Xue Li1, Yongfeng Gao2, Michael J Serpe3. 1. Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G2, Canada. xue13@ualberta.ca. 2. Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G2, Canada. yg2@ualberta.ca. 3. Department of Chemistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G2, Canada. serpe@ualberta.ca.
Abstract
Poly (N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAm)-based hydrogels and hydrogel particles (microgels) have been extensively studied since their discovery a number of decades ago. While their utility seems to have no limit, this feature article is focused on their development and application for sensing small molecules, macromolecules, and biomolecules. We highlight hydrogel/microgel-based photonic materials that have order in one, two, or three dimensions, which exhibit optical properties that depend on the presence and concentration of various analytes. A particular focus is put on one-dimensional materials developed in the Serpe Group.
Poly (N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAm)-based hydrogels and hydrogel particles (microgels) have been extensively studied since their discovery a number of decades ago. While their utility seems to have no limit, this feature article is focused on their development and application for sensing small molecules, macromolecules, and biomolecules. We highlight hydrogel/microgel-based photonic materials that have order in one, two, or three dimensions, which exhibit optical properties that depend on the presence and concentration of various analytes. A particular focus is put on one-dimensional materials developed in the Serpe Group.
Polymer-based stimuli responsive materials have been of great interest over the years due to their ability to convert external chemical and/or physical stimuli into observable changes of the material itself [1,2,3]. Some of the most important of these materials are responsive hydrogels, which are hydrophilic crosslinked polymer networks capable of changing their solvation state in response to various stimuli [4,5,6]. Hydrogel particles (e.g., microgels) can also be synthesized, and typically have diameters of 100–2000 nm [7,8]. Over the years, many polymers, and polymer-based materials, have been identified that exhibit a specific response to a variety of stimuli. Some of those stimuli include temperature [9,10], light [11,12], electric [13], and magnetic fields [14]. These responsivities make hydrogels very useful for many applications, e.g., sensing [15,16], drug delivery [17,18], artificial muscles [19,20], tissue engineering [21,22], and self-healing materials [23,24]. Among these, thermoresponsive materials have been the most extensively studied, and poly (N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAm)-based hydrogels and microgels are the most well-known and extensively studied thermoresponsive materials [25,26,27]. PNIPAm is fully soluble in water below ~32 °C, and transitions to an “insoluble” state when the temperature is above 32 °C. This transition is observed as a coil-to-globule transition, where the polymer transitions from an extended to collapsed state, respectively [28]. The conformational change is also accompanied by a water exchange process. That is, when pNIPAm undergoes the coil-to-globule transition, water is “expelled”, while water is “absorbed” when pNIPAm undergoes a globule-to-coil transition. Similarly, crosslinked pNIPAm-based hydrogels and microgels contract upon heating, and swell with water upon cooling [29,30,31]. This swelling-deswelling transition is fully reversible over multiple heating/cooling cycles.While there are many uses of pNIPAm hydrogels and microgels, a majority of this review focuses on their use for sensing applications. Specifically, this review focuses on the use of microgels and hydrogels as components of photonic material (PM) assemblies. A specific example of a PM is a photonic crystal (PC); PCs are composed of materials of varying refractive indices arranged in an ordered fashion in one, two, or three dimensions (1D, 2D, 3D). There are many examples of PCs in nature, most commonly associated with the vibrant colors of butterfly wings and the opal gemstone. These materials are unique because, unlike many other colored materials found in nature that exhibit color due to the absorbance of light by small molecule chromophores, PCs are colored due to their structure. Specifically, the opal gemstone is composed of a close-packed array of colloids (typically silica), which are capable of interacting with wavelengths of light in the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum. These interactions lead to constructive and destructive interference of the light in the assembly, leading to specific wavelengths of light being reflected, which leads to the observed color [32]. A major goal of many research groups around the world is to generate synthetic colloidal crystals. This is typically done by “forcing” colloids of high refractive index into an ordered array in a matrix of relatively low refractive index (e.g., air, water, polymer). If the particle periodicity (i.e., refractive index periodicity) is on the order of visible wavelengths of light, then the device will appear colored. This is a direct result of light refraction, reflection, and diffraction off the material’s particles, which leads to light interference, and hence color [32,33,34]. PM and PCs are of great interest for various applications, including optics [35,36], actuators [37,38], sensors [39], controlled drug delivery [40] and for display devices [41,42].In this submission, we will first discuss examples of PMs generated from inorganic components (such as silica particles) and block copolymers, and 1D, 2D, and 3D PCs fabricated from them. Then we will discuss their use for sensing and biosensing, with a particular focus on 1D PCs constructed by our group from pNIPAm-based microgels.
