Aminopropyi-heptasobutyl POSS (NH 2 C 3 H 6 POSS) was purchased from Hybrid Plastics. All other materials were purchased from available suppliers (Sigma-Aldrich, TCI, Fisher Scientific, etc.) and used without further purification unless otherwise noted. Tetrahydrofuran (THF) was distilled over sodium naphthalenide and degassed at 10 −6 Torr. Hexane was distilled over 1,1diphenylhexyllithium and degassed at 10 −6 Torr. Lithium chloride (LiCl) was dried with stirring at 150 °C for 24 h at 10 −6 Torr. A 1.4 M sec-butyllithium (s-BuLi) solution in cyclohexane was degassed, appropriately diluted in hexane, divided into clean glass ampules equipped with breakseals at 10 −6 Torr, and stored at −30 °C. 1,1-Diphenylethylene (DPE) and benzyl methacrylate (BzMA) were distilled over calcium hydride (CaH 2 ) at reduced pressure and then redistilled over CaH 2 at 10 −6 Torr. DPE, LiCl, and BzMA were appropriately diluted in THF, divided into clean glass ampules equipped with break-seals at 10 −6 Torr, and stored at −30 °C. A Grubbs third generation catalyst, Ph-CH=Ru(Cl) 2 (H 2 IMes)(pyridine) 2 (G3), was prepared according to a previously reported procedure. S1
S.1.2. Instruments and Analyses.Proton and carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance ( 1 H and 13 C NMR) spectra were recorded using a JNM-ECX 400 NMR spectrometer (JEOL) in chloroform-d (CDCl 3 , 99.8% atom D, contains 0.03 vol% tetramethylsilane (TMS)) at 25 °C. Number-average molecular weight (M n ) and dispersity (Ɖ) values of the polymers were measured using a size exclusion chromatographymultiangle laser light scattering (SEC-MALLS) equipped with a 515 HPLC pump (Waters), a set of four Styragel columns connected in series (HR 0.5, HR 1, HR 3, and HR 4 with pore sizes of
A facile and efficient synthetic grafting-through strategy for preparing well-defined bottlebrush block copolymers (BBCPs) was developed through a combination of living anionic polymerization (LAP) and ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP). ω-End-norbornyl polystyrene (NPSt) and poly(4-tert-butoxystyrene) (NPtBOS) were synthesized by LAP using terminator of chlorine moiety containing silane-protecting amine and coupled with a subsequent amidation using norbornyl activated ester. Bottlebrush homopolymers of NPSt were obtained by ROMP with ultrahigh molecular weights (MWs, M w = 2928 kDa) and narrow molecular weight distributions (MWDs, Đ = 1.07) at high degree of polymerizations (DP w = 1084). Welldefined BBCPs with ultrahigh MWs (M w ∼ 3055 kDa) and narrow MWDs (Đ ∼ 1.13) were synthesized through sequential ROMP of NPSt with NPtBOS. The effect of ultrahigh MWs was investigated by self-assembly of the BBCPs in which the phaseseparated BBCPs presented periodic lamellar structures and exhibited structural colors from blue to pink.
An operationally simple approach to preparation of ωnorbornenyl macromonomers (MMs) is reported. Reaction of exo-N-(6hydroxyhexyl)-5-norbornene-2,3-dicarboximide or exo-N-(10-hydroxydecyl)-5-norbornene-2,3-dicarboximide with α-phenyl acrylate (α-PhA) led to novel end-capping agents, NBxPhA [x is 6 (n-hexyl) or 10 (ndecyl)]. Living anionic polymerization of styrene and methyl methacrylate followed by capping with NBxPhA yielded the desired MMs, ω-norbornenyl polystyrene (NBxPS) and ω-norbornenyl poly-(methyl methacrylate) (NBxPMMA). These MMs, formed with controlled molecular weights (M n = 2−5 kDa) and low dispersity (Đ = 1.02−1.07), upon ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) resulted in P(NB-g-PS) and P(NB-g-PMMA) bottlebrush homopolymers with ∼95% and ∼75% yield, respectively, signifying efficient end-capping efficiency. The factors affecting synthesis of NBxPS and NBxPMMA and their subsequent ROMP, such as [NBxPhA]/[sec-BuLi] ratio, the length of alkyl spacer, and varying molecular weights of the macromonomers, were optimized. Well-defined bottlebrush homopolymers with low polydispersity (Đ = 1.02−1.39) were achieved at various degrees of polymerization (DP 50−600). Additionally, copolymerization of the homopolymers through sequential ROMP furnished the bottlebrush block copolymers (M n = 262−1593 kDa, Đ = 1.09−1.32) displaying photonic crystal properties.
We
report the synthesis of a bottlebrush statistical copolymer
(BSCP) architecture and its role in directing molecular packing in
the bulk state. Copolymers with a statistical distribution of two
chemically distinct side chains on a common polymer backbone were
prepared via one-pot ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP)
of norbornene-capped macromonomers with similar reactivities. Kinetic
studies suggest a near-random compositional profile of polystyrene
(PS) and poly(dimethyl siloxane) (PDMS) side chains along the backbone.
The PS-stat-PDMS BSCPs with symmetric volume fractions
rapidly assembled into lamellar microstructures when cast from solution
without any further thermal or solvent annealing. The domain size
is controlled by the side-chain length, ranging from below 10 nm to
almost 20 nm. Furthermore, the bottlebrush statistical copolymer self-assembly
yielded oriented lamellar morphologies over large areas after thermal
annealing for 10 min at 200 °C without external guiding via surface
or topographic patterning. Such statistical architectural control
of the composition enables a simple preparation route for copolymers
for potential use in the directed self-assembly of device architectures
and other applications that require well-defined morphologies.
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