Ashley E.
Masucci
a,
Masoud
Ghasemi
a,
Christian W.
Pester
*abc and
Enrique D.
Gomez
*abd
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA. E-mail: pester@psu.edu; edg12@psu.edu
bDepartment of Materials Science and Engineering, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
cDepartment of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
dMaterials Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA
First published on 6th June 2023
Polymer nanoparticles are an emerging class of materials with potential impact in sensing, catalysis, imaging, cosmetics, and therapeutics. Here, a collection of graft polymers with conjugated polythiophene backbones were synthesized via a grafting-to approach. We functionalized polythiophene backbones with side chains of either poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), poly(ethylene oxide), or poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) via copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne click chemistry. The backbones, graft polymers and a linear poly(3-hexylthiophene) were fabricated into nanoparticles through precipitation in aqueous media. We measured the absorption and emission spectra of the polymers dissolved in chloroform and as nanoparticles suspended in water. Compared to linear P3HT, all graft polymer nanoparticles exhibit higher quantum yields. Moreover, the addition of PMMA side chains increased the quantum yield by more than two orders of magnitude. This versatile approach to conjugated graft copolymer synthesis demonstrates a route for enhancing photoluminescence of conjugated polymer nanoparticles that could be beneficial for a variety of applications, such as biosensing and bioimaging.
Some of the most widely studied conjugated polymers are based on polythiophene. Polythiophene and its derivatives can exhibit high charge mobility, solution processability, and good environmental stability.5,6 In thin films, polythiophenes, such as poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), form crystalline domains and aggregates.7 Aggregate domains classified as H-aggregates are dominated by short-range intrachain order and strong interchain interactions, which lead to dominant interchain coupling (π–π stacking). In contrast, J-aggregates are dominated by long-range intrachain order and weak interchain interactions, leading to strong intrachain coupling.8,9 The more ordered aggregate domains lead to improved interchain charge-transfer through intermolecular electronic coupling. This same coupling, however, leads to non-radiative pathways for exciton quenching, which limits the potential of P3HT (and many other conjugated molecules) in applications that rely on photoluminescence.10–12
To address this limitation, modifying the chemical architecture of conjugated polymers from a linear into a graft polymer (i.e., a macromolecule with a polymeric backbone and polymeric side chains) has been proposed to reduce aggregate formation.13 Reduced aggregation lowers the probability of fluorescent quenching and improves the optoelectronic properties of conjugated polymer nanoparticles.14–16 As an example, a previous study described end-capping of oligothiophenes with different branched carbosilanes. The branching was used to calculate a bulkiness parameter and showed that increased bulkiness correlates with a decreased dissociation temperature of aggregates, i.e., the formation of less aggregates with weaker interactions.17 Another study synthesized poly(methyl acrylate)-grafted poly(thiophene) and showed that grafted polymers can indeed disrupt the typical ordering of P3HT and improve photoluminescence of thin films by 40%.13
Graft polymers can be synthesized using three different approaches: grafting-to, grafting-through, and grafting-from.18 The grafting-through approach is based on the polymerization of side chain macromonomers. In contrast, grafting-from describes the polymerization of side chains from initiators that are distributed along a polymer backbone. Finally, grafting-to is the separate synthesis of side chain and backbone polymers and the subsequent tethering reaction between the two, usually through highly efficient reactions (e.g., click chemistry). Because removing unreacted side chains in the grafting-to approach is often challenging, grafting-through and grafting-from have been the predominant approaches in the synthesis of graft polymers with conjugated side chains.19,20 Nevertheless, grafting-to allows for the distinct chemical analysis of backbone and side chains and for easily comparable graft polymer products composed of the same backbone but different well-characterized side chains.
Here, we report a grafting-to approach to synthesize three discrete graft polymers comprising a polythiophene (PT) backbone and either (i) polythiophene (P3HT), (ii) poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) or (iii) poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) side chains. P3HT, PEO, and PMMA were chosen to cover a wide range of chemically different polymers, each providing distinct insights into the mechanism of aggregation and exciton quenching in the final graft architecture. P3HT as a side chain eliminates the confounding properties of the copolymer, meaning any changes from the linear P3HT can be attributed directly to the different architectures. PEO is a semicrystalline, water-soluble polymer with ion conducting properties, while PMMA is an amorphous polymer with a high glass transition temperature. The chemical compositions of poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(3-hexylthiophene) (PT-g-P3HT), poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(ethylene oxide) (PT-g-PEO), and poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(methyl methacrylate) (PT-g-PMMA) were characterized and we report their optoelectronic properties in chloroform. Further, the graft polymers and their precursor backbones were fabricated into nanoparticles using a modified precipitation method. The combination of absorption and emission spectra shows that graft architectures exhibit reduced aggregation that results in enhancement of the photoluminescent quantum yield by orders of magnitude.
