Congkai
Ma
a,
Ting
Han
b,
Niu
Niu
b,
Lucas
Al-Shok
a,
Spyridon
Efstathiou
a,
Daniel
Lester
c,
Steven
Huband
d and
David
Haddleton
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK. E-mail: d.m.haddleton@warwick.ac.uk
bCenter for AIE Research, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, 518060, China
cPolymer Characterisation Research Technology Platform, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK
dDepartment of Physics, University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL, UK
First published on 2nd December 2021
There is a requirement for the development of methods for the preparation of well-controlled polymers with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) properties. This requirement directed this current work towards a robust synthetic route, which would be applicable for preparation in water and the presence of many types of functional groups. Herein, aqueous Cu-mediated living radical polymerization (LRP) has been optimized to provide facile and rapid access to a diverse range of water-soluble AIE polymers at sub-ambient temperatures. Homo-, block and statistical copolymerization all proceeded to a near full monomer conversion (≥99%) within 1 or 2 h and exhibited narrow dispersity, even when DP was targeted up to 1000. This excellent control associated with this polymerisation technique and the high-end group fidelity achieved were further demonstrated by linear first order kinetics and successful in situ block copolymerization, respectively. Fine-tuning the monomer sequence and composition of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) copolymers allows for different lower critical solution temperature (LCST) and fluorescent thermoresponsive nanoparticles, which spontaneously self-assembled to varying sizes in water as determined by a combination of techniques (DLS, SAXS and TEM). Additionally, the fluorescence intensity was demonstrated to depend on the polymer concentration, architecture of the side chains and temperature. Particularly, PNIPAM-containing polymers were resistant to reduction in thermo-induced emission. The good biocompatibility, photostability and high specificity make them promising candidates as lysosome-specific probes for application in bioimaging.
Nevertheless, there is still a requirement to develop facile, robust and rapid synthetic strategies to enable the efficient construction of AIE polymers with monomer sequence control and targeted molecular weights as well as well-defined architectures under mild conditions.16,17 In particular, given increasing interests in biologically relevant polymers and environmentally benign synthesis, the straightforward preparation of functional, narrow disperse water-soluble AIE polymers as prepared in aqueous media at low temperatures remains considerably challenging. Noteworthy, difficulties associated with accurate exploration of the structure–property relationship (SPR) of AIE polymers with broad molecular weight distributions emphasize the significance of polymers with low dispersity (Đ).16
Reversible deactivation radical polymerizations (RDRP) and living radical polymerization (LRP), including reversible addition–fragmentation polymerization (RAFT),22,23 atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP)24 and Cu(0)-mediated reversible deactivation radical polymerization (Cu(0)-RDRP),25,26 allow for the synthesis of well-defined polymers and (multi)block copolymers with quite sophisticated architectures even in aqueous media.27 Of these techniques, the use of RAFT has been predominant, especially for polymerization of acrylamides in water and aqueous media.28,29 Indeed, acrylamides have often been demonstrated to be problematic to be polymerized by traditional ATRP approaches with less control over molecular weights or limited synthesis of block copolymers. Perrier et al. reported the multiple block copolymerization of comprising up to four different acrylamide monomers with a degree of polymerization (DP) = 10 for each block using RAFT in both aqueous (70 °C) and organic media (65 °C).28 In a separate study, the same group presented the production of decablock poly(N,N-dimethylacrylamide) (PDMA) and homopoly(4-acryloylmorpholine) (PNAM) with a final Đ ∼ 1.15 after 10 block extensions employing the same technique.29 However, a prolonged reaction time (24 h) for each block was required in both cases. Of particular relevance to AIE, the majority RDRP to polymerize acrylamides were limited in organic solvents. Zhu et al. prepared dual-responsive copolymers with AIE features by incorporating a tetraphenylethylene (TPE)-based monomer with poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), a well-adopted thermosensitive polymer.30 The copolymerizations were performed in DMF at 70 °C using the RAFT method for more than 24 h and the resultant polymers had a compromised dispersity (Đ ∼ 1.41). Yuan et al. reported the copolymerization of a TPE-containing monomer with benzyl methacrylate using PDMA macro-chain-transfer agents combing RAFT and polymerization-induced self-assembly (PISA) in ethanol, in which the correlation of the AIE effect to the nanostructure of polymer assemblies was explored.31
