(613f) Solvent Controls Nanoparticle Size during Nanoprecipitation By Limiting Block Copolymer Assembly
AIChE Annual Meeting
2021
2021 Annual Meeting
Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
Polymer Thermodynamics and Self-Assembly
Thursday, November 11, 2021 - 1:45pm to 2:00pm
In this work, we show how solvent controls NP size by limiting block copolymer assembly.7 We nanoprecipitated conventional block copolymers, such as poly(ethylene glycol)-block-polylactide (PEG-b-PLA), PEG-b-poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PEG-b-PLGA), and PEG-b-poly(caprolactone) (PEG-b-PCL), from acetone, acetonitrile, dimethylsulfoxide, tetrahydrofuran, and dimethylformamide. For the same polymer concentration (10 mg mL-1), NP size varied between 40 and 110 nm depending on the solvent used. Turbidity measurements suggested that in the initial stages of mixingâlow water concentrationsâpolymers assembled into unimer aggregates that were dynamic and varied size in response to changes in water concentration (Fig. 1.). At later stages of mixing, beyond a solvent-specific water concentration, further aggregate growth was blocked and the aggregates became kinetically frozen.
This evidence suggested that the solvent controls NP size by determining the extent of dynamic growth up to a point of growth arrest. The same trend was observed when block copolymers were nanoprecipitated in a flow device which allowed precise control over mixing.8 Based on these findings, we developed a physical model that suggests that spinodal decomposition governs the initial phase of aggregate formation, which corroborated our experimental results.
In total, these findings address a fundamental question in block copolymer nanoprecipitation and provide a framework that may help in the rational design of NPs for biomedical and engineering applications.
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Figure 1. During nanoprecipitation, nanoparticle (NP) growth is stopped at the point of growth arrest. Solvent controls NP size by terminating growth at specific solvent-dependent time points.