One-Pot Universal Initiation-Growth Methods from A Liquid Crystalline Block Copolymer

Published in Chemistry
One-Pot Universal Initiation-Growth Methods from A Liquid Crystalline Block Copolymer
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks

The construction of hierarchical nanostructures with precise morphological and dimensional control has been one of the ultimate goals of contemporary materials science and chemistry, and the emulation of tailor-made nanoscale superstructures realized in the nature, using artificial building blocks, poses outstanding challenges. Meanwhile, the so-called “supramolecular polymerization” approach has emerged as a powerful method to control the polymerization degree, which corresponds to the fiber length in case of linear supramolecular polymers.1 However, in most cases, due to the fairly dynamic nature of supramolecular interactions, these non-covalent polymers are not sufficiently colloidal stable, drastically different from block copolymer assemblies.

Therefore, we thought that it might be a good idea if we can combine the high stability of block copolymer assemblies and the high controllability of supramolecular polymerization. In recent years, the “crystallization-driven self-assembly” approach based on crystalline block copolymers has become a very facile method for the fabrication of nanostructures with uniform and precisely-manipulated dimensions and hierarchies.2 However, a pre-assembly and fragmentation to produce seeds are always mandatary to allow the growth of micelles into uniform structures. This, in terms of experimental procedures, is not very close to what really occurs in chain-growth polymerization reactions, in which initiators and monomers are mixed and the reaction happen simultaneously to yield polymers.

In this current work, we report a one-pot strategy to precisely synthesize hierarchical nanostructures through an in-situ initiation-growth process from a liquid crystalline block copolymer, based on the discovery mentioned above. The principles and concepts of chain growth polymerization reactions are borrowed here to realize the supramolecular polymerization process of a liquid crystalline block copolymer.

All these start from a liquid crystalline (LC) block copolymer we studied in a previous paper, which can form monodisperse cylindrical micelles with a LC poly(2-(perfluorooctyl)ethyl methacrylate) (PFMA) core and a soluble poly(2-vinyl pyridine) (P2VP) corona via a self-seeding process.3 When we tried to prepare uniform cylindrical micelles by heating the partially quaternized block polymer in isopropanol, we obtained cylindrical micelles with uniform length. This surprised us, and we suspected that it might be related to the poor solubility of the partially quaternized block polymers, which would aggregate or precipitate out first in solution. This initiated the further growth of cylindrical micelles via a cooperative mode, resulting in uniform cylindrical micelles eventually. Based on this assumption, we added a small amount of methyl iodide directly to a freshly-prepared block polymers solution, and cylindrical micelles with uniform length were obtained after a simple heating-cooling process. We were really excited about this result and tried many more other molecules, which can all perform supramolecular interactions with P2VP block.

The first example involves the formation of dynamic covalent bonds with phenylselenyl bromide (PhSeBr) with pyridyl ring4 (Fig. 1a). We discovered that by adding a small amount of PhSeBr can yield uniform cylindrical micelles in a one-pot manner. The underlying mechanism of this process, termed as initiation-growth process, is depicted in Fig. 1c. Three steps occur spontaneously, namely interaction, initiation and growth step. Firstly, the PhSeBr initiators form complexes with the pyridyl groups on the P2VP chains (interaction step). The resultant less soluble complex tends to aggregate, giving the associated PFMA chains a higher propensity to form oligomeric aggregates with LC cores (initiation step). In the following growth step, these aggregates subsequently serve as seeds for the growth of the free monomeric polymer chains (unimers), driven by the liquid crystalline ordering effect. By adjusting the parameters, the length of cylindrical micelles can be finely tuned from 370 nm up to 4.6 μm with fairly narrow PDI (<1.03).

