Thermodynamic Parameters of Temperature-Induced Phase Transition for Brushes onto Nanoparticles: Hydrophilic versus Hydrophobic End-Groups Functionalization

Abstract

Quantification of the stimuli-responsive phase transition in polymers is topical and important for the understanding and development of novel stimuli-responsive materials. The temperature-induced phase transition of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAm) with one thiol end group depends on the confinement—free polymer or polymer brush—on the molecular weight and on the nature of the second end. This paper describes the synthesis of heterotelechelic PNIPAm of different molecular weights with a thiol end group—that specifically binds to gold nanorods and a hydrophilic NIPAm end group by reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization. Proton high-resolution magic angle sample spinning NMR spectra are used as an indicator of the polymer chain conformations. The characteristics of phase transition given by the transition temperature, entropy, and width of transition are obtained by a two-state model. The dependence of thermodynamic parameters on molecular weight is compared for hydrophilic and hydrophobic end functional-free polymers and brushes.

Description
Keywords
1H NMR spectroscopy, coil-to-globule transition, gold nanorods, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), polymer brush, temperature-induced phase transition
Citation
Schweizerhof, S., Demco, D. E., Mourran, A., Keul, H., Fechete, R., & Möller, M. (2017). Thermodynamic Parameters of Temperature-Induced Phase Transition for Brushes onto Nanoparticles: Hydrophilic versus Hydrophobic End-Groups Functionalization. 38(19). https://doi.org//10.1002/marc.201700362
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported