Toroidal Triblock Copolymer Assemblies
Washington University in St. Louis · University of Delaware
Abstract
A stable phase of toroidal, or ringlike, supramolecular assemblies was formed by combining dilute solution characteristics critical for both bundling of like-charged biopolymers and block copolymer micelle formation. The key to toroid versus classic cylinder micelle formation is the interaction of the negatively charged hydrophilic block of an amphiphilic triblock copolymer with a positively charged divalent organic counterion. This produces a self-attraction of cylindrical micelles that leads to toroid formation, a mechanism akin to the toroidal bundling of semiflexible charged biopolymers such as DNA. The toroids can be kinetically trapped or chemically cross-linked. Insight into the mechanism of toroid…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 24.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
6- DJDarrin J. PochanCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis, University of Delaware
- ZCZhiyun ChenCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis, University of Delaware
- HCHonggang CuiCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis, University of Delaware
- KHKelly HalesCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis, University of Delaware
- KQKai QiCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis, University of Delaware
Topics & keywords
- Micelle
- Toroid
- Copolymer
- Chemical physics
- Counterion
- Materials science
- Amphiphile
- Cylinder