Issue 35, 2015

Synthesis, nanoprecipitation and pH sensitivity of amphiphilic linear–dendritic hybrid polymers and hyperbranched-polydendrons containing tertiary amine functional dendrons

Abstract

The combination of linear polymers with dendritic chain-ends has led to numerous studies of linear–dendritic polymer hybrid materials. Interchain branching within the linear segment of these materials has recently extended this concept to the formation of soluble hyperbranched-polydendrons. Here, the introduction of amphiphilicity into hyperbranched-polydendrons has been achieved for the first time through the use of tertiary amine functional dendritic chain-ends and branched hydrophobic polymer segments. The synthesis and aqueous nanoprecipitation of these branched materials is compared with their linear–dendritic polymer analogues, showing that chain-end chemistry/generation, precipitation medium pH and polymer architecture are all capable of influencing the ability to generate nanoparticles, the resulting nanoparticle diameter and dispersity, and subsequent response to changes in pH.

Graphical abstract: Synthesis, nanoprecipitation and pH sensitivity of amphiphilic linear–dendritic hybrid polymers and hyperbranched-polydendrons containing tertiary amine functional dendrons

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Mar 2015
Accepted
27 Jul 2015
First published
27 Jul 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 7005-7015

Author version available

Synthesis, nanoprecipitation and pH sensitivity of amphiphilic linear–dendritic hybrid polymers and hyperbranched-polydendrons containing tertiary amine functional dendrons

H. E. Rogers, P. Chambon, S. E. R. Auty, F. Y. Hern, A. Owen and S. P. Rannard, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 7005 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM00673B

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