The assembly of preformed gold nanoparticles (AuNPs ) onto the thermoresponsive poly(N ‐isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM )‐based microgels was achieved on the basis of the driving force of Au‐thiol chemistry. The loading amount of AuNPs can be controlled by varying the ratio of AuNPs relative to PNIPAM ‐based microgels. The as‐prepared PNIPAM /Au hybrid microgels showed well‐defined reversible swelling/deswelling transition in response to temperature, which can be employed to tune the plasmonic property of hybrid microgels. As the temperature was increased, the position of localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR ) band red‐shifted to some extent mainly due to the increase in the local refractive index around AuNPs . 相似文献
We report a thermoresponsive poly(N‐isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) brush functionalized Janus Au–Pt bimetallic micromotor capable of modulating the direction of motion with the change of the ambient temperature. The PNIPAM@Au–Pt micromotor moved along the Au–Pt direction with a speed of 8.5 μm s?1 in 1.5 % H2O2 at 25 °C (below the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM), whereas it changed the direction of motion (i.e., along the Pt–Au direction) and the speed decreased to 2.3 μm s?1 at 35 °C (above LCST). Below LCST, PNIPAM brushes grafted on the Au side were hydrophilic and swelled, which permitted the electron transfer and proton diffusion on the Au side, and thus the motion is regarded as a self‐electrophoretic mechanism. However, PNIPAM brushes above LCST became hydrophobic and collapsed, and thus the driving mechanism switched to the self‐diffusiophoresis like that of Pt‐modified Janus silica motors. These motors could reversibly change the direction of motion with the transition of the hydrophobic and hydrophilic states of the grafted PNIPAM brushes. Such a thermoresponsive polymer brush functionalization method provides a new strategy for engineering the kinematic behavior of phoretically driven micro/nanomotors. 相似文献
Silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) stabilized by a thermoresponsive polymer, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), have been synthesized by the reduction of silver ions with NaBH(4) in aqueous solutions. The obtained Ag NPs are very stable at room temperature due to the extended coil conformation of the PNIPAM chain at temperatures below its volume phase transition temperature ( approximately 32 degrees C). At higher temperatures (such as 45 degrees C) above the phase transition of PNIPAM, only minute aggregation between Ag NPs was observed, showing that the collapsed PNIPAM chains still retain the ability to stabilize Ag NPs. The PNIPAM-stabilized Ag NPs were then characterized as a function of the thermal phase transition of PNIPAM by UV-vis spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, and cyclic voltammeter. Consistent results were obtained showing that the phase transition of PNIPAM has some effect on the optical properties of Ag NPs. Switchable electrochemical response of the PNIPAM-stabilized Ag NPs triggered by temperature change was observed. 相似文献
Summary: Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM‐D) is employed to determine the effect of salt on the volume phase transition of thermoresponsive polymer brushes. Changes in mass and viscoelasticity of poly(N‐isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) layers grafted from a QCM‐D crystal are measured as a function of temperature, upon contact with aqueous solutions of varying salt concentrations. The phase‐transition temperature of PNIPAM brushes, TC,graft, quantified from the QCM‐D measurements is found to decrease as the concentration of salt is increased. This phenomenon is explained by the tendency of salt ions to affect the structure of water molecules (Hofmeister effect). However, in contrast to the linear decrease in phase‐transition temperature upon increasing salt concentration observed for free PNIPAM, the trend in TC,graft for PNIPAM brushes is distinctively non‐linear.
Schematic representation of the effect of salt concentration on the phase transition behavior of thermoresponsive polymer brushes. 相似文献
Poly(N‐ispropylacrylamide) [PNIPAM] is a widely studied polymer for use in biological applications due to its lower critical solution temperature (LCST) being so close to the human body temperature. Unfortunately, attempts to combine carbon nanotubes (CNTs) with PNIPAM have been unsuccessful due to poor interactions between these two materials. In this work, a PNIPAM copolymer with 1 mol‐% pyrene side group [p‐PNIPAM] was used to produce a thermoresponsive polymer capable of stabilizing both single and multi‐walled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) in water. The presence of pyrene in the polymer chain lowers the LCST less than 4 °C and the interaction with nanotubes does not show any influence on LCST. Moreover, p‐PNIPAM stabilized nanotubes show a temperature‐dependent dispersion in water that allows the level of nanotube exfoliation/bundling to be controlled. Cryo‐TEM images, turbidity, and viscosity of these suspensions were used to characterize these thermoresponsive changes. This ability to manipulate the dispersion state of CNTs in water with p‐PNIPAM will likely benefit many biological applications, such as drug delivery, optical sensors, and hydrogels.
Cadmium sulfide (CdS) quantum dots (QDs) grafted with thermoresponsive poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) chains have been prepared. As the temperature increases, PNIPAM chains shrink and aggregate so that the QDs exhibit enhanced fluorescence emission. At a temperature around the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM, the fluorescence exhibits a maximum intensity. Our experiments reveal that the fluorescence emission is determined by the interactions between QDs as a function of the interdot distance. The optical interdot distance for the maximum luminescence intensity is approximately 10 nm. The chain length of PNIPAM also has an effect on the luminescence. Short PNIPAM chains are difficult to associate, leading to a large interdot distance, so that the luminescence intensity changes slightly with temperature. 相似文献
The fabrication of a thermoresponsive biohybrid double hydrophilic block copolymer (DHBC) by a cofactor reconstitution approach is reported. Poly(N‐isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) bearing a porphyrin moiety at the chain terminal, PPIXZn‐PNIPAM, is synthesized by the combination of ATRP and a click reaction. The subsequent cofactor reconstitution process between apomyoglobin and PPIXZn‐PNIPAM affords well‐defined myoglobin‐b‐PNIPAM protein–polymer bioconjugates. Behaving as typical responsive DHBCs, the obtained myoglobin‐b‐PNIPAM biohybrid diblock copolymer exhibits thermo‐induced aggregation behavior in aqueous solution as a result of the presence of the thermoresponsive PNIPAM block, as revealed by temperature‐dependent transmittance, dynamic laser light scattering measurements, transmission electron microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy. This work represents the first report of the preparation of responsive biohybrid DHBCs by the cofactor reconstitution process.
The free volume in thin films of poly(N‐isopropylacrylamid) end‐capped with n‐butyltriocarbonate (nbc‐PNIPAM) is probed with positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS). The PALS measurements are performed as function of energy to obtain depth profiles of the free volume of nbc‐PNIPAM films. The range of nbc‐PNIPAM films with thicknesses from 40 to 200 nm is focused. With decreasing film thickness the free volume increases in good agreement with an increase in the maximum swelling capability of the nbc‐PNIPAM films. Thus in thin hydrogel films the sorption and swelling behavior is governed by free volume.