Coassembly of Linear Diblock Copolymer Chains and
Homopolymer Brushes on Silica Particles: A Combined Computer Simulation and
Experimental Study
Hou, WM (Hou, Wangmeng)[ 1,2 ] ; Feng, Y (Feng, Yuan)[ 3,4 ] ; Li, BH (Li, Baohui)[ 3,4 ] ; Zhao, HY (Zhao, Hanying)[ 1,2 ]
MACROMOLECULES,
2018, 51(5): 1894-1904
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.7b02461
WOS:000427661000032
Abstract
A combined
computer simulation and experimental study on coassembly of
poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate)-block-polystyrene (PDMAEMA-b-PS)
block copolymers and PS brushes on silica particles was performed. PS brushes
on silica particles at two different grafting densities were prepared by the
"grafting to" approach, and PDMAEMA-b-PS block copolymers with
different molecular weights and compositions were synthesized by reversible
addition fragmentation chain transfer polymerization. In THF/methanol mixtures,
block copolymer chains and PS brushes coassemble into surface micelles
(s-micelles), with collapsed PS cores and PDMAEMA coronae. Meanwhile, block
copolymer chains are able to self-assemble into block copolymer micelles
(b-micelles). Computer simulation results and experimental results indicate
that block copolymer concentration, PS and PDMAEMA block lengths, and PS
grafting density exert significant influences on the coassembly process. In low
BCP concentration regime, the average size of s-micelles increases with BCP
concentration and keeps unchanged at high concentration. The PS block length
has a significant influence on the size of s-micelles. The average size
increases with an increase in PS block length. For a BCP with long solvophilic
PDMAEMA block, it is energy favorable to self-assemble into b-micelles, but to
coassemble into s-micelles. With an increase in PDMAEMA block length, the
morphology of the s-micelles changes from wormlike/spherical structures to
spherical structures and to smaller spherical structures. The average size of
the s-micelles coassembled by PS brushes at a lower grafting density is smaller
than those coassembled by PS brushes at a higher grafting density.