Version 2 2018-11-20, 20:33Version 2 2018-11-20, 20:33
Version 1 2018-11-20, 13:13Version 1 2018-11-20, 13:13
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-20, 00:00authored byZhe Qiang, Kevin M. Shebek, Masahiro Irie, Muzhou Wang
Single-molecule
super-resolution microscopy has become a standard
imaging tool in the life sciences for visualizing nanostructures in situ, but the application of this technique in polymer
science is much less explored. A key bottleneck is the lack of fluorophores
and simple covalent attachment strategies onto polymer chains. Here,
we report a functional diarylethene-based photoswitchable fluorophore
that can be directly incorporated into polymer backbones through copolymerization,
which significantly streamlines the labeling strategy, with no further
postcoupling reactions or purifications needed. The attachment of
fluorophores onto selectively labeled polymers enables super-resolution
imaging of a series of model polymer blend systems with different
nanostructures and chemical compositions. As each individual fluorophore
is able to switch several times on average between its bright and
dark state, multiple time-lapse images can be acquired to observe
the dynamic nanostructural evolution of polymer blends upon solvent
vapor annealing. With this demonstration of a universal, simplified
labeling strategy and the ability to image polymer assembly under
native conditions, this reported fluorophore may promote the widespread
use of super-resolution microscopy in the polymer community.