Despite this elegant process, high temperatures and/or a relatively long time frame are routinely applied in aqueous RAFT polymerisation, potentially limiting their applications in biological science. The Haddleton group introduced a novel synthetic route to perform aqueous copper-mediated RDRP via the in situ formation of Cu containing catalysts exploiting the rapid disproportionation (<10 seconds) as an advantageous driving force.32–34 ATRP in water has often been described as being problematic with a Cu/tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (TPMA) complex being described as being the best and most versatile catalyst to employ in water35 even though the quite popular Me6Tren has been shown to be efficient.32–34 This rapid rate of polymerization requires a high radical concentration at any moment in time, however, the excellent control we were seeking is often thought to require a low concentration of radicals, which is somewhat contradictory. Ballard and Asua have described how this apparent contradiction can be explained by taking into account radical diffusion time which explains this rapid and efficient polymerization.36 We decided to use the route we had previously developed using Me6Tren as this proved convenient and effective comforted with the explanation provided by Ballard and Asua. This strategy paves the way for the design and synthesis of an array of hydrophilic polyacrylamides and polyacrylates at sub-ambient temperatures with full monomer conversions producing polymers with narrow dispersities (Đ < 1.10) attained in just few minutes.26,37 In addition, high end-group fidelity is retained even at high conversions, thereby allowing in situ chain extensions and multiblock copolymerizations by iterative monomer addition if required.38 This chemistry was further demonstrated to be compatible with multiple functional groups and biologically associated media such as blood serum39 and PBS.32 Although aqueous Cu-RDRP has been proven to be robust and rapid, there is no report concerning the synthesis of water-soluble polymers with AIE features to date. It is noted that although certain “heavy metals” are often undesirable copper(II) is an essential part of a healthy diet with multiple copper containing enzymes present in the human body and has GRAS (generally regarded as safe) status from the FDA. In addition, copper salts can be easily removed using water swellable complexing resins if required.
Fluorescent organic nanoparticles (NPs) have drawn broad attention in bioluminescence imaging, due to their ready operation, low cost, as well as non-invasive and fast imaging.40 Combining the AIE effect with organic NPs leads to the construction of high-performance fluorescent nanoparticles with excellent biocompatibility and photostability regarding biomedical applications.41–43 It will be even more favourable if the AIE-active NPs could be instinctively generated driven by self-assembly of water-soluble polymers with AIE occurring in water, avoiding often tedious and time-consuming encapsulation of small organic components.
In previous work, the AIEgen-containing initiator tetraphenylethene bromoisobutyrate (TPEBIB) had been synthesized and employed to prepare a range of both hydrophobic and hydrophilic polyacrylates with AIE properties through Cu-wire mediated RDRP in varying organic solvents.44 Herein, we present the synthesis of water-soluble AIE-active polymers with diverse architectures initiated by TPEBIB via aqueous Cu-mediated RDRP at sub-ambient temperatures (Scheme 1).
Scheme 1 Reaction scheme for homopolymerizations and in situ block copolymerizations of acrylamides and PEGA480 with initiator TPEBIB in aqueous Cu-RDRP at 0 °C. |
Entrya | Cosolventb | Cu(I):L | Time (h) | Con.c (%) | M n,SECd (g mol−1) | Đ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a In all reactions, the in situ disproportionation was conducted in 1 ml H2O in an ice bath (0 °C). The total volume of the organic-water solution = 4 ml. [DPn]:[TPEBIB]:[Cu(I)Br]:[Me6Tren] = 100:1:0.8:0.4/0.6/0.8. b Cosolvent: dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), dimethylformamide (DMF), acetonitrile (MeCN), tetrahydrofuran (THF). 3 ml cosolvent was used for entries 1–10. 2 ml dioxane was used for entry 11. c Conversions were calculated according to 1H NMR in DMSO-d6. d Determined by SEC employing DMF as eluent calibrated by narrow PMMA molecular weight standards. e The volume ratio of dioxane to water is 1:1. | ||||||
1 | DMSO | 0.8:0.4 | 20 | 15 | 10200 | 1.24 |
2 | DMF | 0.8:0.4 | 20 | 9 | 1600 | 1.08 |
3 | MeCN | 0.8:0.4 | 20 | 26 | 6500 | 1.12 |
