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Thermoresponsive Coatings on Hollow Particles with Mesoporous Shells Serve as Stimuli-Responsive Gates to Species Encapsulation and Release.

Yang SuOlakunle Francis OjoIgor Kevin Mkam TsengamJibao HeGary L McPhersonVijay T JohnJulia A Valla
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2018)
Nanoscale capsule-type particles with stimuli-respondent transport of chemical species into and out of the capsule are of significant technological interest. We describe the facile synthesis, properties, and applications of a temperature-responsive silica-poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) composite consisting of hollow silica particles with ordered mesoporous shells and a complete PNIPAM coating layer. These composites start with highly monodisperse, hollow mesoporous silica particles fabricated with precision using a template-driven approach. The particles possess a high specific surface area (1771 m2/g) and large interior voids that are accessible to the exterior environment through pore channels of the silica shell. An exterior PNIPAM coating provides thermoresponsiveness to the composite, acting as a gate to regulate the uptake and release of functional molecules. Uptake and release of a model compound (rhodamine B) occurs at temperatures below the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of 32 °C, while the dehydrated hydrophobic polymer layer collapses over the particle at temperatures above the LCST, leading to a shutoff of uptake and release. These transitions are also manifest at an oil-water interface, where the polymer-coated hollow particles stabilize oil-in-water emulsions at temperatures below the LCST and destabilize the emulsions at temperatures above the LCST. Cryogenic scanning electron microscopy indicates patchlike particle structures at the oil-water interface of the stabilized emulsions. The silica-PNIPAM composite therefore couples advantages from both the hollow mesoporous silica structure and the thermoresponsive polymer.
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