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Planet–Satellite Micellar Superstructures Formed...
Journal article

Planet–Satellite Micellar Superstructures Formed by ABCB Terpolymers in Solution

Abstract

The occurrence and relative stability of planet-satellite nanostructures, composed of a host micelle (the planet) accompanied by a number of guest micelles (the satellites), in ABCB tetrablock terpolymer solutions are studied using the polymeric self-consistent field theory and dissipative particle dynamics simulations. The theoretical results demonstrate that the self-assembly of the ABCB tetrablock terpolymers with solvophobic A- and C-blocks and solvophilic B-blocks could lead to the formation of various planet-satellite superstructures, where the planet and satellites are composed of the A- and C-blocks, respectively. Furthermore, the number of satellites is controlled by the ratio of the two B-blocks. The arrangement of the satellites surrounding the planet resembles the solution of the well-known Thomson's problem concerning the optimum arrangement of a given number of electrons on a sphere. Besides providing a facile route to engineering novel multicompartment micelles with planet-satellite superstructures for potential advanced applications, the study strengthens the prospect that multiblock copolymers could become a useful platform for the fabrication of complex nanostructures.

Authors

Duan C; Li W; Qiu F; Shi A-C

Journal

ACS Macro Letters, Vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 257–261

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

March 21, 2017

DOI

10.1021/acsmacrolett.7b00058

ISSN

2161-1653

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