4 | THF | 0.8:0.4 | 20 | 61 | 16700 | 1.12 |
5 | Dioxane | 0.8:0.4 | 20 | 51 | 12000 | 1.11 |
6 | THF | 0.8:0.6 | 3 | 81 | 21000 | 1.15 |
7 | THF | 0.8:0.8 | 3 | 88 | 26500 | 1.21 |
8 | Dioxane | 0.8:0.6 | 4 | 83 | 20400 | 1.11 |
9 | Dioxane | 0.8:0.8 | 4 | 96 | 23100 | 1.14 |
10 | Dioxane | 1.0:1.0 | 3 | 94 | 24700 | 1.15 |
11e | Dioxane | 0.8:0.8 | 1 | 99 | 17500 | 1.08 |
Although the monomer conversions increased significantly (>50%) by using THF or dioxane as the cosolvents, it is still not an ideal system due to the long reaction time required to reach high monomer conversion (20 h). In order to increase the polymerization rate, the concentration of the ligand with respect to the Cu(I)Br was increased with THF or dioxane as the cosolvent (Table 1, entries 6–9). Indeed, the increased [Me6TREN] contributes to a higher conversion in a shorter time (Table 1, entries 6, 7 vs. 4; entries 8, 9 vs. 5). When [CuBr]:[Me6TREN] = 0.8:0.8, monomer conversion of 88% (THF/water, 3 h) and 96% (dioxane/water, 4 h) were attained, with slightly broader molecular weight distributions (Đ = 1.21 and 1.14, respectively) (entries 7 and 9). The higher Đ values were attributed to relatively less effective deactivation due to the lower concentration of additional copper(II) halides, nevertheless, these dispersities were seen as being acceptable. An attempt using a higher copper-to-ligand ratio corresponding to the initiator (1.0:1.0) failed to speed the reaction or yield a more controlled polymer (Table 1, entry 10). Taking both the dispersity and polymerization rate into account, dioxane was chosen as the desired cosolvent with a [CuBr]:[Me6TREN] = 0.8:0.8 for further polymerisations. Since the equilibrium constant (the balance between active and dormant species) is considerably higher in water than that in less polar organic solvents,48 the volume ratio of dioxane to water was further reduced from 3:1 to 1:1 (Table 1, entry 11). As expected, the polymerization was significantly faster, attaining 99% monomer conversion in 1 h. Remarkably, the dispersity was as low as 1.08 under these conditions. Thus the conditions of aqueous Cu-RDRP of N-hydroxyethyl acrylamide using hydrophobic TPEBIB initiator were optimized to be [TPEBIB]:[CuBr]:[Me6TREN] = 1:0.8:0.8 in dioxane/water (1:1) binary mixture, which were applied to all the remaining polymerizations (otherwise stated) in this work.
The purified polymers were also characterized by NMR (Fig. S2 and S3†) and FT-IR (Fig. S4†) to investigate the different architectures. The attachment of the TPE group to polymers was exhibited by the signals δ = 7.15–6.77 ppm in 1H NMR spectrum, δ = 150–120 ppm of 13C NMR spectrum, together with the overlapping traces of the RI and UV (λex = 309 nm) in the SEC (Fig. S5†). Additionally, the characteristic peaks of the side chains were assigned (Fig. S2–S4†).
In order to further demonstrate the effectiveness of the system and the polymerization rate, kinetic investigations were conducted for the homopolymerizations of HEAM and NIPAM (Fig. S6† and Fig. 2A, B). The results revealed near-100% monomer conversions in <1 hour (95% in 30 min for HEAM and 98% in 45 min for NIPAM). It is highlighted that ln([M]0/[Mt]) increased linearly with respect to the reaction time in the dioxane/water media, indicating the polymerization rate to be first order in monomer concentration. This is quite remarkable compared with the wholly aqueous system, where achieving linear first-order kinetics proved challenging due to the extremely fast reaction.34,37 Furthermore, a linear dependence of molecular weight with respect to monomer conversion (Fig. 2B) and low dispersity values (Đ ∼ 1.10) during the reaction also verified that the polymerizations proceed in a well-controlled manner. Matrix assisted laser desorption–ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-ToF-MS) revealed the presence of the TPE end group with a repeating unit of mass 113.04, corresponding to NIPAM (Fig. 2C and D).
With an increasing interest in thermally responsive polymer assemblies, the homopolymerization of NIPAM targeting differing molecular weights (DP = 50–1000) was attempted to probe the potential of aqueous Cu-RDRP initiated by TPEBIB to give thermoresponsive polymers with AIE properties for use in sensor applications (Fig. 1G and Table S1†). It has been reported that it can be important to optimise the copper-to-ligand ratio when targeting different DPs to afford the most well-defined polymers using aqueous RDRP.32,37,48 Significantly, in this present study, all polymerizations proceeded to near quantitative conversions (≥98%) without further optimizing this reagent ratio, and were well-controlled with a dispersity of 1.09–1.17 within 1 or 2 h even when DP was as high as 1000 (Mn = 114 kDa). Symmetrical monomodal shifts were evidently observed from the SEC traces (Fig. 1G), indicative of excellent control when high molecular weights were targeted.
