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  • Self-Assembly-Driven Electrospinning: The Transition from Fibers to Intact Beaded Morphologies.

Self-Assembly-Driven Electrospinning: The Transition from Fibers to Intact Beaded Morphologies.

Macromolecular rapid communications (2015-06-04)
Linge Wang, Paul D Topham, Oleksandr O Mykhaylyk, Hao Yu, Anthony J Ryan, J Patrick A Fairclough, Wim Bras
ABSTRACT

Polymer beads have attracted considerable interest for use in catalysis, drug delivery, and photonics due to their particular shape and surface morphology. Electrospinning, typically used for producing nanofibers, can also be used to fabricate polymer beads if the solution has a sufficiently low concentration. In this work, a novel approach for producing more uniform, intact beads is presented by electrospinning self-assembled block copolymer (BCP) solutions. This approach allows a relatively high polymer concentration to be used, yet with a low degree of entanglement between polymer chains due to microphase separation of the BCP in a selective solvent system. Herein, to demonstrate the technology, a well-studied polystyrene-poly(ethylene butylene)-polystyrene triblock copolymer is dissolved in a co-solvent system. The effect of solvent composition on the characteristics of the fibers and beads is intensively studied, and the mechanism of this fiber-to-bead is found to be dependent on microphase separation of the BCP.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
N,N-Dimethylformamide, anhydrous, 99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
N,N-Dimethylformamide, Molecular Biology, ≥99%
Sigma-Aldrich
Tetrahydrofuran, anhydrous, ≥99.9%, inhibitor-free
Sigma-Aldrich
Tetrahydrofuran, anhydrous, contains 250 ppm BHT as inhibitor, ≥99.9%
Sigma-Aldrich
Tetrahydrofuran, inhibitor-free, purification grade