0000000000086017
AUTHOR
Thomas P. Russell
Interfacial Assembly and Jamming Behavior of Polymeric Janus Particles at Liquid Interfaces
The self-assembly and interfacial jamming of spherical Janus nanoparticles (JNPs) at the water/oil interface were investigated. Polymeric JNPs, made by cross-linking polystyrene-block-polybutadiene-block-poly(methyl methacrylate) (PS-PB-PMMA), with a high interfacial activity assemble at the water/oil interface. During the self-assembly at the interface, the interfacial energy was reduced and a dynamic interlayer was observed that is responsive to the pH of the aqueous phase. Unlike hard particles, the JNPs are composed of polymer chains that can spread at the liquid-liquid interface to maximize coverage at relatively low areal densities. In a pendant drop geometry, the interfacial area of …
Highly Ordered Nanoporous Thin Films from Photocleavable Block Copolymers
Poly(styrene-block-ethylene oxide) with an o-nitrobenzyl ester photocleavable junction (PS-hν-PEO) was synthesized by a combined RAFT polymerization and “click chemistry“ approach and represents the first report utilizing this method for the synthesis of photocleavable block copolymers. After solvent annealing, highly ordered thin films were prepared from PS-hν-PEO. Following a very mild UV exposure and successive washing with water, PS-hν-PEO thin films were transformed into highly ordered nanoporous thin PS films with pore diameters of 15–20 nm and long range ordering (over 2 μm × 2 μm). Afterwards the pores were filled with PDMS by spin-coating in combination with capillary forces. After…
The Next 100 Years of Polymer Science
International audience; The year 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of the first article on poly merization, published by Hermann Staudinger. It is Staudinger who realized that polymers consist of long chains of covalently linked building blocks. Polymers have had a tremendous impact on the society ever since this initial publication. People live in a world that is almost impossible to imagine without synthetic polymers. But what does the future hold for polymer science? In this article, the editors and advisory board of Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics reflect on this question.
Using Janus Nanoparticles To Trap Polymer Blend Morphologies during Solvent-Evaporation-Induced Demixing
Using ternary blends of polystyrene (PS), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), and Janus particles (JPs) with symmetric PS and PMMA hemispheres, we demonstrate the stabilization of dispersed and bicontinuous phase-separated morphologies by the interfacial adsorption of Janus particles during demixing upon solvent removal. The resulting blend morphology could be varied by changing the blend composition and JP loading. Increasing particle loading decreased the size of phase-separated domains, while altering the mixing ratio of the PS/PMMA homopolymers produced morphologies ranging from PMMA droplets in a PS matrix to PS droplets in a PMMA matrix. Notably, bicontinuous morphologies were obtained …