2006 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2006;
Baltimore, MD
Session K28: Focus Session: Microphysical Properties of Block Copolymer Aggregates II
2:30 PM–5:06 PM,
Tuesday, March 14, 2006
Baltimore Convention Center
Room: 325
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: Dennis Discher, University of Pennsylvania
Abstract ID: BAPS.2006.MAR.K28.2
Abstract: K28.00002 : Polymer Vesicles in Biomimetic Applications
3:06 PM–3:42 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Maria Santore
(UMass Amherst Polymer Science and Engineering)
The performance of phospholipid vesicles in targeted pharmaceutical delivery
is greatly improved by the addition of water-soluble polymeric tethers. The
resulting solvated brush resists protein adsorption and access of biological
entities to the hydrophobic membrane core, evading immune response.
Polymeric vesicles have, due to their increased stability and greater
variability in chemical and mechanical properties, huge potential relative
to lipsomes. They may ultimately form the basis for artificial cells and
scavengers, or in non-biomedical applications, distributed microreactors. To
this end, we explore the incorporation of biomimetic features in polymer
lamellae: membrane phase separation and ``rafts'', bending fluctuations and
budding, triggered release, and dynamic engulfment.
Vesicle phase separation, bending, lamellar disruption, and lamellar wetting
all are rooted in block copolymer and polymer brush physics. For instance,
vesicles blended from two block copolymers, polystyrene-co-poly(ethylene
oxide) (PS-PEO) and poly(butadiene)-PEO (PBD-PEO) exhibit no macroscopic
phase separation, though blends of PS and PBD at the same molecular weight
do. This represents either an upward shifting of the UCST or a suppression
of large-scale morphology. Also interesting is the ability of PS-PEO to form
robust, vesicle-sized, capsules carrying aqueous phase cargo. While we doubt
the true vesicular nature of these structures, they are often robust to
passing of a liquid-air contact line. Their morphology is highly dependent
on copolymer composition. The capsules are subject to buckling instabilities
and in some instances, glassy fracture with sudden content release. Lamellar
physics also plays an important role in the scavenging and adhesion
capabilities of polymer vesicles: While the density of adhesive groups on
the chain ends of incorporated tethers acts in ways easy to anticipate,
engulfment dynamics depends dramatically on dynamic membrane bending.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2006.MAR.K28.2