Ren H, Qiu XP, Shi Y, Yang P, Winnik FM. pH-Dependent Morphology and Photoresponse of Azopyridine-Terminated Poly(
N-isopropylacrylamide) Nanoparticles in Water.
Macromolecules 2019;
52:2939-2948. [PMID:
31496545 PMCID:
PMC6727601 DOI:
10.1021/acs.macromol.9b00193]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 13] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/27/2019] [Revised: 03/17/2019] [Indexed: 01/01/2023]
Abstract
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A series of azopyridine-terminated
poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)s
(PNIPAM) (C12-PN-AzPy) (∼5000 < Mw < 20 000 g mol–1, polydispersity index
1.25 or less) were prepared by reversible addition–fragmentation
chain-transfer polymerization of NIPAM in the presence of a chain-transfer
agent that contains an AzPy group and an n-dodecyl
chain. In cold water, the polymers form nanoparticles (5.9 nm < Rh < 10.9 nm) that were characterized by light
scattering (LS), 1H NMR diffusion experiments, and high-resolution
transmission electron microscopy. We monitored the pH-dependent photoisomerization
of C12-PN-AzPy nanoparticles by steady-state and time-resolved UV–vis
absorption spectroscopy. Azopyridine is known to undergo a very fast
cis-to-trans thermal relaxation when the azopyridine nitrogen is quaternized
or bound to a hydrogen bond donor. The cis-to-trans thermal relaxation
of the AzPy chromophore in an acidic nanoparticle suspension is very
fast with a half-life τ = 2.3 ms at pH 3.0. It slows down slightly
for nanoparticles in neutral water (τ = 0.96 s, pH 7.0), and
it is very slow for AzPy-PNIPAM particles in alkaline medium (τ
> 3600 s, pH 10). The pH-dependent dynamics of the cis-to-trans
dark
relaxation, supported by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, 1H NMR spectroscopy, and LS analysis, suggest that in acidic
medium, the nanoparticles consist of a core of assembled C12 chains
surrounded by a shell of hydrated PNIPAM chains with the AzPy+ end groups preferentially located near the particle/water
interface. In neutral medium, the shell surrounding the core contains
AzPy groups H-bonded to the amide hydrogen of the PNIPAM chain repeat
units. At pH 10.0, the amide hydrogen binds preferentially to the
hydroxide anions. The AzPy groups reside preferentially in the vicinity
of the C12 core of the nanoparticles. The morphology of the nanoparticles
results from the competition between the segregation of the hydrophobic
and hydrophilic components and weak attractive interactions, such
as H-bonds between the AzPy groups and the amide hydrogen of the PNIPAM
repeat units.
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