Water soluble poly(styrene sulfonate)-b-poly(vinylidene fluoride)-b-poly(styrene sulfonate) triblock copolymer nanoparticles
Abstract
A visible light, Mn2(CO)2-photomediated process was used to enable the iodine degenerative transfer controlled radical polymerization of vinylidene fluoride (VDF) initiated from I–(CF2)6–I, and the successive quantitative activation of the ∼CH2–CF2–I and ∼CF2–CH2–I chain ends of I–PVDF–I, to produce a series of PNpSS-b-PVDF-b-PNpSS triblock copolymers (NpSS/VDF/NpSS = 4/60/4, 15/60/15, 34/60/34) with neopentyl styrene sulfonate (NpSS), which upon NaN3 deprotection, afforded the corresponding PNaSS-b-PVDF-b-PNaSS. All blocks, as well as PVDF, PNpSS and PNaSS formed water stable dispersion/solutions following either nanoprecipitation from acetone (PVDF, PNpSS, and PNpSS-b-PVDF-b-PNpSS) or direct dissolution in water (PNaSS, PNaSS-b-PVDF-b-PNaSS). Remarkably, all PNaSS-b-PVDF-b-PNaSS triblocks also provided indefinitely stable systems even under the high ionic strength conditions of phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solutions, corresponding to cell-isotonic, pH = 7.4 conditions. These trends were found to be consistent with the block composition dependence of the apparent hydrodynamic radius (Rh), conductivity, and zeta potential (ζ), where Rh increases upon deprotection from about 35–25 nm to about 168–136 nm in water, and decreases to 133–86 nm in PBS solutions, ζ decreases from ∼−40 mV to ∼−70 mV in water and increases to ∼−18 mV in PBS, and where the conductivity is negligible for PNpSS-b-PVDF-b-PNpSS but then increases linearly to ∼0.2 mS cm−1 for PNaSS-b-PVDF-b-PNaSS in water to reach ∼17 mS cm−1 in PBS. Finally, the blocks were evaluated as promising 19F-MRI contrast agents.