Open Access Article
Cansu
Esen
a and
Baris
Kumru
*ab
aMax Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Department of Colloid Chemistry, Am Mühlenberg 1, 14424 Potsdam, Germany. E-mail: baris.kumru@mpikg.mpg.de
bDelft University of Technology, Faculty of Aerospace Engineering, Department of Aerospace Structures and Materials, Kluyverweg 1, 2629 HS Delft, Netherlands. E-mail: b.kumru@tudelft.nl
First published on 23rd June 2022
Polymerization of multifunctional thiol-ene molecules is attractive as a proof of concept in photopolymerization, yet the formation of a bead structure is highly restricted. This manuscript will show graphitic carbon nitride based liquid–liquid printing and subsequent photopolymerization to form thiol-ene polymer beads with extreme simplicity and potential scalability.
g-CN dispersions hold great potential for a wide range of applications from photovoltaics10,11 to bioimaging.12,13 Once employed in dispersions, g-CN–polymer hybrids can be prepared as well.14 While it is possible to encounter aqueous dispersions of g-CN prepared via sonication in the literature,15 stable organic dispersions of g-CN were achieved once the g-CN surface modification reaction is conducted.16 In organic media, the stability arises from electrostatic forces and carbon nitride nanosheets are highly charged.
In recent years, liquid–liquid printing has been popularized due to its versatility to form dimensionally stable soft matter based on interfacial strengthening.17 This innovative approach relies on the utilization of oppositely charged molecules (ideally one has to be of long order) in non-miscible phases. Once they are immersed, opposite charges on the interface undergoe a ‘jamming’ effect and a complex liquid shape is stabilized based on solidification of the interface, while the inner phase is still liquid.18 Shi and Russell pioneered many possible charged molecules in alternative solvents to produce complex architectures.19–23 Our group has investigated the potential of organic g-CN (denoted as CMp-vTA) as an interface stabilizer to access liquid–liquid printing and interfacial photoactivity of an edible oil-in-water printed soft structure by photocatalytic dye degradation was exhibited.24 Overall, liquid–liquid printing is a nanoarchitectonics concept25 as oppositely charged natural molecules can form biological structures in nature.26
In this communication, we will take a step further in g-CN based liquid–liquid printing and photoactivity will be harnessed to form solid polymer beads (Scheme 1).
Polymerization of multifunctional thiol and ene molecules is shown as a proof of concept in photopolymerization and 3D printing.27,28 While it is possible to form many appealing macroscale thiol-ene geometries via 3D printing, heterophase polymerization of thiol-ene is scarce.29 It is quite challenging to conduct traditional suspension polymerization on such systems, and micron-sized particle fabrication is possible via microfluidics.30 Here we will use interfacial nanoscale interactions to form macroscale thiol-ene polymer beads via liquid–liquid printing. A CMp-vTA dispersion in chloroform is prepared and mixed with pentaerythritol tetraacrylate and tetrakis(3-mercaptopropionate) (TT bead, 1
:
1 molar eq.). We also alternated the vinyl monomer library by employing 1,3,5-triallyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6(1H,3H,5H)-trione (TTA bead) and 2,4,6-triallyloxy-1,3,5-triazine (TTO bead, Scheme S1†). A boat shaped aluminium crucible is filled with boric acid aqueous solution. The organic phase is dropped into aqueous solution and stable liquid bead formation is observed due to the interaction of CMp-vTA sheets with boric acid (Fig. 1a inlet and ESI Video 1†). Under UV light, CMp-vTA initiates polymerization and within 2 hours organic macroscale droplets solidify. This process can be automated and is highly energy efficient as no heat or stirring is required. It is optimized to form beads within the range of 1 mm to 1 cm. It is important to underline that the system worked best on aluminium surfaces, and glass or polymer surfaces gave defective structures. After purification, ICP was conducted to ensure that boron is removed from the polymer bead surface and indeed almost no boron was observed (Table S1†).