Figure 1. Initiated assembly process. (a) Chemical structure of P2VP-b-PFMA diblock copolymer and the formation of dynamic covalent bonds between PhSeBr and P2VP units. Schematic illustration of (b) the one-pot synthesis of uniform micelles via the initiated assembly process, and the detailed three steps, including (c), interaction step, dynamic covalent bond-induced in-situ initiation step, and mesogenic ordering induced growth step. (d) TEM and (e) AFM images of the uniform cylindrical micelles from initiation-growth process with RI = 5 % and CP = 0.05 mg/mL. Scale bars are 1 μm in the TEM and AFM images, and 200 nm in the inset.

Furthermore, we examined several other small molecules as initiators, which can form hydrogen bonds, halogen bonds, quaternization, and coordination complexes with the polymer. Exactly the same heating-cooling procedures were applied, and strikingly similar linear morphology were found in all cases, despite that the choice of initiators can substantially influence the micelle length. More interestingly, not only small molecules but also macromolecules, or nano-objects can also be employed to initiate the assembly to form branched, segmented, hairy plate-like, or star-like supramolecular polymers with hierarchical architectures (Fig. 2). The length of these cylindrical arms could be adjusted by tuning the ratio between polymer and these large initiators as well. Meanwhile, the geometry and shape of initiators largely dictated the directions of growing micelles, while the number of cylindrical arms were mostly determined by the dimensions of the initiators.

Figure 2. The initiated assembly by macromolecular initiators. (a) Schematic cartoons of the different large initiators. (b-e) The TEM images of the hierarchical structures initiated by (b) P(tBA-r-AA) (RI = 2 wt.%; CP = 0.05 mg/mL) (c) CNTs (RI = 10 wt.%; CP = 0.025 mg/mL); (d) GOs (RI = 2 wt.%; CP = 0.05 mg/mL), and (e) PS nanospheres (NS, RI = 2 wt.%; CP = 0.025 mg/mL). Scale bars are 500 nm, and 50 nm in the inset.

From a general point of view, this facile yet efficient initiated assembly approach presents a simple methodology for self-assembly, simultaneously with high-level of control over the assembled nanostructures. We believe that this method or mechanism can be extended far beyond this particular polymer, and widely applicable to other analogous block copolymer and supramolecular systems.

For more details, please see our paper: “One-Pot Universal Initiation-Growth Methods from A Liquid Crystalline Block Copolymer” published in Nature Communications:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-10341-7

References:

1            Kashida, H. et al. Bifacial Nucleobases for Hexaplex Formation in Aqueous Solution. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 140, 8456-8462, (2018).

2            Wang, X. et al. Cylindrical block copolymer micelles and co-micelles of controlled length and architecture. Science 317, 644-647, (2007).

3            Li, X. et al. Monodisperse Cylindrical Micelles of Controlled Length with a Liquid-Crystalline Perfluorinated Core by 1D "Self-Seeding". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 55, 11392-11396, (2016).

4            Yi, Y., Xu, H., Wang, L., Cao, W. & Zhang, X. A New Dynamic Covalent Bond of SeN: Towards Controlled Self-Assembly and Disassembly. Chem. Eur. J. 19, 9506-9510, (2013).

 

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Chemistry
Physical Sciences > Chemistry

Related Collections

With collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.

Biology of rare genetic disorders

This cross-journal Collection between Nature Communications, Communications Biology, npj Genomic Medicine and Scientific Reports brings together research articles that provide new insights into the biology of rare genetic disorders, also known as Mendelian or monogenic disorders.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Jan 31, 2025

Advances in catalytic hydrogen evolution

This collection encourages submissions related to hydrogen evolution catalysis, particularly where hydrogen gas is the primary product. This is a cross-journal partnership between the Energy Materials team at Nature Communications with Communications Chemistry, Communications Engineering, Communications Materials, and Scientific Reports. We seek studies covering a range of perspectives including materials design & development, catalytic performance, or underlying mechanistic understanding. Other works focused on potential applications and large-scale demonstration of hydrogen evolution are also welcome.

Publishing Model: Open Access

Deadline: Dec 31, 2024