2020 |
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![]() | Lee, Jeonghyeon; Lopez, Gérald; Améduri, Bruno; Seo, Myungeun Synthesis of heterograft copolymers with a semifluorinated backbone by combination of grafting-through and grafting-from polymerizations Journal Article Macromolecules, 53 (8), pp. 2811–2821, 2020. Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Alternating copolymerization ATRP Fluorinated polymer Free radical polymerization Graft copolymer Mesoporous Microphase separation Porous polymer ROP @article{Lee2020c, title = {Synthesis of heterograft copolymers with a semifluorinated backbone by combination of grafting-through and grafting-from polymerizations}, author = {Jeonghyeon Lee and Gérald Lopez and Bruno Améduri and Myungeun Seo}, year = {2020}, date = {2020-04-20}, journal = {Macromolecules}, volume = {53}, number = {8}, pages = {2811–2821}, abstract = {We report that an alternating semifluorinated copolymer of chlorotrifluoroethylene (CTFE) and vinyl ether (VE) is an attractive platform for the synthesis of heterograft copolymers consisting of two distinct side chains. The radical terpolymerization of CTFE with PLA-tethered vinyl ether (PLAVE) synthesized by ring-opening polymerization and isobutyl vinyl ether (IBVE) as a spacer produced PLA-grafted fluorinated copolymer via a “grafting-through” manner. Two PLAVEs with different molar masses (2 and 10 kg mol–1) were successfully incorporated, and the grafting density could be controlled by varying the [PLAVE]/[IBVE] initial molar ratio. From the chlorine atoms in the CTFE repeating units, atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of styrene was further employed to grow PS side chains following a “grafting-from” mechanism per each (CTFE-alt-VE) repeating unit dyad. First-order kinetics was observed for the styrene polymerization and supported controlled growth of PS. The resulting heterograft copolymers possessed regularly spaced PS chains and statistically distributed PLA chains on the backbone, generating a nanoscopic disordered morphology via microphase separation driven by incompatibility between PLA and PS. By copolymerization of styrene and divinylbenzene (DVB) in neat ATRP condition, a cross-linked polymer monolith with the disordered bicontinuous morphology could be also prepared via polymerization-induced microphase separation. The cross-linked precursor was converted into a mesoporous polymer with pore size of 3.7–10.4 nm by removal of PLA. The mesopore size was tunable by adjusting the PLA molar mass and styrene/DVB molar ratio.}, keywords = {Alternating copolymerization, ATRP, Fluorinated polymer, Free radical polymerization, Graft copolymer, Mesoporous, Microphase separation, Porous polymer, ROP}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } We report that an alternating semifluorinated copolymer of chlorotrifluoroethylene (CTFE) and vinyl ether (VE) is an attractive platform for the synthesis of heterograft copolymers consisting of two distinct side chains. The radical terpolymerization of CTFE with PLA-tethered vinyl ether (PLAVE) synthesized by ring-opening polymerization and isobutyl vinyl ether (IBVE) as a spacer produced PLA-grafted fluorinated copolymer via a “grafting-through” manner. Two PLAVEs with different molar masses (2 and 10 kg mol–1) were successfully incorporated, and the grafting density could be controlled by varying the [PLAVE]/[IBVE] initial molar ratio. From the chlorine atoms in the CTFE repeating units, atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of styrene was further employed to grow PS side chains following a “grafting-from” mechanism per each (CTFE-alt-VE) repeating unit dyad. First-order kinetics was observed for the styrene polymerization and supported controlled growth of PS. The resulting heterograft copolymers possessed regularly spaced PS chains and statistically distributed PLA chains on the backbone, generating a nanoscopic disordered morphology via microphase separation driven by incompatibility between PLA and PS. By copolymerization of styrene and divinylbenzene (DVB) in neat ATRP condition, a cross-linked polymer monolith with the disordered bicontinuous morphology could be also prepared via polymerization-induced microphase separation. The cross-linked precursor was converted into a mesoporous polymer with pore size of 3.7–10.4 nm by removal of PLA. The mesopore size was tunable by adjusting the PLA molar mass and styrene/DVB molar ratio. |
2019 |
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![]() | Ahn, Nam Young; Seo, Myungeun Synthetic route-dependent intramolecular segregation in heteroarm core cross-linked star polymers as Janus-like nanoobjects Journal Article Polym. Chem., 11 , pp. 449-460, 2019, (Invited Paper to a Special Issue “Emerging Investigators 2020”). Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Alternating copolymerization CCS polymer Polymer particle RAFT polymerization Self-assembly @article{Ahn2019, title = {Synthetic route-dependent intramolecular segregation in heteroarm core cross-linked star polymers as Janus-like nanoobjects}, author = {Nam Young Ahn and Myungeun Seo}, year = {2019}, date = {2019-10-09}, journal = {Polym. Chem.}, volume = {11}, pages = {449-460}, abstract = {Heteroarm core cross-linked star (CCS) polymers consist of two different polymer chains covalently joined to a cross-linked core. We investigated their self-assembly behavior to understand whether intramolecular segregation can be induced during synthesis, to produce spatial domains enriched with each polymer, and whether they would exhibit well-defined microphase separation morphologies as a result. Heteroarm CCS polymers containing polylactide (PLA) and polystyrene (PS) arms were synthesized by reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer copolymerization of styrene and 1,2-bis(maleimidoethane) in the presence of a PLA-macro chain transfer agent (PLA-CTA), followed by chain extension with styrene (the in–out route). Dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, and small angle X-ray scattering analyses were employed to examine the self-assembly behavior in toluene and acetonitrile, as a relatively neutral and a PLA-selective solvent, respectively. Above a critical PS molar mass, lamellar-like and spherical morphologies were observed, formed by microphase separation into discrete PLA and PS domains. The increase in order with increasing PS molar mass was consistent with the segregation strength-dependent microphase separation behavior. In contrast, when the CCS polymer was synthesized by simultaneously joining PLA and PS chains (the multi macroinitiatior route) it produced rather ill-defined self-assemblies, suggesting that styrene chain extension via the in–out process is important to achieve intramolecular segregation. Using the more PLA-selective acetonitrile as a polymerization solvent indeed produced more well-defined supermicelles with PS cores and PLA coronas, confirming that intramolecular segregation can be driven by the incompatibility of the growing PS to the intramolecular environment, including PLA and the solvent.