PT-Br was then treated with sodium azide in tetrahydrofuran (THF) at 50 °C overnight to produce poly(3-hexylthiophene-random-3-(6-azidohexyl)thiophene) (PT-N3). The product was purified by precipitation in methanol and rinsed with water to remove unreacted sodium azide. The post-polymerization modification was verified through 1H NMR and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) (Fig. S2 and S3a, ESI†). The presence of a new absorption band at 2200 cm−1 in the FTIR spectrum is due to the asymmetric stretching of the azide functional group and indicates successful polymer modification. 1H NMR experiments verified quantitative conversion from bromine to azide by an upfield shift of the methylene protons adjacent to the bromine (from δ = 3.44 to δ = 3.29 ppm). Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) further indicated successful modification without crosslinking due to the limited molecular weight increase (see Fig. S3b, ESI†).
Scheme 1(b–d) illustrates synthesis of alkyne-terminated PEO, P3HT, and PMMA side chains. P3HT was synthesized following reported methods and the polymerization reaction mixture was quenched with hydrochloric acid to produce ω-terminated P3HT with a bromine chain end.21,22 According to 1H NMR,23 the P3HT side chains indeed contain primarily monofunctionalized chains (–Br/H) (see Fig. S4, ESI†). The resulting P3HT-Br polymer was purified by precipitation in methanol, followed by Soxhlet extraction in methanol (12 h) and hexanes (12 h). The hexane P3HT fraction was then used in the following reaction, i.e., a Songashira coupling to modify the monofunctionalized P3HT through the addition of a protected alkyne. This functionalization was again confirmed by 1H NMR through appearance of trimethylsilyl protons (0.08 ppm) (see Fig. S5, ESI†). In addition, high resolution matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI-ToF) was conducted to verify monofunctionalization of P3HT and avoid crosslinking in the subsequent CuAAC reactions (see Fig. S6, ESI†).
PEO and PMMA synthetic conditions were controlled to produce molecular weights that resemble the P3HT samples. Poly(ethylene oxide monomethyl ether) (Mw = 2100 g mol−1) was modified using propargyl bromide and the addition of the alkyne group was verified by 1H NMR (Fig. S7, ESI†). Alkyne-functionalized PMMA was synthesized using light-mediated atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) from an alkyne containing ATRP initiator following previously reported techniques.241H NMR and GPC were used to verify the terminal alkyne moiety and molecular weights (Fig. S8, ESI†). Table 1 summarizes the molecular weights of P3HT-alkyne, PEO-alkyne, and PMMA-alkyne side chains.
Polymer | M n SEC (g mol−1) | M n,NMR (g mol−1) | Mol% side chains | Wt% side chains | Wt% aromatics | Grafting efficiency |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
P3HT-alkyne | 5800 | 2300 | 100 | 100 | 48.8 | — |
PEO-alkyne | 2100 | 1500 | 100 | 100 | 0 | — |
PMMA-alkyne | 1700 | 2900 | 100 | 100 | 0 | — |
PT-g-P3HT | 29000 | 32400 | 90.6 | 76.9 | 39.0 | 48% |
PT-g-PEO | 16300 | 46900 | 97.6 | 71.4 | 10.4 | 55% |
PT-g-PMMA | 24400 | 34200 | 94.1 | 88.3 | 4.3 | 86% |
The final graft polymers were synthesized via CuAAC from the azide-functionalized PT-N3 and the individual alkyne-terminated side chains.20 PMMA and P3HT alkynes were deprotected using a tetrabutylammonium fluoride solution (TBAF) the day before (see Experimental information). The PT-N3 backbone was added to a THF solution containing the side chain polymers, and subsequently a solution of copper bromide (Cu(I)Br) and N,N,N′,N′′,N′′-pentamethyldiethylenetriamine (PMDETA) in THF was added. The reaction was stirred at 65 °C. Each graft polymer, i.e., poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(3-hexylthiophene) (PT-g-P3HT), poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(ethylene oxide) (PT-g-PEO), and poly(thiophene)-graft-poly(methyl methacrylate) (PT-g-PMMA) was purified by initial precipitation in methanol. PT-g-P3HT was then purified by Soxhlet extraction in methanol, acetone, and hexanes (12 hours per solvent). Because the P3HT side chains were soluble in hexanes, they were mostly extracted during this purification. PT-g-PMMA was Soxhlet-extracted in methanol, in which the PMMA side chains were soluble. PT-g-PEO was purified from unreacted side chains by rinsing with methanol, a good solvent for PEO, but not P3HT.
