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Weak Polyelectrolytes as Nanoarchitectonic Design Tools for Functional Materials: A Review of Recent Achievements

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27103263

Keywords

polymer materials; polyelectrolyte films; electrodeposition; block copolymer; self-assembly; LbL; nanostructured materials; pharmaceutical vectors

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Weak polyelectrolytes offer adjustable properties through pH and ionic strength stimuli, making them key components for the design of dynamic systems with precise structures, compositions, and responses to stimuli.
The ionization degree, charge density, and conformation of weak polyelectrolytes can be adjusted through adjusting the pH and ionic strength stimuli. Such polymers thus offer a range of reversible interactions, including electrostatic complexation, H-bonding, and hydrophobic interactions, which position weak polyelectrolytes as key nano-units for the design of dynamic systems with precise structures, compositions, and responses to stimuli. The purpose of this review article is to discuss recent examples of nanoarchitectonic systems and applications that use weak polyelectrolytes as smart components. Surface platforms (electrodeposited films, brushes), multilayers (coatings and capsules), processed polyelectrolyte complexes (gels and membranes), and pharmaceutical vectors from both synthetic or natural-type weak polyelectrolytes are discussed. Finally, the increasing significance of block copolymers with weak polyion blocks is discussed with respect to the design of nanovectors by micellization and film/membrane nanopatterning via phase separation.

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