RESUMO
Chiral mesoporous silica (mSiO2) nanomaterials have gained significant attention during the past two decades. Most of them show a topologically characteristic helix; however, little attention has been paid to the molecular-scale chirality of mSiO2 frameworks. Herein, we report a chiral amide-gel-directed synthesis strategy for the fabrication of chiral mSiO2 nanospheres with molecular-scale-like chirality in the silicate skeletons. The functionalization of micelles with the chiral amide gels via electrostatic interactions realizes the growth of molecular configuration chiral silica sols. Subsequent modular self-assembly results in the formation of dendritic large mesoporous silica nanospheres with molecular chirality of the silica frameworks. As a result, the resultant chiral mSiO2 nanospheres show abundant large mesopores (â¼10.1 nm), high pore volumes (â¼1.8 cm3·g-1), high surface areas (â¼525 m2·g-1), and evident CD activity. The successful transfer of the chirality from the chiral amide gels to composited micelles and further to asymmetric silica polymeric frameworks based on modular self-assembly leads to the presence of molecular chirality in the final products. The chiral mSiO2 frameworks display a good chiral stability after a high-temperature calcination (even up to 1000 °C). The chiral mSiO2 can impart a notable decline in ß-amyloid protein (Aß42) aggregation formation up to 79%, leading to significant mitigation of Aß42-induced cytotoxicity on the human neuroblastoma line SH-ST5Y cells in vitro. This finding opens a new avenue to construct the molecular chirality configuration in nanomaterials for optical and biomedical applications.
Assuntos
Doença de Alzheimer , Nanosferas , Humanos , Nanosferas/química , Peptídeos beta-Amiloides , Dióxido de Silício/química , Micelas , Géis , AmidasRESUMO
In chirality research area, it is of interest to reveal the chiral feature of inorganic nanomaterials and their enantioselective interactions with biomolecules. Although common Raman spectroscopy is not regarded as a direct chirality analysis tool, it is in fact effective and sensitive to study the enantioselectivity phenomena, which is demonstrated by the enantio-discrimination of amino acid enantiomers using the polydopamine-modified intrinsically chiral SiO2 nanofibers in this work. The Raman scattering intensities of an enantiomer of cysteine are more than twice as high as those of the other enantiomer with opposite handedness. Similar results were also found in the cases of cystine, phenylalanine, and tryptophan enantiomers. In turn, these organic molecules could be used as chirality indicators for SiO2, which was clarified by the unique Raman spectra-derived mirror-image relationships. Thus, an indirect chirality detection method for inorganic nanomaterials was developed.
Assuntos
Aminoácidos/química , Indóis/química , Polímeros/química , Dióxido de Silício/química , Análise Espectral Raman , Nanofibras/química , EstereoisomerismoRESUMO
Au nanoparticles (NPs) labeled with the handedness tag of "d-" or "l-", which were detached from inorganic chiral silica, showed both intrinsic chirality and surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) activity. In the presence of these chiral Au substrates, it was found that the enantiomer of cystine with the same handedness tag of Au NPs would show stronger Raman scattering signal intensities than those of the enantiomer with the opposite tag, where the differences could be over three times. Consequently, this work afforded a novel enantioselective recognition method on ordinary Raman spectroscopy by using chiral plasmonic metallic nanomaterials.
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Silica is abundant in the Earth's crust, and silicate materials are used on the global scale, from industrial products for architecture, vehicles, electronics, and optics to consumption as foods, medicines, supplements, and cosmetics. Silica has become increasingly important in current science and technology, as seen in the components of advanced materials. The characteristic formula of silica is very simply often expressed as SiO2 . However, it is difficult to draw silica precisely owing to its intricate chemical structures. We need to make a greater effort in understanding silica, even though silica chemistry has existed for over 200â years. Similar to the homochirality observed in natural amino acids, natural silica of quartz is chiral, and in some sense, the origin of life with chirality might be partly related to quartz-like silica chirality. This review focuses on the asymmetry of silica from the view of the formation of irregular tetrahedron structures of SiO4 . Silica is composed of several repeated tetrahedron units of SiO4 , leading to the formation of inorganic polymers with divergently expanded 3D structures. In this large polymeric skeleton, not every unit of SiO4 can maintain an ideal tetrahedron, and thus, it becomes twisted. The twisting results in an asymmetric point on the Si atom, leading silica to become racemic in the stereochemical sense. Therefore, enantioselective preparation of silica should endow silica with chirality through the silica skeleton. Some recent achievements exhibit that silica is an effective chiral material and has great potential for transferring chirality from silica to other matter.
