posted on 2020-06-01, 16:04authored byXueguang Lu, Hailin Fu, Kuo-Chih Shih, Fei Jia, Yehui Sun, Dali Wang, Yuyan Wang, Stephen Ekatan, Mu-Ping Nieh, Yao Lin, Ke Zhang
Herein,
we report the DNA-mediated self-assembly of bivalent bottlebrush
polymers, a process akin to the step-growth polymerization of small
molecule monomers. In these “condensation reactions”,
the polymer serves as a steric guide to limit DNA hybridization in
a fixed direction, while the DNA serves as a functional group equivalent,
connecting complementary brushes to form well-defined, one-dimensional
nanostructures. The polymerization was studied using spectroscopy,
microscopy, and scattering techniques and was modeled numerically.
The model made predictions of the degree of polymerization and size
distribution of the assembled products, and suggested the potential
for branching at hybridization junctions, all of which were confirmed
experimentally. This study serves as a theoretical basis for the polymer-assembly
approach which has the potential to open up new possibilities for
suprapolymers with controlled architecture, macromonomer sequence,
and end-group functionalities.