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Topological Control of Polystyrene-Silica Core-Shell Microspheres.

Zane A GradyAlexandria Z ArthurChristopher J Wohl
Published in: Colloids and surfaces. A, Physicochemical and engineering aspects (2018)
Controllable surface morphology is requisite across a gamut of processes, industries, and applications. The surface morphology of silica-coated polystyrene microspheres was controllably modified to enable generation of both smooth and bumpy, or raspberry-like, surfaces. Although smooth and raspberry-like silica shells on polystyrene templates have been demonstrated extensively, the method described here used readily available materials to produce radical changes in surface morphology from a single polystyrene template coated in silica through a facile sol-gel reaction processes. Silica shells were deposited via a sol-gel process (using tetraethyl orthosilicate as the silica precursor) onto 1 to 2 μm diameter anionic polystyrene spheres, fabricated by emulsifier-free polymerization. By varying of the concentration of silica precursor and ammonium hydroxide catalyst and altering the electrostatic surface interactions via addition of a cationic polymeric brush, an array of surface topologies was generated. The resulting silica shells ranged from 100 to 200 nm in thickness, as measured by calcination of the polystyrene template. Empirical relations between reaction conditions and the resulting silica colloid diameter were utilized to understand the resultant silica shell topology. These results may serve as a guide to generate a versatile platform for research in the multitude of applications where polystyrene-silica core-shell particles are utilized.
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