2. Photonic Materials
As discussed above, the opal gemstone is composed of particles packed into an ordered array—these structures are sometimes referred to as colloidal crystal arrays (CCAs). Both natural and synthetic CCAs exist, and can yield extremely colorful materials. The color the materials exhibit depends on the spacing between the array elements (and other parameters), according to Equation (1):
where m is the order of diffraction, λ is the wavelength of incident light, n is the refractive index of the optical components, d is the interplanar spacing, and θ is the angle between the incident light and the diffracting crystal planes, which are oriented parallel to the crystal surface in the prepared CCA. Since the color the material exhibits depends directly on the array element spacing, expansion/contraction of responsive polymers coupled to CCAs can be used to tune the spacing, and hence the color of the materials. One of the most extensively used responsive polymer for this purpose is pNIPAm, and early examples from the Asher Group showed that the volume changes that pNIPAm undergoes as a function of temperature can be used to tune the visual color of colloidal crystals. The Asher Group [43] showed that the optical properties of these materials, referred to as polymerized crystalline colloidal arrays (PCCAs), could be tuned quite dramatically with temperature. Specifically, as shown in Figure 1, the Bragg peak could be tuned between 704 and 460 nm by variation in the temperature.
3. PNIPAm Microgel-Based 1D PCs and Their Application for Sensing and Biosensing
Compared with other pNIPAm microgel-based photonic materials, which exhibit order in 2D or 3D [46,49,50], the Serpe Group discovered color tunable materials (etalons) that exhibit structure in 1D. This was accomplished by sandwiching a pNIPAm microgel-based layer between two thin Au layers, which act as mirrors. The devices exhibit visual color, and unique multipeak reflectance spectra—the position of the peaks in the reflectance spectra primarily depend the thickness of the microgel layer, according to Equation (3),
where m is the peak order, n is the refractive index of the dielectric material, d is the distance between Au layers, and θ is the angle of incidence [51,52]. The structure of the device and representative reflectance spectra are shown in Figure 7. Since the optical properties primarily depend on the thickness of the microgel layer (controls the mirror-mirror distance), the microgel’s response to a stimulus results in changes in the optical properties [53,54,55,56,57,58,59]. This property is extremely important for sensing applications, since the solvation state of microgels can be made to depend on many different stimuli.
Furthermore, we demonstrated that the ability of the devices to lift masses can be used for sensing applications [73]. Firstly, the device and paperclips (used as weights) were added to a humidity-controlled chamber along with a top loading balance. The paperclips were allowed to rest on the balance, which recorded a mass. A photograph of the setup can be seen in Figure 21a. Initially, the chamber was held at 0% relative humidity, which caused the device to be completely curled up—this resulted in a relatively low mass on the balance. When the relative humidity was increased from 0% to 10% (usually takes ~30 min to fully stabilize) the device opened up, which allowed more of the paperclip mass to be added to the balance pan resulting in a concomitant increase in the measured mass. As the chamber humidity was incrementally increased, the device opened up, subsequently adding more of the paperclip mass to the balance pan. At 50% relative humidity, the device was completely open, bringing the mass to a maximum. The complete response of the device over the whole humidity range is shown in Figure 21b.
We have briefly reviewed a few key examples of the use of responsive polymer-based photonic materials as sensors. The sensing mechanisms primarily depended on the responsive polymers changing the spacing between the PM/PC array elements, yielding the observed change in optical properties. While this is the case, changes in the lattice effective refractive index can also yield changes in their optical properties. PNIPAm microgel-based devices were subsequently introduced, and their use as sensors detailed, with a focus on pH, glucose, protein, and DNA sensing. We conclude that pNIPAm microgel-based devices have a lot of promise for sensing applications, although more work is needed to bring the technology to the market. The first challenge is the limited tunability of the PMs optical properties, which limits sensitivity; although, many examples in this review do show tunability over large wavelength ranges. Another limitation is response time; many examples in this review depend on diffusion to yield a response, which is a slow process. Yet another limitation is building reusability into the sensors; this could be addressed by exploiting the weakening of interactions with T, pH, and ionic strength to break signal-causing interactions to regenerate sensors. Despite the limitations, the foundations for building useful PM/PC-based sensors has been laid and further tuning of the devices can alleviate the above-mentioned drawbacks. Furthermore, new research is leading to a new understanding of how PM/PC-based sensors can be generated, which will lead to a new generation of PM/PC-based sensor technology.
Authors: Juan V Alegre-Requena; Santiago Grijalvo; Diego Sampedro; Judith Mayr; César Saldías; José Juan Marrero-Tellado; Ramón Eritja; Raquel P Herrera; David Díaz Díaz Journal: RSC Adv Date: 2020-03-20 Impact factor: 4.036