GPC elugrams verified an increase in molecular weight and successful grafting-to reactions that lead to conjugated grafted macromolecules. Graft polymers and side chains containing PMMA and PEO were analyzed with THF as the GPC eluant, while PT-g-P3HT and P3HT-alkyne were analyzed using a chlorobenzene eluant due to the better solubility of P3HT in chlorobenzene. GPC also helped confirm purification of the grafts from unreacted side chains (see Fig. 1). By comparing to the side chain chromatograms, the absence of unreacted PMMA and PEO side chains in PT-g-PMMA and PT-g-PEO, respectively, is apparent. The presence of a small shoulder in PT-g-P3HT, however, indicates minor unreacted P3HT side chain impurities. Table 1 summarizes the chemical composition of graft polymers.
GPC analyses using linear polystyrene standards are inherently skewed for graft polymers, whose more densely packed conformations yield smaller hydrodynamic radii compared to linear polymers. Therefore, 1H NMR was used to determine the mole percent of conjugated monomers in the backbone to that of side chain monomers and calculate the graft polymer molecular weight (Fig. S9–S11, ESI†). The mole percentages were then converted to weight percent of backbone to side chains. As expected, Mn was underestimated by the GPC analyses when compared to 1H NMR. Using Mn,NMR, the grafting efficiency of the click reaction was calculated from the amount of expected reactive sites on each backbone and the molar ratio of side chain monomer to backbone monomer (see Tables S1–S5, ESI†). The grafting efficiency of PT-g-P3HT corresponds well with literature for grafting conjugated side chains onto a conjugated backbone.20 In comparison, the efficiencies of PT-g-PEO and PT-g-PMMA are higher, which could be due to their smaller Kuhn length and smaller hydrodynamic radius.25 Because the grafting-to approach is mass transport limited (i.e., the side chains must diffuse through those already attached to the backbone to reach a reactive site), we speculate that smaller hydrodynamic radii allow for improved mobility of the PMMA and PEO side chains to the reactive sites on the PT-N3 backbone.
The steady-state UV-vis absorbance and photoluminescence spectra of the graft polymers in chloroform at room temperature were measured using UV-vis spectroscopy and fluorometry at different concentrations. Because of the copolymer nature of the graft polymers, we use mass absorptivity (ε) to describe light absorption properties instead of molar absorptivity. ε was calculated using Beer–Lambert's law from a linear fit of absorbance vs. concentration (Fig. S12–S18, ESI†). We also calculate the mass absorptivities of the grafts that is then normalized by the weight percent of aromatics (or chromophores) in the graft (see Table 2). Because all polymers contain exclusively thiophene as a chromophore, the absorption spectra are dominated by the first singlet state of polythiophene (Fig. S19, ESI†).26 In comparison to P3HT, both PT-Br and PT-N3 show lower ε (Fig. 2(a), left). The photoluminescence spectra (cts) were normalized to the quanta of light absorbed at the excitation wavelength (λ450nm); f = 1 − 10−A, where A is absorbance (Fig. 2(a), right). The photoluminescence spectrum is dominated by the radiative decay of the singlet exciton at around λ = 570 nm.26 The addition of an electron-withdrawing bromine end group to P3HT has been shown to reduce ε and photoluminescence intensity.27 Quantum yields (ϕ) were calculated from the linear fit of their integrated fluorescence to their absorbance in comparison to a standard, in this case 4-(dicyanomethylene)-2-methyl-6-(4-dimethylaminostyryl)-4H-pyran (Fig. S20–S23, ESI†). P3HT, PT-Br and PT-N3 show very similar photoluminescence spectra and ϕ ≈ 0.26, indicating the –H to –Br and –H to –N3 substitution does not influence the electronic structure of P3HT.
