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Molecular Weight Dependent Morphological Transitions of Bottlebrush Block Copolymer Particles: Experiments and Simulations

Authors
Kim, E.J.Shin, J.J.Do, T.Lee, G.S.Park, J.Thapar, V.Choi, J.Bang, J.Yi, G.-R.Hur, S.-M.Kim, J.G.Kim, B.J.
Issue Date
23-3월-2021
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Keywords
block copolymer particle; bottlebrush polymer; ellipsoidal particle; molecular weight; onion-like particle; particle shape
Citation
ACS Nano, v.15, no.3, pp.5513 - 5522
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
ACS Nano
Volume
15
Number
3
Start Page
5513
End Page
5522
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/129050
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.1c00263
ISSN
1936-0851
Abstract
The molecular weights and chain rigidities of block copolymers can strongly influence their self-assembly behavior, particularly when the block copolymers are under confinement. We investigate the self-assembly of bottlebrush block copolymers (BBCPs) confined in evaporative emulsions with varying molecular weights. A series of symmetric BBCPs, where polystyrene (PS) and polylactide (PLA) side-chains are grafted onto a polynorbornene (PNB) backbone, are synthesized with varying degrees of polymerization of the PNB (NPNB) ranging from 100 to 300. Morphological transitions from onion-like concentric particles to striped ellipsoids occur as the NPNB of the BBCP increases above 200, which is also predicted from coarse-grained simulations of BBCP-containing droplets by an implicit solvent model. This transition is understood by the combined effects of (i) an elevated entropic penalty associated with bending lamella domains of large molecular weight BBCP particles and (ii) the favorable parallel alignment of the backbone chains at the free surface. Furthermore, the morphological evolutions of onion-like and ellipsoidal particles are compared. Unlike the onion-like BBCP particles, ellipsoidal BBCP particles are formed by the axial development of ring-like lamella domains on the particle surface, followed by the radial propagation into the particle center. Finally, the shape anisotropies of the ellipsoidal BBCP particles are analyzed as a function of particle size. These BBCP particles demonstrate promising potential for various applications that require tunable rheological, optical, and responsive properties. ©
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