Anchorage-Dependent Living Supramolecular Self-Assembly of Polymeric Micelles.
Zhengmin TangLiang GaoJiaping LinChunhua CaiYuan YaoGerald GuerinXiaohui TianShaoliang LinPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021)
Anchorage-dependent contact-inhibited growth usually refers to on-surface cell proliferation inhibited by the proximity of other cells. This phenomenon, prominent in nature, has yet to be achieved with polymeric micelles. Here, we report the control living supra-macromolecular self-assembly of elongated micelles with a liquid crystalline core onto a hydrophobic substrate via the synergetic interactions between the substrate and aggregates dispersed in solution. In this system, seed formation is a transient phenomenon induced by the adsorption and rearrangement of the core-swollen aggregates. The seeds then trigger the growth of elongated micelles onto the substrate in a living controllable manner until the contact with the substrate is disrupted. Brownian dynamic simulations show that this unique behavior is due to the fusion of the aggregates onto both ends of the anchored seeds. More important, the micelle length can be tuned by varying the substrate hydrophobicity, a key step toward the fabrication of intricate structures.