mz2c00495_si_001.pdf (26.64 MB)
Self-Assembly of Repetitive Segment and Random Segment Polymer Architectures
journal contribution
posted on 2022-11-22, 21:44 authored by Hao Yu, Falon C. Kalutantirige, Lehan Yao, Charles M. Schroeder, Qian Chen, Jeffrey S. MooreRecent
advances in chemical synthesis have created new methodologies
for synthesizing sequence-controlled synthetic polymers, but rational
design of monomer sequence for desired properties remains challenging.
In this work, we synthesize periodic polymers with repetitive segments
using a sequence-controlled ring-opening metathesis polymerization
(ROMP) method, which draws inspiration from proteins containing repetitive
sequence motifs. The repetitive segment architecture is shown to dramatically
affect the self-assembly behavior of these materials. Our results
show that polymers with identical repetitive sequences assemble into
uniform spherical nanoparticles after thermal annealing, whereas copolymers
with random placement of segments with different sequences exhibit
disordered assemblies without a well-defined morphology. Overall,
these results bring a new understanding to the role of periodic repetitive
sequences in polymer assembly.
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uniform spherical nanoparticlesopening metathesis polymerizationperiodic repetitive sequencescreated new methodologiessynthesize periodic polymersrepetitive segment architecturecontrolled synthetic polymersrepetitive segments usingrepetitive segmentnew understandingcontrolled ringwhereas copolymersthermal annealingresults showresults bringrational designrandom placementdraws inspirationdramatically affectdefined morphologychemical synthesis