Laterally Nanostructured Vesicles, Polygonal Sheets, and
Anisotropically Patched Micelles from Solution-State Self-Assembly of Miktoarm
Star Quaterpolymers: A Simulation Study
Wu, JP (Wu, Jiaping); Wang, Z (Wang, Zheng); Yin, YH (Yin, Yuhua); Jiang, R (Jiang, Run); Li, BH (Li, Baohui)[ 1 ]
MACROMOLECULES, 2019, 52(10): 3680-3688
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.9b00433
Abstract
The
self-assembly of miktoarm star quaterpolymers, composed of one solvophilic arm
and three solvophobic arms connected at a common junction point, in dilute
solutions has been investigated using a simulated annealing technique. By
tuning the strength of incompatibility between the different solvophobic arms
(alpha) or the quaterpolymer composition, unique multicompartment aggregates
are predicted and their formation mechanisms are elucidated. It is the
competition between the interfacial energy and the surface energy that results
in the morphological transitions. At large alpha values, interfacial energy
dominates over the system, and hence, hexagonally shaped laterally patterned
nanosheets with smaller interfacial areas always form to decrease the interfacial
energy. The smaller interfacial area of this morphology comes from the high
local order of the three-colored short-cylinders where any three centers of
mass of the nearest neighboring A, B, and C domains constitute an approximately
regular triangle. The paving of the nearly rigid triangles results in the
hexagonal shape of the whole nanosheet. At relatively small alpha values,
transitions from vesicles to nanosheets and further to micelles are observed
with increasing the volume fraction of the solvophilic arm, f(P). The vesicles
can be of lateral patterns with six protrusions which distributed
symmetrically, and each corresponds to a packing defect of the three-colored
short-cylinders. Micelles can be highly anisotropic and multiple-patched. The
higher curvature of micelles favors the maximal contact for the solvophilic arm
with solvent molecules. The morphological sequence obtained with increasing
f(P) has a similar trend to that obtained with decreasing alpha. Our simulation
results are compared with related experiments. The self-assembly of miktoarm
star quaterpolymers could provide a powerful strategy for fabricating
nanoscaled multicompartment aggregates with special shape and morphology, which
may offer tremendous potential in nanotechnology.