4.7 Article

Bifunctional Janus Spheres with Chemically Orthogonal Patches

Journal

ACS MACRO LETTERS
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 714-718

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.9b00193

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Funding

  1. CSC [201406230043]

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Bifunctional Janus particles with patches carrying orthogonal surface functionalities that can be independently modified are widely seen as promising building blocks for the bottom-up assembly of functional materials due to their full compositional and geometrical programmability. However, synthesis of these colloids remains an elusive task as current scalable procedures are generally limited to monofunctional particles only. Herein, a scalable bulk wet-chemical synthetic method for fabricating bifunctional Janus particles following a two-step dispersion polymerization is developed. Patch formation on these colloids is driven by the spontaneous phase separation between a brominated outer shell and poly(propargyl acrylate) (p(PA)), formed after the seed particles were swollen with the corresponding monomer. The size ratio between the two patches is readily tunable by controlling the volumetric ratio between the feeding monomers. The distinct patches of these Janus particles carry chemical handles facilitating independent and orthogonal surface modification using Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization (ATRP) and thiol-yne Click chemistry for the brominated and alkyne-containing patches, respectively. The presented route toward bifunctional patchy spheres provides a versatile starting point for the development of bifunctional colloidal particles with tailored directional properties.

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