4.8 Article

Tuning Polymer Thickness: Synthesis and Scaling Theory of Homologous Series of Dendronized Polymers

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 131, Issue 33, Pages 11841-11854

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja9032132

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ETH [TH-1608-1, TH-0908-2]
  2. European Community [NMP3-CT-2005-016375, FP6-2004-NMP-T1-4 STRP 033339]

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The thickness of dendronized polymers can be tuned by varying their generation g and the dendron functionality X. Systematic studies of this effect require (i) synthetic ability to produce large samples of high quality polymers with systematic variation of g, X and of the backbone polymerization degree N, (ii) a theoretical model relating the solvent swollen polymer diameter, r, and persistence length, lambda, to g and X. This article presents an optimized synthetic method and a simple theoretical model. Our theory. approach, based on the Boris-Rubinstein model of dendrimers predicts r similar to n(1/4)g(1/2) and lambda similar to n(2) where n = [(X - 1)(g) - 1]/(X - 2) is the number of monomers in a dendron. The average monomer concentration in the branched. side chains of a dendronized polymer increases with g in qualitative contrast to bottle brushes whose side chains are linear. The stepwise, attach-to, synthesis of X = 3 dendronized polymers yielded gram amounts of g = 1-4 polymers with N approximate to 1000 and N approximate to 7000 as compared to earlier maxima of 0.1 g amounts and of N approximate to 1000. The method can be modified to dendrons of different X The conversion fraction at each attach-to step, as quantified by converting unreacted groups with UV labels, was 99.3% to 99.8%. Atomic force microscopy on mixed polymer samples allows to distinguish between chains of different g and suggests an apparent height difference of 0.85 nm per generation as well as an increase of persistence length with g. We suggest synthetic directions to allow confrontation with theory.

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