Polymer | Max. mass absorptivity (mL mg−1 cm−1) at λmax (nm) | Normalizeda max. mass absorptivity (mL mg−1 cm−1) | Quantum yield at λmax (nm) |
---|---|---|---|
a Normalized by weight fraction of aromatic groups. | |||
P3HT | 54.8 (447) | 112.0 | 0.25 (576) |
PT-Br | 27.4 (444) | 72.1 | 0.27 (571) |
PT-N3 | 35.8 (445) | 99.4 | 0.26 (571) |
PT-g-P3HT | 25.4 (443) | 53.6 | 0.12 (574) |
PT-g-PEO | 0.9 (440) | 28.1 | 0.06 (570) |
PT-g-PMMA | 3.8 (439) | 100.0 | 0.18 (572) |
PT-g-PEO, PT-g-PMMA, and PT-g-P3HT all show reduced mass absorbance and a lower photoluminescence intensity compared to linear P3HT (Fig. 2(b)). The values of ε and ϕ of the graft polymers decreased compared to linear P3HT (Table 2). This could in part be due to deviations of the backbone planarity with the addition of sterically hindered side groups leading to a decreased effective conjugated length of the graft polymer backbone. The absorption and emission of PT-g-PEO (ε = 28.1, ϕ = 0.06), however, decrease more than the other studied grafts. PEO can exhibit coil-to-globule transitions in organic solvents at 30 °C.28,29 At room temperature, we speculate the PEO side chains could be in a globular form inducing increased steric hindrance and further reducing the effective conjugation length of the polythiophene backbone compared to P3HT and PMMA side chains.
Conjugated polymer nanoparticles from the graft polymers were prepared in deionized water using a modified precipitation method (Fig. S24, ESI†).1,2,9 (PT-g-PMMA)NP and (PT-g-PEO)NP were prepared by dropwise addition of 10 mL water to 1 mg mL−1 and 2 mg mL−1 solutions in THF under vigorous stirring, respectively (see Fig. 3(a)). THF was then evaporated under a flow of argon. PT-Br, PT-N3, P3HT, and PT-g-P3HT did not form stable nanoparticles using the dropwise technique, instead forming large aggregates and precipitating out of solution. As an alternative, PT-Br, PT-N3, P3HT, and PT-g-P3HT were prepared into a 0.1 mg mL−1 solution of THF and 1 mL of this solution was added to 10 mL of water under ultrasonication (Fig. 3(b)). THF was then evaporated under argon flow. With this modified protocol for PT-Br, PT-N3, P3HT, and PT-g-P3HT, all polymers formed stable suspensions of nanoparticles in water and did not precipitate or settle on the sides or bottom of the vials over multiple days, as previously shown.4
Conjugated polymer nanoparticle size was measured using dynamic light scattering (DLS) with three independent measurements (Fig. S25, ESI†). The three measurements were averaged and overlayed, displaying similar diameters of the different nanoparticles from d = 80 to 120 nm (Fig. 3(d) and (e)). (PT-g-PEO)NP form significantly larger nanoparticles, which could be due to the extended conformation of water soluble PEO side chains. Additionally, cryogenic electron microscopy (Cryo-EM) results show (PT-g-PMMA)NP ranging from about 70 nm to 130 nm (Fig. 3(e) – inset), confirming the DLS experiments describing the nanoparticle size.
UV-vis absorbance and photoluminescence spectra of conjugated nanoparticles were measured using UV-vis spectroscopy and fluorometry at different concentrations. The normalized absorbance and photoluminescence spectra and photophysical properties (ε and ϕ) were calculated as outlined above and are quantitatively summarized in Table 3, along with the size and the polydispersity index (PDI) obtained from DLS (Fig. S26–S38, ESI†). The broad, featureless absorption in chloroform is associated with the a twisting of the polymer backbone from repulsive steric interactions between repeat units.30 In the solid state, however, intrachain and interchain interactions result in the formation of structured aggregates. Aggregates are most apparent in (P3HT)NP, (PT-Br)NP, and (PT-N3)NP, where their absorption spectra show bathochromic shifts towards lower energy wavelengths (Fig. S39, ESI†) and three distinct features are present (λ = 600, 550, 490 nm).7,31,32 The lowest energy absorption (λ = 600 nm) corresponds to the 0–0 transition related to J-aggregates. The 0–1 transition occurs at λ = 550 nm corresponding to H-aggregates. The J- and H-aggregates lead to reduced photoluminescence through non-radiative recombination pathways.33,34 The large reduction in quantum yields (from f = 0.260 to f = 0.001) for (P3HT)NP, (PT-Br)NP, and (PT-N3)NP can be attributed to the formation of these aggregates.