Solid UV-Vis spectra of TT and TT@CMp-vTA exhibit a significant absorption difference whilst the characteristic broad spectrum of pristine CMp-vTA (350–450 nm) matches with that of TT@CMp-vTA that can be attributed to CMp-vTA integration (Fig. 1a). Structural investigation performed via FT-IR analysis simply confirmed varied thiol-ene bead compositions. The ester C
O stretching modes that appeared at 1732 cm−1 for the TT@CMp-vTA sample differed from those for the TTA@CMp-vTA sample regarding its isocyanurate based structure; C
O stretching at 1730 cm−1, N–C
O 1677 cm−1, and aromatic C–N stretching at 1453 cm−1. TTO@CMp-vTA spectra displayed intense cyanurate absorption bands at 1737 cm−1, 1557 cm−1 and roughly until 1330 cm−1 corresponding to N
C–O and aromatic ring vibrations of C–N and C
N bonds, respectively. The overall differences in all spectra in the lower fingerprint region additionally confirm the structural variation of the resulting thiol-ene beads (Fig. 1b).
Thermogravimetric profiles demonstrated a slight difference in regard to the thermal stability of samples including the ones that do not possess CMp-vTA. Regardless of CMp-vTA incorporation, significant mass loss starts at around 350 °C and eventuates closely at 435 °C for TTA, TTO, TTA@CMp-vTA, and TTO@CMp-vTA samples unlike TT and TT@CMp-vTA beads that are more stable up to 485 °C. Regarding residual mass amounts, which indicated possible thermal condensation at high temperature (up to 800 °C) that might lead to carbonization of polymer samples, they are investigated and discussed further in the following parts (Fig. 1c and S1†).
The scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of TT@CMp-vTA exhibited very smooth surface morphology that underlines the favoured colloidally stable (interfacial jamming) synthetic condition during polymerization (Fig. 2a and S3a1, a2†). Besides, the confocal laser scanning microscopy image (cross section of half the TT@CMp-vTA bead) simply confirmed the surface-restricted location of CMp-vTA based on intense green luminescence around 540 nm as it is a characteristic emissive property of CMp-vTA (Fig. 2b). Furthermore, EDX mapping revealed a homogeneous distribution of elements without any compartmentalization (Fig. 2c).
In order to investigate the solvent uptake performance of TT@CMp-vTA beads, various solvents were used and according to the results, the highest solvent uptake ratio was detected in dipolar aprotic acetone (46.8%) and polar aprotic THF (32%) followed by polar protic ethanol (29.5%). Beads in nonpolar solvents such as toluene (1.1%) and hexane (1.5%) or polar water (0.7%) did not show efficient uptake (Fig. S2†).
As CMp-vTA particles reside on the surface with no porosity, significant photoactivity is not observed as it takes place on porous interfaces in g-CN hybrids.31 As expected, our studies on photocatalytic RhB degradation via TT@CMp-vTA beads showed no remarkable activity on RhB degradation (Fig. S3†), which underlines the restricted photoactivity of TT@CMp-vTA beads. This observation is in good agreement with general knowledge that porosity is needed for (photo)catalysis on hybrid structures where the photoactive material should be at the inner porous interface and not on the surface.32 As the mechanism of liquid–liquid printing solely relies on interface interactions (Scheme S2†), all CMp-vTA particles from the organic phase rush towards the interface to accommodate stable structure formation.
In other words, the beads obtained in this study seem covalently coated with CMp-vTA particles. Possessing a thermally stable outer layer is highly interesting for polymer carbonization (‘compartmentalized microchamber effect’). In recent years, carbonization of polymeric materials has been a growing trend to manufacture doped carbonaceous matter for electrochemical and battery applications.33–35 While many polymers reach ceiling temperature and yield no carbon, polymers yielding special carbons require complicated synthesis and overall very expensive materials to be employed. Additionally, it is complicated to have monolithic doped carbon structures except in exceptional cases.36–39 To examine our case, carbonization of the so-formed beads was conducted. To begin with, the reduced bead size of TT@CMp-vTA beads (carbonized analogue is labeled CTT@CMp-vTA) can be clearly seen via scanning electron microscopy images (Fig. 3a and S4a, b†). The preserved bead shape (in a range of 0.5–4 mm) after carbonization is also proven visually via digital images (Fig. 3b), that is unique for TT@CMp-vTA beads since the rest of the beads (TTA@CMp-vTA and TTO@CMp-vTA) are obtained in powder form with metallic black color (named CTTA@CMp-vTA and CTTO@CMp-vTA, respectively). EDX mapping exhibits the abundance of atoms in the CTT@CMp-vTA sample; an increased C content (wt%) and a significant decrease in the S atom (wt%) compared to TT@CMp-vTA were noted (Fig. 3c). Combustive elemental analysis of all carbonized samples showed a high carbon content with N and S codoping (Fig. 3d and Table S2†). For CTT@CMp-vTA, we believe that the reason for the notable difference in the detected N content via EDX (12.26%) and combustive elemental analysis (3.22%) arises from the gradient structure. CMp-vTA, a nitrogen rich compound, was exclusively located on the surface of precursor beads. Thus EDX highlights the high N content on the surface of the carbonized analogue, whereas elemental analysis investigates the whole sample and thus the N content decreases in the inner parts. One can argue the formation of core–shell like N-content gradient carbon beads in this case.
