Temperature-Directed Formation of Anisotropic Kettlebell and Tadpole Nanostructures in the Absence of a Swelling-Induced Solvent.
Sung-Po R ChenValentin A BobrinZhongfan JiaMichael J MonteiroPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Anisotropic Janus ("snowman") nanoparticles with a single protrusion are currently made via the solvent swelling-induced method. Here, we demonstrate without the aid of toxic solvents a generally applicable method for the formation of anisotropic polymer nanoparticles directly in water by controlling polymer mobility through tuning its glass transition temperature (T g ). Spherical structures, formed immediately after the emulsion polymerization, transformed into uniform tadpoles (with head diameter ≈60 nm and tail length ≈130 nm) through the protrusion of a single cylindrical tail when cooled to a temperature above the T g of the polymer. Cooling the spheres to below the T g produced kinetically trapped kettlebell structures that could be freeze-dried and rehydrated without any structural change. These unique kettlebells could transform into uniform tadpoles by heating above the T g , representing a triggered and on-demand structural reorganization.