In
this work, bipolar electrochemistry is used to perform wireless
indirect electrodeposition of two different polymer coatings on both
sides of carbon nanotube arrays. Using a thermoresponsive hydrogel
on one side and an inert insoluble polymer on the other side, it is
possible to generate, in a single step, a nanoporous reservoir with
Janus character closed on one side by a thermoresponsive membrane.
The thermoresponsive polymer, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)
(pNIPAM), is generated by the local reduction of persulfate ions,
which initiates radical polymerization of NIPAM. Electrophoretic paint
(EP) is chosen as an inert polymer. It is deposited by precipitation
because of a local decrease in pH during water oxidation. Both polymers
can be deposited simultaneously on opposite sides of the bipolar electrode
during the application of the electric field, yielding a double-modified
Janus object. Moreover, the length and thickness of the polymer layers
can be controlled by varying the electric field and the deposition
time. This concept is applied to vertically aligned carbon nanotube
arrays (VACNTs), trapped inside an anodic aluminum oxide membrane,
which can further be used as a smart reservoir for chemical storage
and release. A fluorescent dye is loaded in the VACNTs and its release
is studied as a function of temperature. Low temperature, when the
hydrogel layer is in the swollen state, allows diffusion of the molecule.
Dye release occurs on the hydrogel-modified side of the VACNTs. At
high temperatures, when the hydrogel layer is in the collapsed state,
dye release is blocked because of the impermeability of the pNIPAM
layer. This concept paves the way toward the design of advanced devices
in the fields of drug storage and directed delivery.
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