4.8 Article

Atom transfer radical polymerization from nanoparticles: A tool for the preparation of well-defined hybrid nanostructures and for understanding the chemistry of controlled/living radical polymerizations from surfaces

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 123, Issue 31, Pages 7497-7505

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja010235q

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Structurally well-defined polymer-nanoparticle hybrids were prepared by modifying the surface of silica nanoparticles with initiators for atom transfer radical polymerization and by using these initiator-modified nanoparticles as macroinitiators. Well-defined polymer chains were grown from the nanoparticle surfaces to yield individual particles composed of a silica core and a well-defined, densely grafted outer polystyrene or poly(methyl methacrylate) layer. In both cases, linear kinetic plots, linear plots of molecular weight (M-n) versus conversion, increases in hydrodynamic diameter with increasing conversion, and narrow molecular weight distributions (M-w/M-n) for the grafted polymer samples were observed. Polymerizations of styrene from smaller (75-nm-diameter) silica nanoparticles exhibited good molecular weight control, while polymerizations of methyl methacrylate (MMA) from the same nanoparticles exhibited good molecular weight control only when a small amount of free initiator was added to the polymerization solution. The difference in polymerization behavior for styrene and MMA was ascribed to the facts that styrene undergoes thermal self-initiation while MMA does not and that termination processes involving freely diffusing chains are faster than those involving surface-bound chains. The polymerizations of both styrene and MMA from larger (300-nm-diameter) silica nanoparticles did not exhibit molecular weight control. This lack of control was ascribed to the very high initial monomer-to-initiator ratio in these polymerizations. Molecular weight control was induced by the addition of a small amount of free initiator to the polymerization but was not induced when 5-15 mol % of deactivator (Cu(II) complex) was added.

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