Zwitterionic materials are an important class of antifouling biomaterials for various applications. Despite such desirable antifouling properties, molecular-level understanding of the structure–property relationship associated with surface chemistry/topology/hydration and antifouling performance still remains to be elucidated. In this work, we computationally studied the packing structure, surface hydration, and antifouling property of three zwitterionic polymer brushes of poly(carboxybetaine methacrylate) (pCBMA), poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate) (pSBMA), and poly((2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl)phosporylcoline) (pMPC) brushes and a hydrophilic PEG brush using a combination of molecular mechanics (MM), Monte Carlo (MC), molecular dynamics (MD), and steered MD (SMD) simulations. We for the first time determined the optimal packing structures of all polymer brushes from a wide variety of unit cells and chain orientations in a complex energy landscape. Under the optimal packing structures, MD simulations were further conducted to study the structure, dynamics, and orientation of water molecules and protein adsorption on the four polymer brushes, while SMD simulations to study the surface resistance of the polymer brushes to a protein. The collective results consistently revealed that the three zwitterionic brushes exhibited stronger interactions with water molecules and higher surface resistance to a protein than the PEG brush. It was concluded that both the carbon space length between zwitterionic groups and the nature of the anionic groups have a distinct effect on the antifouling performance, leading to the following antifouling ranking of pCBMA > pMPC > pSBMA. This work hopefully provides some structural insights into the design of new antifouling materials beyond traditional PEG-based antifouling materials.
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polyGraft 1.0: A program for molecular structure and topology generation of polymer‐grafted hybrid nanostructures
Abstract Polymer‐grafted hybrid materials have been ubiquitously employed in various engineering applications. The design of these hybrid materials with superior performances requires a molecularly detailed understanding of the structure and dynamics of the polymer brushes and their interactions with the grafting substrate. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are very well suited for the study of these materials which can provide molecular insights into the effects of polymer composition and length, grafting density, substrate composition and curvatures, and nanoconfinement. However, few existing tools are available to generate such systems, which would otherwise reduce the barrier of preparation for such systems to enable high throughput simulations. Here polyGraft, a general, flexible, and easy to use Python program, is introduced for automated generation of molecular structure and topology of polymer grafted hybrid materials for MD simulations purposes, ranging from polymer brushes grafted to hard substrates, to densely grafted bottlebrush polymers. polyGraft is openly accessible on GitHub (https://github.com/nanogchen/polyGraft).
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- Award ID(s):
- 1916864
- PAR ID:
- 10501705
- Publisher / Repository:
- Wiley
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Computational Chemistry
- Volume:
- 44
- Issue:
- 28
- ISSN:
- 0192-8651
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 2230 to 2239
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Bottlebrush polymers, macromolecules consisting of dense polymer side chains grafted from a central polymer backbone, have unique properties resulting from this well-defined molecular architecture. With the advent of controlled radical polymerization techniques, access to these architectures has become more readily available. However, synthetic challenges remain, including the need for intermediate purification, the use of toxic solvents, and challenges with achieving long bottlebrush architectures due to backbone entanglements. Herein, we report hybrid bonding bottlebrush polymers (systems integrating covalent and noncovalent bonding of structural units) consisting of poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) (p(NaSS)) brushes grafted from a peptide amphiphile (PA) supramolecular polymer backbone. This was achieved using photoinitiated electron/energy transfer-reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (PET-RAFT) polymerization in water. The structure of the hybrid bonding bottlebrush architecture was characterized using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, and its properties were probed using rheological measurements. We observed that hybrid bonding bottlebrush polymers were able to organize into block architectures containing domains with high brush grafting density and others with no observable brushes. This finding is possibly a result of dynamic behavior unique to supramolecular polymer backbones, enabling molecular exchange or translational diffusion of monomers along the length of the assemblies. The hybrid bottlebrush polymers exhibited higher solution viscosity at moderate shear, protected supramolecular polymer backbones from disassembly at high shear, and supported self-healing capabilities, depending on grafting densities. Our results demonstrate an opportunity for novel properties in easily synthesized bottlebrush polymer architectures built with supramolecular polymers that might be useful in biomedical applications or for aqueous lubrication.more » « less
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Because surface-grafted polyelectrolyte brushes (PEBs) are responsive to external stimuli, such as electric fields and ionic strength, PEBs are attractive for applications ranging from drug delivery to separations technologies. Essential to PEB utilization is understanding how critical parameters like grafting density (σ) impact PEB structure and the dynamics of the PEB and counterions. To study the effect of σ on PEB and counterion structure and dynamics, we fine-tune a coarse-grained model that retains the chemical specificity of a strong polyelectrolyte, poly[(2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl) trimethylammonium chloride] (PMETAC), using the MARTINI forcefield. Using “salt-free” conditions where the counterion concentration balances the charge on the brush, we build coarse-grained (CG) molecular dynamics simulations for MARTINI PMETAC brushes (N=150 monomers; MW = 31.2 kg/mol) at experimentally relevant values of σ = 0.05, 0.10, 0.20, and 0.40 chains/nm2. Using 5 µs simulations, we investigate the effects of grafting density on PEB structure, ion dissociation dynamics, polymer mobility, and counterion diffusivity. Results show that competition between electrostatic interactions, steric hindrance, and polymer mobility controls counterion diffusivity. The interplay of these factors leads to diffusivity that depends non-monotonically on σ, with counterion diffusivity peaking at an intermediate σ = 0.10 chains/nm2.more » « less
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We investigate the dynamics of polymers grafted to spherical nanoparticles in solution using hybrid molecular dynamics simulations with a coarse-grained solvent modeled via the multiparticle collision dynamics algorithm. The mean-square displacements of monomers near the surface of the nanoparticle exhibit a plateau on intermediate time scales, indicating confined dynamics reminiscent of those reported in neutron spin–echo experiments. The confined dynamics vanish beyond a specific radial distance from the nanoparticle surface that depends on the polymer grafting density. We show that this dynamical confinement transition follows theoretical predictions for the critical distance associated with the structural transition from confined to semidilute brush regimes. These findings suggest the existence of a hitherto unreported dynamic length scale connected with theoretically predicted static fluctuations in spherical polymer brushes and provide new insights into recent experimental observations.more » « less
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