Uniform nanodonuts: Stable toroidal micelles that have a highly uniform size and shape spontaneously self-assemble from a selective THF/ethanol solvent mixture (see 3D AFM image). The donut-shaped micelles can be used as a template to grow gold nanoparticles, which form along the ring surface.
Microwave-assisted polymerization has been utilized to synthesize amphiphilic poly(2-ethyl-2-oxazoline-block-2-"soy alkyl"-2-oxazoline) diblock copolymers (PEtOx-PSoyOx). The amphiphilic block copolymers have been used to prepare aqueous spherical micelles consisting of a PEtOx corona and a PSoyOx core, which have been further cross-linked by UV irradiation. The morphology of these cross-linked micelles has been shown to reversibly change from spheres to short rods referred to as rice grains whenever the micelles were transferred from water into acetone, a nonselective solvent for the constituent blocks. This morphological transition has been attributed to the swelling of the slightly cross-linked PSoyOx core.
We report on the first successful example of the preparation of triblock copolymers via a cationic
ring-opening polymerization procedure. A library of 30 triblock copolymers was prepared from 2-methyl-, 2-ethyl-,
2-nonyl-, and 2-phenyl-2-oxazoline in a single-mode microwave reactor. The polymers exhibited narrow molecular
weight distributions and showed only minor deviations from the targeted monomer ratio of 33:33:33. The glass-transition temperature of the triblock copolymers spanned the range from 50 to 100 °C depending on the
incorporated monomers. The micellization behavior was investigated for some amphiphilic triblock copoly(2-oxazoline)s containing two hydrophilic and one hydrophobic blocks. The size of the micelles was larger when
the hydrophobic block is located at one end of the triblock copoly(2-oxazoline)s, as measured by atomic force
microscopy and dynamic light scattering.
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