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Recently, circularly polarized luminescence (CPL)-active systems have become a very hot and interesting subject in chirality- and optics-related areas. The CPL-active systems are usually available by two approaches: covalently combining a luminescent centre to chiral motif or associating the guest of luminescent probe to a chiral host. However, all the chiral components in CPL materials were organic, although the luminescent components were alternatively organics or inorganics. Herein, the first totally inorganic CPL-active system by "luminescent guest-chiral host" strategy is proposed. Luminescent sub-10â nm lanthanide oxides (Eu2 O3 or Tb2 O3 ) nanoparticles (guests) were encapsulated into chiral non-helical SiO2 nanofibres (host) through calcination of chiral SiO2 hybrid nanofibres, trapping Eu3+ (or Tb3+ ). These lanthanide oxides display circular dichroism (CD) optical activity in the ultraviolet wavelength and CPL signals around at 615â nm for Eu3+ and 545â nm for Tb3+ . This work has implications for inorganic-based CPL-active systems by incorporation of various luminescent guests within chiral inorganic hosts.
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A facile avenue to fabricate micrometer-sized chiral (L-, D-) and meso-like (dl-) SiO2 materials with unique structures by using crystalline complexes (cPEI/tart), composed of comblike polyethyleneimine (cPEI) and L-, D-, or dl-tartaric acid, respectively, as catalytic templates is reported. Interestingly, both chiral crystalline complexes appeared as regularly left- and right-twisted bundle structures about 10â µm in length and about 5â µm in diameter, whereas the dl-form occurred as circular structures with about 10â µm diameter. Subsequently, SiO2 @cPEI/tart hybrids with high silica content (>55.0â wt %) were prepared by stirring a mixture containing tetramethoxysilane (TMOS) and the aggregates of the crystalline complexes in water. The chiral SiO2 hybrids and calcined chiral SiO2 showed very strong CD signals and a nanofiber-based morphology on their surface, whereas dl-SiO2 showed no CD activity and a nanosheet-packed disklike shape. Furthermore, metallic silver nanoparticles (Ag NPs) were encapsulated in each silica hybrid to obtain chiral (D and L forms) and meso-like (dl form) Ag@SiO2 composites. Also, the reaction between L-cysteine (Lcys) and these Ag@SiO2 composites was preliminarily investigated. Only chiral L- and D-Ag@SiO2 composites promoted the reaction between Lcys and Ag NPs to produce a molecular [Ag-Lcys]n complex with remarkable exciton chirality, whereas the reaction hardly occurred in the case of meso-like (dl-) Ag@SiO2 composite.
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D-glucaric acid (D-Glc) associates with linear poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) through hydrogen bonding and electrostatic interactions in aqueous media to form nanostructured crystalline PEI/D-Glc/H2O complexes with PEI/D-Glc/H2O ratios of 2:1:2. These complexes can serve as templates for silica depositions from hydrolytic condensation of tetramethoxysilane to guide morphologically duplicated silica under very mild conditions. Their microscale morphologies are tunable by use of the crystalline complexes regulated in the different pH of the PEI/D-Glc solutions. It was also found that some metal ions added in the PEI/D-Glc complexation process could have a synergistic effect under a certain pH regimes, bringing about remarkable changes in the hierarchy of the resulting complexes. Especially, the complexes formed through fine-tuning of the complexation conditions could direct torsionally stacked silica nanosheets, in which the nanosheets are composed of orderly-bundled nanofibrils. Final elimination of organic components of the templates afforded chiral inorganic silica while retaining the morphologically higher-order structures. The chirality of the silica, which was obtained after calcination at 600 °C, was characterized by means of diffused reflectance circular dichroism (DRCD) spectroscopy with a remote confirmation of the appearance of induced-CD (ICD) signals of achiral or racemic chromophores covalently linked on the silica frames. Interestingly, the shapes and signs of these ICD signals are dramatically changed depending on the pH-tuned templates used in silicification and are strongly correlated to that of the CD signals of the complex templates, indicating that the chiral transcription proceeds accurately with imprinting the higher-order chirality of the complexes on the morphologically structured silica networks.
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Organic molecules with accompanying self-organization have been a great subject in chemistry, material science and nanotechnology in the past two decades. One of the most important roles of organized organic molecules is the capability of templating complexly structured inorganic materials. The focus of this Minireview is on nanostructured silica with divergent morphologies and/or integrated chirality directed by organic templates of self-assembled polyamine/polypeptides/block copolymers, chiral organogels, self-organized chiral amphiphiles and chiral crystalline complexes, etc., by biomimetic silicification and conventional sol-gel reaction. Among them, biosilica (diatoms and sponges)-inspired biomimetic silicifications are particularly highlighted.
