A series of alkene-functional polymers were synthesized by controlled polymerization techniques in order to investigate and compare the efficiency and orthogonality of both photochemically and thermally initiated thiol-ene click coupling reactions. The copolymers were designed to have single or multiple alkene-functional groups along the backbone, and to evaluate the robustness of these procedures, functionalization reactions with a library of mercaptans were studied. In comparing the photoinitiated reaction to its thermal counterpart, the thiol-ene photocoupling was found to proceed with higher efficiency, require shorter reaction times for complete conversion, and displayed a higher tolerance to various backbones and functional groups. To examine the orthogonality of the thiol-ene click reaction, an asymmetric telechelic polymer based on PS was designed with alkene functionality at one end and an azide at the other. The thermally initiated thiol-ene coupling was found to be completely orthogonal with the traditional azide/alkyne click reaction allowing the individual chain ends to be quantitatively functionalized without the need for protection/deprotection strategies. From these studies, the demonstrated efficiency and orthogonality of thiol-ene chemistry shows it to be a practical addition to the family of click reactions that are suitable for polymer functionalization.
We present herein a versatile method for grafting polymer brushes to passivated silicon surfaces based on the Cu(I)-catalyzed Huisgen 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition (click chemistry) of omega-azido polymers and alkynyl-functionalized silicon substrates. First, the "passivation" of the silicon substrates toward polymer adsorption was performed by the deposition of an alkyne functionalized self-assembled monolayer (SAM). Then, three tailor-made omega-azido linear brush precursors, i.e., PEG-N3, PMMA-N3, and PS-N3 (Mn approximately 20,000 g/mol), were grafted to alkyne-functionalized SAMs via click chemistry in tetrahydrofuran. The SAM, PEG, PMMA, and PS layers were characterized by ellipsometry, scanning probe microscopy, and water contact angle measurements. Results have shown that the grafting process follows the scaling laws developed for polymer brushes, with a significant dependence over the weight fraction of polymer in the grafting solution and the grafting time. The chemical nature of the brushes has only a weak influence on the click chemistry grafting reaction and morphologies observed, yielding polymer brushes with thickness of ca. 6 nm and grafting densities of ca. 0.2 chains/nm2. The examples developed herein have shown that this highly versatile and tunable approach can be extended to the grafting of a wide range of polymer (pseudo-) brushes to silicon substrates without changing the tethering strategy.
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