4.8 Article

Binary Polymer Brushes of Strongly Immiscible Polymers

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 23, Pages 12505-12515

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am5080248

Keywords

binary polymer brush; grafting through; block copolymer; responsive brush; supramolecular assembly; bioadhesion

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR 0947897]
  2. Center for Drug Design and Delivery (RISK grant of the Department of Community and Economic Development, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania)

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The phenomenon of microphase separation is an example of self-assembly in soft matter and has been observed in block copolymers (BCPs) and similar materials (i.e., supramolecular assemblies (SMAs) and homo/block copolymer blends (HBCs)). In this study, we use microphase separation to construct responsive polymer brushes that collapse to generate periodic surfaces. This is achieved by a chemical reaction between the minor block (10%, poly(4-vinylpyridine)) of the block copolymer and a substrate. The major block of polystyrene (PS) forms mosaic-like arrays of grafted patches that are 10-20 nm in size. Depending on the nature of the assembly (SMA, HBC, or neat BCP) and annealing method (exposure to vapors of different solvents or heating above the glass transition temperature), a range of mosaic brushes with different parameters can be obtained. Successive grafting of a secondary polymer (polyacrylamide, PAAm) results in the fabrication of binary polymer brushes (BPBs). Upon being exposed to specific selective solvents, BPBs may adopt different conformations. The surface tension and adhesion of the binary brush are governed by the polymer occupying the top stratum. The mosaic brush approach allows for a combination of strongly immiscible polymers in one brush. This facilitates substantial contrast in the surface properties upon switching, previously only possible for substrates composed of predetermined nanostructures. We also demonstrate a possible application of such PS/PAAm brushes in a tunable bioadhesion bioadhesive (PS on top) or nonbioadhesive (PAAm on top) surface as revealed by Escherichia coli bacterial seeding.

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