RAFT Polymerization for Advanced Morphological Control: From Individual Polymer Chains to Bulk Materials
Control of the morphology of polymer systems is achieved through reversible-deactivation radical polymerization techniques such as Reversible Addition-Fragmentation chain Transfer (RAFT). Advanced RAFT techniques offer much more than just "living" polymerization - the RAFT toolkit now enab...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Advanced materials (Weinheim) 2024-11, p.e2412407 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Control of the morphology of polymer systems is achieved through reversible-deactivation radical polymerization techniques such as Reversible Addition-Fragmentation chain Transfer (RAFT). Advanced RAFT techniques offer much more than just "living" polymerization - the RAFT toolkit now enables morphological control of polymer systems across many decades of length-scale. Morphological control is explored at the molecular-level in the context of syntheses where individual monomer unit insertion provides sequence-defined polymers (single unit monomer insertion, SUMI). By being able to define polymer architectures, the synthesis of bespoke shapes and sizes of nanostructures becomes possible by leveraging self-assembly (polymerization induced self-assembly, PISA). Finally, it is seen that macroscopic materials can be produced with nanoscale detail, based on phase-separated nanostructures (polymerization induced microphase separation, PIMS) and microscale detail based on 3D-printing technologies. RAFT control of morphology is seen to cross from molecular level to additive manufacturing length-scales, with complete morphological control over all length-scales. |
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ISSN: | 0935-9648 1521-4095 1521-4095 |
DOI: | 10.1002/adma.202412407 |