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Polymeric Nanocylinders by Combining Block Copolymer Self-Assembly and Nanoskiving
Author(s) -
Mohammadreza Nasiri,
Arthur Bertrand,
Theresa M. Reineke,
Marc A. Hillmyer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/am504486r
Subject(s) - materials science , copolymer , fabrication , nanostructure , self assembly , nanoscopic scale , nanotechnology , microtome , matrix (chemical analysis) , solvent , template , chemical engineering , polymer , polymer chemistry , composite material , organic chemistry , engineering , medicine , chemistry , alternative medicine , physics , pathology , optics
A new facile fabrication approach to generate polymeric nanostructures is described. Block copolymers containing immiscible segments can self-assemble to generate ordered nanostructures, such as cylinders of one block in a matrix of the other in the bulk, which can then be sectioned on the nanoscale using a microtome (nanoskiving). Dispersing these sections in a selective solvent for the matrix block results in nanocylinders. In one example, we utilized a poly(N,N-dimethylacrylamide)-block-poly(styrene) (PDMA-PS) copolymer containing 36% by volume of PS. This composition was selected as it self-assembles into cylinders of PS in a matrix of PDMA. Following a previously described procedure, the cylinders were aligned using a channel die. The aligned samples were subsequently sectioned using a microtome containing a diamond knife and dispersed in water, a selective solvent for the PDMA matrix, affording PS nanocylinders with a PDMA corona. This technique allows tuning of nanocylinders without the requirement of specialty fabrication equipment.

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