Bottlebrush polymers are complex architectures with densely grafted polymer side chains along polymeric backbones. The dense and conformationally extended chains in bottlebrush polymers give rise to unique properties, including low chain entanglement, low critical aggregation concentrations, and elastomeric properties in the bulk phase. Conjugated polymers have garnered attention as lightweight, processible, and flexible semi-conducting materials. They are promising candidates in electronic devices and sensors, but their optoelectronic properties depend on adequate polymer ordering, π-π interactions, and crystallization. Crystallization-driven self-assembly of conjugated polymers has become a prominent method to optimize properties including band energies, redox potentials, and exciton diffusion and transport. Much progress has been made in controlled block copolymer self-assembly, but despite their promising properties, reports of conjugated bottlebrushes have been limited, and their self-assembly is relatively unexplored. For the first time, we report the synthesis of conjugated core-shell bottlebrush polymers. These materials contain poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) in either core or shell position. We demonstrate that the use of P3HT as a crystallizable conjugated polymer and PEG as a colloidally stabilizing and disaggregating block facilitates their self-assembly into a number of unique crystalline morphologies with longer conjugation lengths and lower exciton bandwidths relative to analogous diblock copolymers. These include intramolecularly self-assembled segregated bottlebrush polymers, short nanofibers formed by end-on-end stacking of bottlebrush molecules, extremely long >20 μm nanofibers formed exclusively by end-on-end stacking, and >15 μm nanoribbons formed from both end-on-end and side-by-side stacking of bottlebrush polymers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sc06868h | DOI Listing |
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
The University of Sydney, School of Chemistry, Buiding F11, Easyern Avenue, 2006, Sydney, AUSTRALIA.
Amphiphilic bottlebrush block copolymers (BBCs) with tadpole-like, coil-rod architecture can be used to self-assemble into functional polymer nanodiscs directly in water. The hydrophobic segments of the BBC were tuned via the ratio of ethoxy-ethyl glycidyl ether (EE) to tetrahydropyranyl glycidyl ether (TP) within the grafted polymer sidechains. In turn, this variation controlled the sizes, pH-responsiveness, and drug loading capacity of the self-assembled nanodiscs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Nano
January 2025
Department of Chemistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, United States.
Adv Healthc Mater
January 2025
Hangzhou Institute of Medicine, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 310022, China.
Bottlebrush polymers (BBPs) have garnered significant attention as advanced drug delivery systems, capable of transporting a diverse range of therapeutic agents, including both chemical drugs and biologics. Despite their effectiveness, the empty BBP vectors post-drug release may pose long-term safety risks due to their difficult systemic clearance. Here, a responsive degradable BBP platform for cancer therapy is developed, featuring a poly(disulfide) backbone grafted with fluorine-terminated zwitterionic side chains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
January 2025
Tianjin Key Laboratory of Brine Chemical Engineering and Resource Eco-utilization, College of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Tianjin University of Science & Technology, Tianjin 300457, P. R. China.
Polymer nanoparticles with low curvature, especially two-dimensional (2D) soft materials, are rich in functions and outstanding properties and have received extensive attention. Crystallization-driven self-assembly (CDSA) of linear semicrystalline block copolymers is currently a common method of constructing 2D platelets of uniform size. Although accompanied by high controllability, this CDSA method usually and inevitably requires a longer aging time and lower assembly concentration, limiting the large-scale preparation of nanoaggregates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSmall
December 2024
Institute of Chemistry, University of Potsdam, Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 24-25, 14476, Potsdam, Germany.
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a major cause of death worldwide. This urges the search for alternatives to antibiotics, and antimicrobial polymers hold promise due to their reduced susceptibility to AMR. The topology of such macromolecules has a strong impact on their activity, with bottlebrush architectures outperforming their linear counterparts significantly.
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