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Creators/Authors contains: "Johnson, Jeremiah A"

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  1. Abstract Surface functionalization and colloidal stability are pivotal for numerous applications of gold nanoparticles (Au‐NPs). Over the past decade, N‐heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) have emerged as promising ligands for stabilizing Au‐NPs owing to their ease of synthesis, structural diversity, and strong metal‐ligand bonds. Here, we introduce new Au(I)–NHCcopolymer scaffolds as precursors to multidentate NHC‐protected Au‐NPs. Ring‐opening metathesis copolymerization of a norbornene‐appended Au(I)−NHC complex with another functionalized norbornene comonomer provides NHC–Au(I) copolymers with modular compositions and structures. Upon reduction, these copolymers yield multidentate polyNHC‐coated Au‐NPs with varied properties and corona functionalities dictated by the secondary monomer. These nanoparticles exhibit excellent size homogeneity and stability against aggregation in various buffers, cell culture media, and under exposure to electrolytes, oxidants, and exogenous thiols over extended periods. Moreover, we demonstrate post‐synthetic surface functionalization reactions of polyNHC−Au‐NPs while maintaining colloidal stability, highlighting their robustness and potential for applications such as bioconjugation. Overall, these findings underscore the potential of ROMP‐derived NHC‐containing copolymers as highly tunable and versatile multidentate ligands that may be suitable for other inorganic colloids and flat surfaces. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 4, 2026
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available January 29, 2026
  3. Gels made of telechelic polymers connected by reversible cross-linkers are a versatile design platform for biocompatible viscoelastic materials. Their linear response to a step strain displays a fast, near-exponential relaxation when using low-valence cross-linkers, while larger supramolecular cross-linkers bring about much slower dynamics involving a wide distribution of timescales whose physical origin is still debated. Here, we propose a model where the relaxation of polymer gels in the dilute regime originates from elementary events in which the bonds connecting two neighboring cross-linkers all disconnect. Larger cross-linkers allow for a greater average number of bonds connecting them but also generate more heterogeneity. We characterize the resulting distribution of relaxation timescales analytically and accurately reproduce stress relaxation measurements on metal-coordinated hydrogels with a variety of cross-linker sizes including ions, metal-organic cages, and nanoparticles. Our approach is simple enough to be extended to any cross-linker size and could thus be harnessed for the rational design of complex viscoelastic materials. 
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  4. Hydrogen fluoride (HF) is a versatile reagent for material transformation, with applications in self-immolative polymers, remodeled siloxanes, and degradable polymers. The responsive in situ generation of HF in materials therefore holds promise for new classes of adaptive material systems. Here, we report the mechanochemically coupled generation of HF from alkoxy-gem-difluorocyclopropane (gDFC) mechanophores derived from the addition of difluorocarbene to enol ethers. Production of HF involves an initial mechanochemically assisted rearrangement of gDFC mechanophore to α-fluoro allyl ether whose regiochemistry involves preferential migration of fluoride to the alkoxy-substituted carbon, and ab initio steered molecular dynamics simulations reproduce the observed selectivity and offer insights into the mechanism. When the alkoxy gDFC mechanophore is derived from poly(dihydrofuran), the α-fluoro allyl ether undergoes subsequent hydrolysis to generate 1 equiv of HF and cleave the polymer chain. The hydrolysis is accelerated via acid catalysis, leading to self-amplifying HF generation and concomitant polymer degradation. The mechanically generated HF can be used in combination with fluoride indicators to generate an optical response and to degrade polybutadiene with embedded HF-cleavable silyl ethers (11 mol %). The alkoxy-gDFC mechanophore thus provides a mechanically coupled mechanism of releasing HF for polymer remodeling pathways that complements previous thermally driven mechanisms. 
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  5. Abstract Supramolecular polymer networks contain non-covalent cross-links that enable access to broadly tunable mechanical properties and stimuli-responsive behaviors; the incorporation of multiple unique non-covalent cross-links within such materials further expands their mechanical responses and functionality. To date, however, the design of such materials has been accomplished through discrete combinations of distinct interaction types in series, limiting materials design logic. Here we introduce the concept of leveraging “nested” supramolecular crosslinks, wherein two distinct types of non-covalent interactions exist in parallel, to control bulk material functions. To demonstrate this concept, we use polymer-linked Pd2L4metal–organic cage (polyMOC) gels that form hollow metal–organic cage junctions through metal–ligand coordination and can exhibit well-defined host-guest binding within their cavity. In these “nested” supramolecular network junctions, the thermodynamics of host-guest interactions within the junctions affect the metal–ligand interactions that form those junctions, ultimately translating to substantial guest-dependent changes in bulk material properties that could not be achieved in traditional supramolecular networks with multiple interactions in series. 
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  6. Small angle neutron scattering was used to measure single chain radii of gyration of end-linked polymer gels before and after cross-linking to calculate the prestrain, which is the ratio of the average chain size in a cross-linked network to that of a free chain in solution. The prestrain increased from 1.06 ± 0.01 to 1.16 ± 0.02 as gel synthesis concentration decreased near the overlap concentration, indicating that the chains are slightly more stretched in the network than in solution. Dilute gels with higher loop fractions were found to be spatially homogeneous. Form factor and volumetric scaling analyses independently confirmed that elastic strands stretch by 2–23% from Gaussian conformations to create a space-spanning network, with increased stretching as network synthesis concentration decreases. Prestrain measurements reported here serve as a point of reference for network theories that rely on this parameter for the calculation of mechanical properties. 
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  7. While Si-containing polymers can often be deconstructed using chemical triggers such as fluoride, acids, and bases, they are resistant to cleavage by mild reagents such as biological nucleophiles, thus limiting their end-of-life options and potential environmental degradability. Here, using ring-opening metathesis polymerization, we synthesize terpolymers of (1) a “functional” monomer ( e.g. , a polyethylene glycol macromonomer or dicyclopentadiene); (2) a monomer containing an electrophilic pentafluorophenyl (PFP) substituent; and (3) a cleavable monomer based on a bifunctional silyl ether . Exposing these polymers to thiols under basic conditions triggers a cascade of nucleophilic aromatic substitution (S N Ar) at the PFP groups, which liberates fluoride ions, followed by cleavage of the backbone Si–O bonds, inducing polymer backbone deconstruction. This method is shown to be effective for deconstruction of polyethylene glycol (PEG) based graft terpolymers in organic or aqueous conditions as well as polydicyclopentadiene (pDCPD) thermosets, significantly expanding upon the versatility of bifunctional silyl ether based functional polymers. 
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  8. Weak cross-linkers can improve the ultimate strength and tear resistance of polymer networks. 
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  9. The mechanical properties of a polymer network reflect the collective behavior of all of the constituent strands within the network. These strands comprise a distribution of states, and a central question is how the deformation and tension experienced by a strand is influenced by strand length. Here, we address this question through the use of mechanophore force probes with discrete molecular weights. Probe strands, each bearing a mechanochromic spiropyran (SP), were prepared through an iterative synthetic strategy, providing uniform PDMS-functionalized SP force probes with molecular weights of 578, 1170, and 2356 g/mol. The probes were each doped (9 mM) into the same silicone elastomer matrix. Upon stretching, the materials change color, consistent with the expected conversion of SP to merocyanine (MC). The critical strain at which measurable mechanochromism is observed is correlated with the strain hardening of the matrix, but it is independent of the molecular length of the probe strand. When a network with activated strands is relaxed, the color dissipates, and the rate of decoloration varies as a function of the relaxing strain ((ε_r ) ̅); faster decoloration occurs at lower (ε_r ) ̅. The dependence of decoloration rate on (ε_r ) ̅ is taken to reflect the effect of residual tension in the once-activated strands on the reversion reaction of MC to SP, and the effect of that residual tension is indistinguishable across the three molecular lengths examined. The combination of discrete strand synthesis and mechanochromism provides a foundation to further test and develop molecular-based theories of elasticity and fracture in polymer networks. 
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