2018 AIChE Annual Meeting

(50d) Tuning Self-Assembled Block Copolymer Micelles Via Co-Solvent Addition

Authors

Tyler J. Cooksey - Presenter, University of Houston
Xiuli Li, Virginia Tech
Avantika Singh, University of Houston
Kim Mai Le, University of Houston
Sameer Vajjala Kesava, The Pennsylvania State University
Enrique D. Gomez, The Pennsylvania State University
Bryce E. Kidd, Virginia Tech
Louis Madsen, Virginia Tech
Megan Robertson, University of Houston
Block copolymer micelles, assembled in selective solvents, have wide ranging applications, from drug delivery to personal care products to nanoreactors. A convenient method of tuning the self-assembly of block copolymer micelles is the addition of co-solvents, which modify the core-corona interfacial tension. The structure of biocompatible poly(ethylene oxide-b-ε-caprolactone) (PEO-PCL) diblock copolymers in deuterated water (D2O) / tetrahydrofuran (THFd8) mixtures were investigated with a combination of small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). PEO-PCL block copolymers of varying molecular weight but constant block ratio formed spherical micelles over a wide range of solvent compositions (10 to 60% volume THFd8 in D2O). Variation of the THFd8 content in the solvent led to changes in the solvent uptake of the micelle cores, which was similar for both series of differing polymer molecular weight. However, the two series of differing molecular weight showed drastically different trends in the aggregation number, and therefore micelle size parameters, as a function of solvent composition. The unimer content, as determined by NMR, allowed refinement of extracted micelle parameters. The presence of THFd8 in the micelle cores serves as a model cargo molecule; in ongoing studies these results are extended to the incorporation of relevant therapeutic drug molecules in the micelles.