Issue 8, 2017

Synthesis of polyacid nanogels: pH-responsive sub-100 nm particles for functionalisation and fluorescent hydrogel assembly

Abstract

Nanogels are crosslinked polymer particles with a swollen size between 1 and 100 nm. They are of major interest for advanced surface coatings, drug delivery, diagnostics and biomaterials. Synthesising polyacid nanogels that show triggered swelling using a scalable approach is a key objective of polymer colloid chemistry. Inspired by the ability of polar surfaces to enhance nanoparticle stabilisation, we report the first examples of pH-responsive polyacid nanogels containing high –COOH contents prepared by a simple, scalable, aqueous method. To demonstrate their functionalisation potential, glycidyl methacrylate was reacted with the –COOH chemical handles and the nanogels were converted to macro-crosslinkers. The concentrated (functionalised) nanogel dispersions retained their pH-responsiveness, were shear-thinning and formed physical gels at pH 7.4. The nanogels were covalently interlinked via free-radical coupling at 37 °C to form transparent, ductile, hydrogels. Mixing of the functionalised nanogels with polymer dots enabled covalent assembly of fluorescent hydrogels.

Graphical abstract: Synthesis of polyacid nanogels: pH-responsive sub-100 nm particles for functionalisation and fluorescent hydrogel assembly

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Dec 2016
Accepted
19 Jan 2017
First published
25 Jan 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 1554-1560

Synthesis of polyacid nanogels: pH-responsive sub-100 nm particles for functionalisation and fluorescent hydrogel assembly

A. H. Milani, J. M. Saunders, N. T. Nguyen, L. P. D. Ratcliffe, D. J. Adlam, A. J. Freemont, J. A. Hoyland, S. P. Armes and B. R. Saunders, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 1554 DOI: 10.1039/C6SM02713J

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