Autopoietic Behavior of Dynamic Covalent Amphiphiles.
Rémi NguyenNicolas JouaultStefano ZaniratiMichel RawisoLionel AlloucheEric BuhlerGiuseppone NicolasPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2018)
The condensation of aldehydes and amines in water to give amphiphilic imines can lead to a particular autocatalytic behavior known as autopoiesis, in which the closed micellar structure made by the amphiphile at the mesoscale can accelerate the condensation of its constituents. Herein, through a combination of analytical tools, including diffusion ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) as well as light, neutron, and X-ray scattering techniques, the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters were probed at both the level of dynamic covalent imine bond formation and the level of the resulting micellar self-assemblies. It was found that the autopoietic behavior was the result of a combination of several parameters, including solubilization of hydrophobic building blocks, template effect at the core-shell interface, and growth/division cycles of the micellar objects.