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  2. Oil-in-Water Emulsion Templated and Crystallization-Driven Self-Assembly Formation of Poly(l-lactide)-Polyoxyethylene-Poly(l-lactide) Fibers

Oil-in-Water Emulsion Templated and Crystallization-Driven Self-Assembly Formation of Poly(l-lactide)-Polyoxyethylene-Poly(l-lactide) Fibers

  • Langmuir. 2017 Nov 14;33(45):13060-13067. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b02596.
Chunyu Li 1 Rui Liu 1 Qingbin Xue 1 Yaping Huang 2 Yunlan Su 2 Qiang Shen 1 Dujin Wang 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Key Laboratory for Colloid and Interface Chemistry of Education Ministry, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Shandong University , Shan Da Nan Road 27, Jinan 250100, China.
  • 2 Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Key Laboratory of Engineering Plastics, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Zhongguancun North First Street 2, Beijing 100190, China.
Abstract

A molecular solution of an amphiphilic block copolymer may act as an oil phase by dispersing into an aqueous micellar system of small-molecular surfactant, forming oil-in-water (O/W) emulsion droplets. In this paper, an as-synthesized triblock copolymer poly(l-lactide)-polyoxyethylene-poly(l-lactide) (PLLA-PEO-PLLA) was dissolved in tetrahydrofuran (THF) and then added to an aqueous micellar solution of nonaethylene glycol monododecyl ether (AEO-9), forming initially coalescent O/W emulsion droplets in the size range of 35 nm-1.3 μm. Along with gradual volatilization of THF and simultaneous concentration of PLLA-PEO-PLLA molecules, the amphiphilic copolymer backbones themselves experience solution-based self-assembly, forming inverted core-corona aggregates within an oil-phase domain. Anisotropic coalescence of adjacent O/W emulsion droplets occurs, accompanied by further volatilization of THF. The hydrophilic block crystallization of core-forming PEOs and the hydrophobic chain stretch of corona-forming PLLAs together induce the intermediate formation of rod-like architectures with an average diameter of 300-800 nm, and this leads to a large-scale deposition of the triblock copolymer fibers with an average diameter of ∼2.0 μm. Consequently, this strategy could be of general interest in the self-assembly formation of amphiphilic block copolymer fibers and could also provide access to aqueous solution crystallization of hydrophilic segments of these copolymers.

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