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Self-Assembly of Linear and Cyclic Polylactide Stereoblock Copolymers with a Parallel and Antiparallel Chain Arrangement Distinguishing Their Directions on a Water Surface.

Kenta IwashimaTakuya YamamotoYasuyuki TezukaJiro Kumaki
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2020)
The self-assembly of molecules into a well-ordered structure is one of the most important processes in fabricating sophisticated materials. Here, we show that polymer chains can be self-assembled, distinguishing their direction (parallel or antiparallel), and could be a new useful scaffold for self-assembly in a controlled direction. The system that was used was a stereocomplex (SC) formation of linear and cyclic polylactide (PLA) stereoblock copolymers with a parallel and antiparallel chain arrangement in a Langmuir monolayer. The linear and cyclic stereoblock copolymers with a parallel arrangement formed a well-ordered lamellar SC in the first and second layers upon compression, but the linear and cyclic stereoblock copolymers with an antiparallel arrangement did not form a first-layer lamella and instead formed only the second-layer lamella. These results were only rationally explained by assuming that the enantiomeric PLA chains selectively assembled in a parallel direction, not in an antiparallel direction, in the SC. A simple polymer chain could be self-assembled, distinguishing the direction without a specific interaction group in it.
Keyphrases
  • mass spectrometry
  • solar cells