| Literature DB >> 34960913 |
Narmin Suvarli1, Iris Perner-Nochta1, Jürgen Hubbuch1, Michael Wörner1.
Abstract
Spherical, individual polymer nanoparticles with functional -SH groups were synthesized via aerosol photopolymerization (APP) employing radically initiated thiol-ene chemistry. A series of various thiol and alkene monomer combinations were investigated based on di-, tri-, and tetrafunctional thiols with difunctional allyl and vinyl ethers, and di- and trifunctional acrylates. Only thiol and alkene monomer combinations able to build cross-linked poly(thio-ether) networks were compatible with APP, which requires fast polymerization of the generated droplet aerosol during the photoreactor passage within a residence time of half-minute. Higher monomer functionalities and equal overall stoichiometry of functional groups resulted in the best nanoparticles being spherical and individual, proven by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The presence of reactive -SH groups in the synthesized nanoparticles as a basis for post-polymerization modifications was verified by Ellman's test.Entities:
Keywords: aerosol photopolymerization; polymer nanoparticles; thiol-ene polymerization; thiol-functional nanoparticles
Year: 2021 PMID: 34960913 PMCID: PMC8704326 DOI: 10.3390/polym13244363
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Thiol (left) and -ene (right) monomers used for the synthesis of polymer nanoparticles via APP.
Figure 2Aerosol photopolymerization setup: I—atomization unit; II—photoreaction unit; III—collection unit; (1) Spray solution, (2) Nozzle, (3) Reactor, (4) UV fluorescent devices, (5) particle collection (membrane filter housing).
Formulations of spray solutions with monomers and their quantities and the chosen solvent. The amount of the solvent is the same (10 g) in all samples, the amount of photoinitiator in all spray solutions is 1 wt% ratio to combined monomers. Equal stoichiometry (1:1 ratio) of functional groups (−SH for thiol and −C=C for double bonds) was considered in each spray solution.
| Spray Solution | Thiol | Thiol Qtty | Alkene | Alkene Qtty (mM) | Functional | Solvent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Trithiol | 14.4 | TMPTA | 14.4 | 3−SH:3−C=C | EtOH |
| P2 | Trithiol | 13.9 | NPG | 20.9 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | EtOH |
| P3 | Trithiol | 13.5 | DAA | 20.3 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | EtOH |
| P4 | Trithiol | 14.2 | TEG-DVE | 21.3 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | EtOH |
| P5 | Trithiol | 15.4 | TATT | 15.4 | 3−SH:3−C=C | AcO |
| P6 | TMPIC | 12.1 | TMPTA | 12.1 | 3−SH:3−C=C | AcO |
| P7 | TMPIC | 11.8 | NPG | 17.8 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | AcO |
| P8 | TMPIC | 11.6 | DAA | 17.3 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | AcO |
| P9 | TMPIC | 12.1 | TEG-DVE | 18.1 | 2(3−SH):3(2−C=C) | AcO |
| P10 | TMPIC | 12.9 | TATT | 12.9 | 3−SH:3−C=C | MeCN |
| P11 | Tetrathiol | 11.3 | TMPTA | 15.1 | 3(4−SH):4(3−C=C) | MeCN |
| P12 | Tetrathiol | 10.9 | NPG | 21.9 | 4−SH:2(2−C=C) | MeCN |
| P13 | Tetrathiol | 10.6 | DAA | 21.3 | 4−SH:2(2−C=C) | MeCN |
| P14 | Tetrathiol | 11.2 | TEG-DVE | 22.3 | 4−SH:2(2−C=C) | MeCN |
| P15 | Tetrathiol | 12.2 | TATT | 16.2 | 3(4−SH):4(3−C=C) | MeCN |
Figure 3SEM images of polymer nanoparticles produced via aerosol photopolymerization from various thiol-ene monomer combinations. For simplicity, the nomenclature of thiol and alkene monomers is presented on the left-hand side and the top, respectively. The scalebar corresponds to 1 µm. The nomenclature agrees with the formulations listed in Table 1.
Figure 4Size distribution histogram (left) as a function of particle diameter and particle count (graphed using image analysis of SEM micrographs) and corresponding SEM images of the polymer nanoparticles produced from solutions P1 and P1-S*20 (right). Scalebar—1 µm.