}, note = {Invited Paper to a Special Issue “Emerging Investigators 2020”}, keywords = {Alternating copolymerization, CCS polymer, Polymer particle, RAFT polymerization, Self-assembly}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } Heteroarm core cross-linked star (CCS) polymers consist of two different polymer chains covalently joined to a cross-linked core. We investigated their self-assembly behavior to understand whether intramolecular segregation can be induced during synthesis, to produce spatial domains enriched with each polymer, and whether they would exhibit well-defined microphase separation morphologies as a result. Heteroarm CCS polymers containing polylactide (PLA) and polystyrene (PS) arms were synthesized by reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer copolymerization of styrene and 1,2-bis(maleimidoethane) in the presence of a PLA-macro chain transfer agent (PLA-CTA), followed by chain extension with styrene (the in–out route). Dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, and small angle X-ray scattering analyses were employed to examine the self-assembly behavior in toluene and acetonitrile, as a relatively neutral and a PLA-selective solvent, respectively. Above a critical PS molar mass, lamellar-like and spherical morphologies were observed, formed by microphase separation into discrete PLA and PS domains. The increase in order with increasing PS molar mass was consistent with the segregation strength-dependent microphase separation behavior. In contrast, when the CCS polymer was synthesized by simultaneously joining PLA and PS chains (the multi macroinitiatior route) it produced rather ill-defined self-assemblies, suggesting that styrene chain extension via the in–out process is important to achieve intramolecular segregation. Using the more PLA-selective acetonitrile as a polymerization solvent indeed produced more well-defined supermicelles with PS cores and PLA coronas, confirming that intramolecular segregation can be driven by the incompatibility of the growing PS to the intramolecular environment, including PLA and the solvent. |
2016 |
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![]() | Ahn, Nam Young; Seo, Myungeun Heteroarm core cross-linked star polymers via RAFT copolymerization of styrene and bismaleimide Journal Article RSC Adv., 6 , pp. 47715-47722, 2016. Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Alternating copolymerization CCS polymer RAFT polymerization @article{Ahn2016, title = {Heteroarm core cross-linked star polymers via RAFT copolymerization of styrene and bismaleimide}, author = {Nam Young Ahn and Myungeun Seo}, url = {https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2016/ra/c6ra07527d#!divAbstract}, year = {2016}, date = {2016-05-09}, journal = {RSC Adv.}, volume = {6}, pages = {47715-47722}, abstract = {We explored reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) copolymerization of 1,2-bis(maleimidoethane) (BMI) with styrene (S) in the presence of polylactide macro-chain transfer agent (PLA-CTA) as a means to synthesize heteroarm core cross-linked star (CCS) polymers consisting of PLA and PS arms (PLAnPSn). Because of the strong alternating tendency of maleimide and styrenic double bonds, copolymerization of BMI with an excess of S depleted BMI in the early stage of polymerization forming a cross-linked core. The remaining S was successively polymerized to grow PS arms from the core, completing PLAnPSn via “in–out” mechanism. Use of a stoichiometric amount of S produced PLAn, which could be used as a macro-CTA for the synthesis of more well-defined PLAnPSn. Compared with divinylbenzene, copolymerization of BMI with S was much more effective for core formation suggesting the importance of the alternating character of the copolymerization. While PLAnPSn existed as stable nanoparticles in a neutral solvent in contrast to linear PLA-b-PS, it also self-assembled to form microphase-separated structures in a selective solvent and in bulk indicating that PLA and PS arms can be intramolecularly segregated.}, keywords = {Alternating copolymerization, CCS polymer, RAFT polymerization}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } We explored reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) copolymerization of 1,2-bis(maleimidoethane) (BMI) with styrene (S) in the presence of polylactide macro-chain transfer agent (PLA-CTA) as a means to synthesize heteroarm core cross-linked star (CCS) polymers consisting of PLA and PS arms (PLAnPSn). Because of the strong alternating tendency of maleimide and styrenic double bonds, copolymerization of BMI with an excess of S depleted BMI in the early stage of polymerization forming a cross-linked core. The remaining S was successively polymerized to grow PS arms from the core, completing PLAnPSn via “in–out” mechanism. Use of a stoichiometric amount of S produced PLAn, which could be used as a macro-CTA for the synthesis of more well-defined PLAnPSn. Compared with divinylbenzene, copolymerization of BMI with S was much more effective for core formation suggesting the importance of the alternating character of the copolymerization. While PLAnPSn existed as stable nanoparticles in a neutral solvent in contrast to linear PLA-b-PS, it also self-assembled to form microphase-separated structures in a selective solvent and in bulk indicating that PLA and PS arms can be intramolecularly segregated. |