The living anionic copolymerization
of isoprene and styrene in
cyclohexane affords tapered block copolymers due to the highly disparate
reactivity ratios of r
I = 12.8 and r
S = 0.051. Repeated addition of a mixture of
these monomers was exploited to generate tapered multiblock copolymer
architectures of the (AB)
n
type with up
to 10 blocks (1 ≤ n ≤ 5), thereby subdividing
the polymer chains in alternating flexible polyisoprene (PI) and rigid
polystyrene (PS) segments. Three series of well-defined tapered multiblock
copolymers with approximate molecular weights of 80, 240, and 400
kg/mol were prepared on the 100 g scale. Via this synthetic strategy
polymer chains were divided in di-, tetra-, hexa-, octa-, and decablock
tapered multiblock structures. Because of the living nature of the
polymerization, low dispersities in the range 1.06–1.28 (decablock)
were obtained. To ensure full monomer conversion prior to the addition
of the isoprene/styrene mixture, kinetic Monte Carlo simulation was
employed, permitting to simulate chain growth in silico by employing the known polymerization rates and rate constants k
p. The synthesized tapered multiblock copolymers
were characterized via SEC and selected samples via oxidative degradation
of the polyisoprene block in solution, confirming the well-defined
nature of the PS segments. Subsequently, the question was addressed,
to which extent the tapered multiblock copolymers are capable of forming
ordered nanosegregated morphologies. Detailed thermal, structural,
and rheological investigations showed that the tapered multiblock
copolymers with a molecular weight of 240 kg/mol formed ordered phases
with the expected lamellar morphology. However, X-ray scattering data
and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images of the octablock
and decablock copolymers reflect weakly ordered structures at ambient
temperature. The domain spacing, d, was found to
scale as d ∼ N
0.62, where N is the total degree of polymerization,
suggesting stretching of chains and nonideal configurations. Following
the structure factor, S(q), as a
function of temperature revealed that the tapered multiblock copolymers
undergo a fluctuation-induced first-order transition at the respective
order-to-disorder transition temperature, T
ODT. The viscoelastic response of the tapered copolymers was controlled
by the nanodomain structure, the degree of segregation, nanodomain-bridging
configurations of blocks, and also the proximity to the glass temperature
of the vitrified PS domains. Tapered hexablock copolymers were found
to best combine structural integrity and mechanical toughness, while
maintaining a large strain at break (>900%).