, including
undulated cylinders and pearl-necklace-like micelles with a perfect
sinusoidal wave throughout the length. Moreover, the present system
with transitional morphology is proved to be able to act as a model
to encapsulate hydrophobic guests in the micellar cores, which displays
a relatively sustained release behavior. The specific kinetic pathway
provides new insight into the mechanism of block copolymer micellar
morphological transition; meanwhile, the dynamic system might serve
as a promising candidate for unique nanostructure design as well as
contribute to the transition-coupled guest delivery and controlled
release