H–Si(111)-terminated
surfaces were alkenylated via two routes:
through a novel one-step gas-phase hydrosilylation reaction with short
alkynes (C3 to C6) and for comparison via a
two-step chlorination and Grignard alkenylation process. All modified
surfaces were characterized by static water contact angles and X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Propenyl- and butenyl-coated Si(111)
surfaces display a significantly higher packing density than conventional
C10–C18 alkyne-derived monolayers, showing
the potential of this approach. In addition, propyne chemisorption
proceeds via either of two approaches: the standard hydrosilylation
at the terminal carbon (lin) at temperatures above
90 °C and an unprecedented reaction at the second carbon (iso) at temperatures below 90 °C. Molecular modeling
revealed that the packing energy of a monolayer bonded at the second
carbon is significantly more favorable, which drives iso-attachment, with a dense packing of surface-bound iso-propenyl chains at 40% surface coverage, in line with the experiments
at <90 °C. The highest density monolayers are obtained at
130 °C and show a linear attachment of 1-propenyl chains with
92% surface coverage.
The
synthesis of charged polymers often requires the polymerization
of protected monomers, followed by a polymer-analogous reaction to
the polyelectrolyte product. We present a mild, facile method to cleave tert-butyl groups from poly(tert-butyl
acrylate) blocks that yields poly(acrylic acid) (pAA) blocks free
of traces of the ester. The reaction utilizes a slight excess of HCl
in hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) at room temperature and runs
to completion within 4 h. We compare deprotection in HFIP with the
common TFA/DCM method and show that the latter does not yield clean
pAA. We show the effect of complete tert-butyl cleavage
on a ABA triblock copolymer, where poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)
(pNIPAM) is A and pAA is B, by means of viscosimetry, DLS, and SAXS
on solutions above overlap. The pNIPAM blocks dehydrate, and their
increased self-affinity above the lower critical solution temperature
(LCST) results in network formation by the triblocks. This manifests
itself as an increase in viscosity and a slowing down of the first-order
correlation function in light scattering. However, this stickering
effect manifests itself exclusively when the pAA block is tert-butyl-free. Additionally, SAXS shows that the conformational
properties of tert-butyl-free pAA copolymers are
markedly different from those with residual esters. Thus, we illustrate
a surprising effect of hydrophobic impurities that act across blocks
and assert the usefulness of HCl/HFIP in pAA synthesis.
Nature has developed elegant and economical strategies to produce materials that are well‐adapted to their purposes. As biology evolved to remarkable and complex designs, synthetic mimics are evolving toward new levels of complexity achieving larger combinations of properties within one material. The field of bioinspiration encompasses a wide range of advanced materials ranging from biooptics to energy materials, to biomaterials. In this paper an overview is given of selected recent developments in the field of bioinspired material design focusing on gecko‐inspired adhesives, mussel‐inspired coatings, and spider silk‐inspired biomaterials.
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