For the block copolymers (PNIPAM-b-PNMA), the conversion of both the first and second block was ≥95% (Table 2). SEC analysis revealed monomodal peaks with a shift of the mass distribution to higher molecular weights upon the second block addition whist maintaining narrow dispersities (Đ ∼ 1.15) (Fig. 1H and Fig. S7†), indicative of full reaction of PNIPAM chains with additional NAM, thus suggesting excellent end group fidelity at high monomer conversions. Of the statistical copolymers (PNIPAM-s-PNMA), total monomer conversion reached ≥98% within 1 or 2 h, yielding polymers with low molecular weight distributions (Đ = 1.11–1.17) (Table 2, Fig. 1I and S8†). In all cases, the negligible deviation between the theoretical (Mn,th) and experimental molecular weights (especially Mn,th) (Table 2) as well as monomodal SEC traces without tailing (Fig. S7 and S8†) was demonstrated. Chemical compositions were characterized by NMR and FT-IR (Fig. S2–S4†).
Copolymersa | Con.b (%) | M n,th (g mol−1) | M n,SECc (g mol−1) | M n,NMR (g mol−1) | Đ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Copolymerization was conducted using the conditions [TPEBIB]:[CuBr]:[Me6TREN] = 1:0.8:0.8 in dioxane/water (1:1) binary mixture. Expect TPE-PNIPAM50-s-PNAM50 (2 h), the other statistical copolymerizations were stopped in 1 h. b Conversions were calculated according to 1H NMR in CD3OD; the values in the brackets are the conventions of the first block. c Determined by SEC employing DMF as eluent calibrated by narrow PMMA molecular weight standards. | |||||
TPE-PNIPAM95-b-PNAM5 | >99 (99) | 12000 | 16000 | 12300 | 1.15 |
TPE-PNIPAM90-b-PNAM10 | >99 (96) | 12100 | 15900 | 12400 | 1.15 |
TPE-PNIPAM80-b-PNAM20 | >99 (97) | 12400 | 16500 | 12700 | 1.16 |
TPE-PNIPAM70-b-PNAM30 | 99 (98) | 12700 | 16900 | 13600 | 1.17 |
TPE-PNIPAM50-b-PNAM50 | 96 (95) | 13200 | 17400 | 14000 | 1.15 |
TPE-PNIPAM95-s-PNAM5 | 98 | 12000 | 15700 | 12300 | 1.14 |
TPE-PNIPAM90-s-PNAM10 | 99 | 12100 | 15700 | 12500 | 1.12 |
TPE-PNIPAM80-s-PNAM20 | 98 | 12400 | 15400 | 12500 | 1.17 |
TPE-PNIPAM70-s-PNAM30 | 99 | 12700 | 14500 | 12800 | 1.15 |
TPE-PNIPAM50-s-PNAM50 | >99 | 13200 | 16500 | 13400 | 1.11 |
In addition, the thermal properties of the obtained polymers were characterized by thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measurements (Fig. S9 and S10†). The hydroxyl-containing polymers, TPE-PHEAM100 and TPE-PNAT100, showed two degradation stages with a decomposition temperature (Td) at 5% weight loss under nitrogen at 292 °C and 253 °C, respectively. The other polymers all had one degradation stage, losing 5 wt% at temperatures ranging between 383 and 409 °C. DSC analysis demonstrated the glass transition temperature (Tg) of these polyacrylamides was in the range of 126–168 °C, of which TPE-PNAM100 had the highest Tg. With the increase of DP from 50 to 1000, the Tg of homopolymer TPE-PNIPAM increased from 140 °C to 149 °C. Moreover, when increasing the ratio of PNAM from 0% to 50%, the Tg of block copolymers and statistical copolymers increased from 143 °C to 146 °C and 153 °C, respectively.
Herein, the cloud point (Tcp) is defined here by the temperature at which a 10% sharp loss in sample transmittance is detected in the heating cycle. The Tcp of homopolymer TPE-PNIPAM (DP = 50) = 34 °C, which is not affected by the DP from 50 (34.3 °C) to 1000 (34.8 °C) (Fig. S12†). Interestingly, by changing the end group of PNIPAM100 from TPEBIB to ethyl α-bromoisobutyrate (EBiB, less hydrophobic/aggregating), the cloud point increased to 39.0 °C (Fig. S12†). Furthermore, the Tcp of EBiB-terminated PNIPAM has a much larger dependence on the DP, decreasing from 43.6 °C to 35.6 °C with an increase in DP from 50 to 400. Thus, there seems to be a significant contribution of the hydrophobic end-moiety (TPE) in the self-assembly behaviour of these AIE polymers in aqueous media.
