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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Nanotubes from the self-assembly of asymmetric crystalline-coil poly(ferrocenylsilane-siloxane) block copolymers.

Block copolymers with a high asymmetry normally give spherical starlike micelles in a solvent selective for the longer block. We have discovered that samples of poly(ferrocenyldimethylsilane-b-dimethylsiloxane) (PFS-b-PDMS) with block ratios of 1:12 form nanotubes in n-hexane and n-decane, which are poor solvents for PFS. Two block copolymer samples PFS(40)-b-PDMS(480) (M(n) = 45 300, PDI = 1.01) and PFS(80)-b-PDMS(960) (M(n) = 90 500, PDI = 1.01) were synthesized by sequential anionic polymerization. When self-assembly occurs, the PFS blocks aggregate and crystallize to form a shell with a cavity in the middle of the tube, while the PDMS blocks form the corona. The nature of these structures was elucidated by conventional transmission electron microscopy and dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy. Time- and temperature-dependence studies revealed that a variety of morphologies are formed initially depending on the conditions of sample preparation, but most of them eventually rearrange to form nanotubules. The lengths of the tubes can be varied with time and with the choice of solvents. We have been able to grow nanotubes with lengths reaching 0.1 mm. The presence of the hollow core was confirmed by trapping tetrabutyllead in the cavity and performing energy-dispersive X-ray measurements on the resulting structure.[1]

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