Sample | Z-averaged size (nm) | PDI | ε max,normalized (mL mg−1 cm−1) at λmax (nm) | Quantum yield at λmax (nm) |
---|---|---|---|---|
(P3HT)NP | 120.0 | 0.29 | 65.2 (478) | 0.001 (562) |
(PT-Br)NP | 124.6 | 0.18 | 108 (512) | 0.001 (646) |
(PT-N3)NP | 81.7 | 0.27 | 92.3 (498) | 0.001 (636) |
(PT-g-P3HT)NP | 95.6 | 0.49 | 31.8 (463) | 0.005 (566) |
(PT-g-PEO)NP | 335.4 | 0.27 | 16.1 (429) | 0.019 (582) |
(PT-g-PMMA)NP | 123.3 | 0.05 | 8.0 (459) | 0.247 (570) |
The absorption spectra of (PT-g-P3HT)NP is red-shifted and shows similar aggregation structures as (P3HT)NP; however, the 0–0 transition at λ = 600 nm was reduced in the normalized spectra (Fig. 4(a)). This could indicate the reduction of aggregate formation and be the reason for an improvement in the quantum yield (ϕ = 0.005). It has been suggested that low molecular weight P3HT contains more photophysically uncoupled polymer chains than its high molecular weight counterpart.35,36 Therefore, by grafting smaller P3HT side chains to a long backbone, the chain–chain coupling effects are diluted and could also contribute to an improved quantum yield. Additionally, since P3HT and PT-g-P3HT share the same monomer structure, the improved quantum yield of PT-g-P3HT can be directly attributed to the difference in architecture.
In contrast, the absorption spectra of (PT-g-PMMA)NP do not show signatures of aggregation (Fig. 4(c)). In fact, the absorbance of (PT-g-PMMA)NP resembles that of P3HT in chloroform, suggesting the PT backbone is trapped in an isolated or “solution-like” state (solvated by the PMMA side chains) when in nanoparticle form.37 The quantum yield of (PT-g-PMMA)NP (ϕ = 0.247) is higher by a factor of about 250 when compared to (P3HT)NP, which can be attributed to the reduced aggregation (Fig. 4(d)). The quantum yield is close to that of P3HT in chloroform, when completely unaggregated (Fig. 4(e)). The solid-state absorption of PT-g-PMMA further confirms the isolation of the PT backbone by the relatively unchanged peak absorption wavelength (λ ≈ 450 nm) compared to absorption in solution and as nanoparticles (Fig. S40, ESI†). Solid-state photoluminescence measurements that have been normalized by the number of photons absorbed also show a large increase to the photoluminescence of (PT-g-PMMA)NP compared to (P3HT)NP (Fig. S41, ESI†). The solid-state absorbance and photoluminescence indicate these materials could be useful not only as nanoparticles, but also as photoluminescent thin-films and devices. In addition, we speculate that the similarity of the absorption spectra and quantum yield between solubilitzed P3HT and (PT-g-PMMA)NP suggests that the grafting density (86% of backbone sites) is high enough to effectively isolate individual polythiophene backbones. Further work is needed to identify the minimum grafting density needed to enhance the photoluminescence of polythiophene in nanoparticles and films.
The absorption spectra for (PT-g-PEO)NP show new features at higher energy not corresponding to J- and H-aggregation. The new features (λ = 450, 415, 405) could be caused by the increased crystallinity of the PEO side chains, which could disrupt the conjugated backbone and make the monomers act essentially as individual chromophores (Fig. 4(b)). Thermal analysis by differential scanning calorimetry shows PT-g-PEO exhibits a crystallization temperature at 32.9 °C, providing evidence that there could be crystalline PEO domains in (PT-g-PEO)NP at room temperature (Fig. S42b and Table S6, ESI†). Nevertheless, the reduction of aggregation in the thiophene backbone still serves to improve the quantum yield (ϕ = 0.019). Additionally, just as (PT-g-PMMA)NP exhibits reduced aggregation and improved photoluminescence in the solid-state, so does (PT-g-PEO)NP (Fig. S40 and S41, ESI†).
PT-N3 was synthesized according to a literature procedure.20 P3HT-alkyne, PMMA-alkyne, and PEO-alkyne were also synthesized according to literature procedures.20,38,39
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3ma00165b |
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