Uniform shape monodisperse single chain nanocrystals by living aqueous catalytic polymerization

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Abstract

The preparation of polymer nanoparticles with a uniform size and shape, beyond spheres, is an unresolved problem. Here we report a living aqueous catalytic polymerization, resulting in particles grown by a single active site and composed of a single ultra high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) chain. The control on a molecular level (Mw/Mn = 1.1–1.2) and at the same time on a particle level (PDI < 0.05) together with the immediate deposition of the growing chain on the growing nanocrystal results in a distinct evolution of the particle morphology over time. These uniform nanocrystals are obtained as concentrated aqueous dispersions of > 10 wt-% (N ≈ 1019 particles L−1) polymer content. Key to this robust procedure to single chain nanoparticles are long-lived water-stable Ni(II) catalysts that do not undergo any chain transfer. These findings are a relevant step towards polymer materials based on nanoparticle assembly.

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Schnitte, M., Staiger, A., Casper, L. A., & Mecking, S. (2019). Uniform shape monodisperse single chain nanocrystals by living aqueous catalytic polymerization. Nature Communications, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10692-1

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