posted on 2023-06-28, 19:33authored byJaechul Ju, Arthi Jayaraman, Ryan C. Hayward
Supramolecular block copolymers have attracted considerable
attention
due to their unique capabilities for responding to external stimuli
by altering their degree of association and correspondingly their
self-assembled structures. Although hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) interactions
that can be dissociated and re-associated with changes in temperature
have been widely combined with polymer blend systems, the case of
H-bonded polymer blends with multiple single-point H-bonds between
strands that are of sufficient length to microphase separate remains
largely unexplored. Herein, phenol (Ph) and pyridine (Py) as a strong
single-point H-bonding pair were attached as pendants to polystyrene
(PS) and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) chains, respectively. The tendency
for PS and PDMS to phase-separate competes with the attraction between
Ph and Py units. The number of H-bonding groups per chain was systematically
tuned, leading to a transition in the low-temperature state from macrophase-
to microphase-separated as the number of H-bonding groups increased.
Broad small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) patterns for blends with
≥20 H-bonding groups (Ph or Py) per (PS or PDMS) chain indicate
the formation of disordered nanostructures. Interestingly, for the
highest number of H-bonding groups (an average of 36 per chain), a
reversible change in domain spacing, from 8 to 35 nm with increasing
temperature from room temperature to 190 °C was observed due
to progressive dissociation of H-bonds. Gravimetric analysis and SAXS
after etching of the PDMS phase indicated percolation of both PDMS
and PS phases, suggesting that this architecture offers a simple and
highly tunable route to form cocontinuous polymer nanostructures.