Light-switchable nanoparticles based on amphiphilic diblock, triblock and heterograft polyoxazoline†
Abstract
Photo-active nanoparticles (NPD, NPT, NPH) were elaborated in water from amphiphilic diblock (D), triblock (T) and heterograft (H) copolymers based on a chromatic unit, coumarin, linked to an alkyl chain and a hydrophilic polyoxazoline chain. Under UV-exposure, for graft copolymers, the coumarin moieties crosslink the nanoparticle core (NPHx) while a simple chain by chain dimerization happens with linear diblock and triblock copolymers (NPDx and NPT). The self-assembly of these copolymers was examined as well as the UV-activity and UV-reversibility of the corresponding NPs by UV spectroscopy. Their stability under light exposure and temperature was also monitored by dynamic light scattering (DLS). Finally, the loading of a lipophilic fluorescent probe (Nile red) into the NP core was evaluated by fluorescence emission. All these data illustrate the tunable size, UV-activity, stability and loading efficiency of the NPs by the starting macromolecular architecture of the amphiphilic copolymers. Triblock copolymers seem to be a promising tool for switchable NPs characterized by two opposite states: NPs alternatively with and without a photo-dimerized core.