Spherical Micelles with Nonspherical Cores: Effect of Chain Packing on the Micellar Shape

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Abstract

Self-assembly of amphiphilic polymers into micelles is an archetypical example of a "self-confined"system due to the formation of micellar cores with dimensions of a few nanometers. In this work, we investigate the chain packing and resulting shape of Cn-PEOx micelles with semicrystalline cores using small/wide-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS/WAXS), contrast-variation small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). Interestingly, the n-alkyl chains adopt a rotator-like conformation and pack into prolate ellipses (axial ratio ≈ 0.5) in the "crystalline"region and abruptly arrange into a more spheroidal shape (≈ 0.7) above the melting point. We attribute the distorted spherical shape above the melting point to thermal fluctuations and intrinsic rigidity of the n-alkyl blocks. We also find evidence for a thin dehydrated PEO layer (≤1 nm) close to the micellar core. The results provide substantial insight into the interplay between crystallinity and molecular packing in confinement and the resulting overall micellar shape.

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König, N., Willner, L., Carlström, G., Zinn, T., Knudsen, K. D., Rise, F., … Lund, R. (2020). Spherical Micelles with Nonspherical Cores: Effect of Chain Packing on the Micellar Shape. Macromolecules, 53(23), 10686–10698. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.0c01936

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