Symmetry breaking via polymer chain overcrowding in molecular bottlebrush crystallization
ORAL
Abstract
One of the fundamental laws in crystallization is translational symmetry, which accounts for the profound shapes observed in natural mineral crystals and snowflakes. Spherical polymer crystalsomes have been grown and investigated in the context of spherical crystallography, where translational symmetry is broken be confining crystal growth in a curved liquid/liquid interface. In this talk, we present the spontaneous formation of spherical hollow crystals with broken translational symmetry in crystalline molecular bottlebrush (mBB) polymers. The unique structure was named as mBB crystalsome (mBBC), highlighting its similarity to the classical molecular vesicles. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments showed that the mBBC formation was driven by local chain overcrowding-induced asymmetrical lamella bending.
–
Presenters
-
Christopher Li
Drexel Univ
Authors
-
Christopher Li
Drexel Univ
-
Hao Qi
Drexel Univ
-
Mark Staub
Drexel Univ
-
Daniel Henn
University of Tennessee
-
Bin Zhao
University of Tennessee