Abstract
The synthetic toolbox for stimuli-responsive polymers has broadened to include many variables of tunable control, making these materials applicable in diverse technologies. However, unraveling the key composition-structure-function relationships to facilitate ground-up design remains a challenge due to the inherent dispersity in sequence and conformations for synthetic polymers. We here present a systematic study of these relationships using a model system of copolymers with a thermoresponsive (N-isopropylacrylamide) backbone in addition to metal-chelating (acrylic acid) and hydrophobic structural comonomers and evaluate their efficiency at the isolation of technologically critical lanthanide ions. The efficiency of lanthanide ion extraction by precipitation was quantitated with a metallochromic dye to reveal trends relating copolymer hydrophobicity to improved separations. Further, we examined the role of different hydrophobic comonomers in dictating solution-phase conformation of the polymer in the presence and absence of lanthanide ions, and we identify key features of the hydrophobic comonomer that influence extraction efficiency. Finally, we identified how the local proximity of thermoresponsive, chelating, and hydrophobic subunits facilitate metal extraction by manipulating copolymer sequence with multiblock polymerization. Through mechanistic analysis, we propose a binding-then-assembly process through which metal ions are coprecipitated with macromolecular chelators.
Supplementary materials
Title
Structure-Function Insights into Thermoresponsive Copolymers as Lanthanide Precipitants - Supporting Information
Description
Supporting information containing materials and methods as well as additional characterization (polymer synthesis, scattering profiles, metal ion quantitation, SEC)
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