4.2 Article

The role of living/controlled radical polymerization in the formation of improved imprinted polymers

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR RECOGNITION
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 361-369

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jmr.2168

Keywords

molecular imprinting; macromolecular memory; living polymerization; RAFT; controlled polymerization; enhanced binding properties; polymer reaction analysis

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF-CBET-0730903, G00003191]
  2. US Department of Education (GAANN) [P200A060184]

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In this work, living/controlled radical polymerization (LRP) is compared with conventional free radical polymerization in the creation of highly and weakly cross-linked imprinted poly(methacrylic acid-co-ethylene glycol dimethacrylate) networks. It elucidates, for the first time, the effect of LRP on the chain level and begins to explain why the efficiency of the imprinting process is improved using LRP. Imprinted polymers produced via LRP exhibited significantly higher template affinity and capacity compared with polymers prepared using conventional methods. The use of LRP in the creation of highly cross-linked imprinted polymers resulted in a fourfold increase in binding capacity without a decrease in affinity; whereas weakly cross-linked gels demonstrated a nearly threefold increase in binding capacity at equivalent affinity when LRP was used. In addition, by adjusting the double bond conversion, we can choose to increase either the capacity or the affinity in highly cross-linked imprinted polymers, thus allowing the creation of imprinted polymers with tailorable binding parameters. Using free radical polymerization in the creation of polymer chains, as the templatemonomer ratio increased, the average molecular weight of the polymer chains decreased despite a slight increase in the double bond conversion. Thus, the polymer chains formed were shorter but greater in number. Using LRP neutralized the effect of the template. The addition of chain transfer agent resulted in slow, uniform, simultaneous chain growth, resulting in the formation of longer more monodisperse chains. Reaction analysis revealed that propagation time was extended threefold in the formation of highly cross-linked polymers when LRP techniques were used. This delayed the transition to the diffusion-controlled stage of the reaction, which in turn led to the observed enhanced binding properties, decreased polydispersity in the chains, and a more homogeneous macromolecular architecture. Copyright (c) 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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