Furthermore, XRD profiles of all carbonized samples exhibited broad diffractions at 25.2° and 43.75° that can be assigned to (002) and (100) planes of the amorphous carbon structure (Fig. S5†). Moreover, Raman spectra of carbonized CMp-vTA containing samples showed the characteristic defect-induced band (D band, 1358 cm−1) and crystalline band (G band, 1585 cm−1) with varied ID/IG (intensity ratio of D to G band) values. The CTT@CMp-vTA sample, which is the only carbon sample preserved in bead shape, exhibited the lowest ID/IG value which can be considered as having a higher ordering degree than the CTTA@CMp-vTA and CTTO@CMp-vTA samples that are obtained in powder form after carbonization (Fig. S6†). It is important to underline that almost no boron was detected in carbonized structures as well (Table S1†).
According to the N2 sorption results, CMp-vTA based carbonized samples (CTT@CMp-vTA, CTTA@CMp-vTA, and CTTO@CMp-vTA) possess very low surface area (∼20 m2 g−1) as neither a porogen nor a template was applied during synthesis (Fig. S7†). Enhancing the surface area and elucidating electrochemical applications open the door for further studies.
Overall, a simple synthetic methodology prone to being automated to attain thiol-ene polymer beads can be followed by carbonization to obtain scalable S, N-codoped carbon materials from very cheap and available monomers that would be highly interesting for electrocatalysis and batteries.
Solvent uptakes were calculated manually. 40 mg (Wd) purified TT@CMp-vTA beads were weighed into separate vials for various solvent additions (2 mL of acetone, ethanol, water, toluene, and THF) and then the vials were capped and left for 24 hours at room temperature. Beads treated with solvents were weighed separately (Ws) and solvent uptake was calculated by using the following formula for each solvent type:
| Solvent uptake = (Ws − Wd)/Wd × 100% |
:
1 eq.) were weighed in a glass vial, 1 mL of the freshly prepared CMp-vTA/chloroform dispersion was added into the vial and all components were mixed properly. Meanwhile, boat shape crucibles were filled with aqueous boric acid solution (4 wt%). The as-prepared monomer and CMp-vTA containing the organic mixture were carefully dropped into boric acid solution as demonstrated in a digital video reported in the ESI.† Subsequently, the crucibles were placed under a UV light source at a distance of 15 cm from the top to the crucible level, for 2 hours to complete polymerization. Afterwards, the as-prepared polymer beads were washed with an adequate amount of THF and water three times and left in a fume hood for drying (denoted as TT@CMp-vTA). In order to vary the bead composition, the same process was performed by conducting 1,3,5-triallyl-1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6(1H,3H,5H)-trione and 2,4,6-triallyloxy-1,3,5-triazine with tetrakis(3-mercaptopropionate) (1
:
1 eq.) and the resulting samples were denoted as TTA@CMp-vTA and TTO@CMp-vTA, respectively.
Given the fact that CMp-vTA is the photoinitiator for photopolymerization and an interface stabilizer to provide bead shape, reference materials in the absence of CMp-vTA were synthesized in bulk by the addition of DPO (1 wt%) and the obtained materials were labeled as TT, TTA, and TTO in accordance with CMp-vTA containing analogues.
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See https://doi.org/10.1039/d2na00254j |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |