Ice recrystallisation inhibiting polymer nano-objects: Via saline-tolerant polymerisation-induced self-assembly

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Abstract

Chemical tools to modulate ice formation/growth have great (bio)technological value, with ice binding/antifreeze proteins being exciting targets for biomimetic materials. Here we introduce polymer nanomaterials that are potent inhibitors of ice recrystallisation using polymerisation-induced self-assembly (PISA), employing a poly(vinyl alcohol) graft macromolecular chain transfer agent (macro-CTA). Crucially, engineering the core-forming block with diacetone acrylamide enabled PISA to be conducted in saline, whereas poly(2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate) cores led to coagulation. The most active particles inhibited ice growth as low as 0.5 mg mL-1, and were more active than the PVA stabiliser block alone, showing that the dense packing of this nanoparticle format enhanced activity. This provides a unique route towards colloids capable of modulating ice growth. This journal is

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Georgiou, P. G., Kontopoulou, I., Congdon, T. R., & Gibson, M. I. (2020). Ice recrystallisation inhibiting polymer nano-objects: Via saline-tolerant polymerisation-induced self-assembly. Materials Horizons, 7(7), 1883–1887. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0mh00354a

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