In order to construct thermoresponsive particles at physiologically temperatures, a hydrophilic comonomer (NAM) was incorporated by both block and statistical copolymerization. The effects of the different copolymerization methods, as well as the comonomer ratio on the LCST, were evaluated (Fig. 3A and B). In the block copolymers (Fig. 3A), there was a distinctly reduced loss of transmittance with an increasing ratio of NAM at elevated temperatures. The Tcp increased to 35.9 °C and 37.1 °C with 5 mol% and 10 mol% NAM, respectively. It was difficult to define the Tcp when the block incorporation ratio of NAM ≥20 mol%, without rapid loss in transmittance. Conversely, all statistical copolymers showed low transmittance (<10%) upon heating, with a linearly increasing Tcp up to 45.1 °C as a function of the DP values of NAM (Fig. 3B and Fig. S13†). The cooling cycles were also recorded for all the polymers, exhibiting similar hysteresis (∼4 °C lower than Tcp) in full transmittance recovery (Fig. S12 and 13†).
The particle size information was collected as a function of temperature (30–70 °C) by DLS (Fig. 3C and Fig. S14†). At low temperatures (<LCST), the hydrodynamic diameter (Dh) of all the TPE-PNIPAM containing polymers in aqueous solutions is approximately 30 nm with a polydispersity (PDI) of ∼0.25, due to the self-assembly driven exclusively by the hydrophobic end moiety. When the temperature approaches Tcp upon heating, all the block copolymers tend to self assembles into larger aggregates with a narrower population distribution (Fig. S15†). Increasing the NAM molar ratio from 0 to 50% in the block polymers contributes to decreases in stabilized particle sizes at high temperatures, with Dh varying from 180 nm to 40 nm. By comparison, the reverse trend was found for statistical copolymers (Dh = 240–1600 nm) (Fig. S14†).
Particle behaviour in aqueous solutions at 37 °C were further compared using different techniques (Fig. 3D–H). In terms of TPE-PNIPAM100, TPE-PNIPAM95-b-PNAM5 and TPE-PNIPAM90-b-PNAM10, whose Tcp ≤ 37.1 °C, the Dh values were 204 nm, 110 nm, and 87 nm, respectively (Fig. 3D and F). It is noteworthy distributions (PDI = 0.05–0.07). For the other block copolymers, the Dh = 31–42 nm with a broader dispersity (PDI = 0.18–0.23). Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) was also used (Fig. 3E and Fig. S16†). The mean diameter (Dmean) determined by SAXS is approximately half that obtained from DLS (Fig. 3F). This is as SAXS and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) typically only reflect the internal core or physical diameter, despite which, Dh also includes the thickness of an electrical dipole layer adhered that they all self-assembled to form particles with quite narrow to its surface.50 Additionally, as exemplified by TPE-PNIPAM90-b-PNAM10 (Fig. 3E), all of the particles of TPE-PNIPAM100 and the block copolymers were fitted to be a spherical modal by SAXS (Fig. S16†). TEM was applied with sample preparation at 25 °C (<Tcp) and 37 °C (>Tcp), respectively so as to visualize the changes of the particle size and morphology as a function of temperature. The spherical particles experienced a coil-to-globule transition with a swelling (from 15 nm to 83 nm) due to chain collapse and aggregation of the PNIPAM (Fig. 3G, H and Fig. S17†).
We subsequently investigated how the emission intensity changed as a function of solution temperatures in the range of 20 to 50 °C (Fig. 4E and F). The non-thermoresponsive polymer TPE-PNAM100 was also included for comparison, which had a liner emission decrease trend by gradually elevating the temperature (Fig. 4F). By contrast, in the cases of TPE-PNIPAM-based copolymers, a minor emission decrease was observed between 30 °C and Tcp, attributing to the increasing hydrophobicity on a basis of integral hydrophilicity caused by gradual dehydration of the PNIPAM chains. Moreover, the fluorescence intensity dropped sharply (∼15%) from Tcp to Tcp +1 for TPE-PNIPAM100 and TPE-PNIPAM95-b-PNAM5 aqueous solutions, which is indistinct for the other block copolymers (Fig. 4F). The difference results from the fact that it is more difficult for the UV excitation beam to reach TPE moiety buried in the larger micelles after the coil-to-globule transmission.52 Statistical copolymers also behaved in a similar fashion (Fig. S21†).
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/d1py01432c |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |