What is it about?
Tadpole-shaped polymers, which consist of a semiflexible ring and a rigid rod-like tail, are functionalized in such a way that either the tail or ring are able to attach to a planar surface. Due to this directed adsorption capability, our polymers create unexpected patterns both on the adsorption surface and in the vicinity of it, where they build a polymeric brush.
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Why is it important?
The organization of both the adsorbed phase and the polymeric brush can be controlled by changing the flexibility of the polymer ring: long range order of the tails on the surface can be changed to cluster organization, and coiled structures, intricate snake-like patterns and staked rings arise as the rigidity of the adsorbed rings increases.
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This page is a summary of: Adsorption characteristics of Janus tadpole polymers, The Journal of Chemical Physics, June 2024, American Institute of Physics,
DOI: 10.1063/5.0213433.
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