Assuntos
Materiais Biomiméticos/química , Dióxido de Silício/química , Biomimética , Nanotecnologia , PoliaminasRESUMO
Environmentally friendly iron(II) catalysts for atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) were synthesized by careful selection of the nitrogen substituents of N,N,N-trialkylated-1,4,9-triazacyclononane (R3 TACN) ligands. Two types of structures were confirmed by crystallography: "[(R3 TACN)FeX2 ]" complexes with relatively small R groups have ionic and dinuclear structures including a [(R3 TACN)Fe(µ-X)3 Fe(R3 TACN)](+) moiety, whereas those with more bulky R groups are neutral and mononuclear. The twelve [(R3 TACN)FeX2 ]n complexes that were synthesized were subjected to bulk ATRP of styrene, methyl methacrylate (MMA), and butyl acrylate (BA). Among the iron complexes examined, [{(cyclopentyl)3 TACN}FeBr2 ] (4 b) was the best catalyst for the well-controlled ATRP of all three monomers. This species allowed easy catalyst separation and recycling, a lowering of the catalyst concentration needed for the reaction, and the absence of additional reducing reagents. The lowest catalyst loading was accomplished in the ATRP of MMA with 4 b (59â ppm of Fe based on the charged monomer). Catalyst recycling in ATRP with low catalyst loadings was also successful. The ATRP of styrene with 4 b (117â ppm Fe atom) was followed by precipitation from methanol to give polystyrene that contained residual iron below the calculated detection limit (0.28â ppm). Mechanisms that involve equilibria between the multinuclear and mononuclear species were also examined.
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In this work, chiroptical crystalline complexes of PEI/Tart (P/T) consisting of linear poly(ethylemeimine) (PEI) and an enantiomeric excess (ee) of tartaric acid (Tart) were used as chiral catalytic templates in the hydrolytic condensation of titanium bislactates and co-condensation of titanium bislactates and tetramethoxysilane for the preparation of chiral titania (TiO2) and chiral titania/silica (TiO2/SiO2) hybrid. Different from the general case of enantiopure templates excelling in chiral transformation when compared to enantiomeric excess ones, P/T systems with different enantiomer ratios exhibited each activity in the transformation of their chiral information to the resulting minerals titania and titania/silica. Especially, the P/T complexes with ee only by ±4% (D/L = 52/48 or 48/52), which is near the racemic state (D/L = 50/50), served as excellent chiral catalytic templates to generate chiroptical titania and titania/silica with mirror relation of the CD signals. By means of DSC, XRD, SEM and DRCD techniques, the crystalline complexes of PEI/Tart (P/T), the as-prepared TiO2@P/T and TiO2/SiO2@P/T, and the calcined TiO2 and TiO2/SiO2 were thoroughly investigated and the mechanism of the chiral transformation from the enantiomeric excess of P/T to minerals was proposed.
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The hybrid vesicle AuNP@LCCV, in which a large number of AuNPs with an average size of about 2.8 nm were densely and uniformly distributed in an isolated state throughout the corona of the unusual polymer vesicle, was prepared via in situ reduction of Au3+ ions, which were encapsulated in advance in the unique polymer vesicle (LCCV) consisting of a hydrophobic membrane of poly(2-phenyl-2-oxazoline) and a hydrophilic loop-cluster corona of polyethyleneimine. The vesicle was formed via self-assembly from a comb-like block copolymer in which a polystyrenic main chain was grafted densely with diblock polyethyleneimine-b-poly(2-phenyl-2-oxazoline) and acted as a reactor for the reduction of Au3+. The hybrid vesicle AuNP@LCCV showed powerful catalytic ability in the reduction of nitrophenols (NPs). Interestingly, the reduction reactions of NPs showed a remarkably long induction time, which could be shortened dramatically from 60 min to 1-2 min by greatly increasing the concentration of NaBH4. It is revealed that the oxygen adsorbed on the AuNPs significantly inhibited the reduction, causing the induction time. Once the oxygen is chemically cleaned from the surface of the AuNPs, the reduction of 4-NP proceeds gradually for a while and then completes suddenly. The reduction mechanism accompanying the oxygen-dependent induction time is proposed from the view of the strong oxygen affinity of the catalyst AuNP@LCCV.
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A far-from-equilibrium strategy is developed to synthesize coral-like nanostructures of TiO(2) on a variety of surfaces. TiO(2) nanocoral structures consist of anatase base film and rutile nanowire layers, and they are continuously formed on substrates immersed in aqueous TiOSO(4)-H(2)O(2). The sequential deposition of TiO(2) starts with hydrolysis and condensation reactions of titanium peroxocomplexes in the aqueous phase, resulting in deposition of amorphous film. The film serves as adhesive interface on which succeeding growth of rutile nanowires to occur. This initial deposition reaction is accompanied by shift in pH of the reaction media, which is favorable condition for the growth of rutile nanocrystals. During the growth of rutile nanocoral layers, the amorphous base films are transformed to anatase phase. These sequential deposition reactions occur at temperatures as low as 80 °C, and the mild synthetic condition allows the use of a wide range of substrates such as ITO (indium tin oxide), glass, and even organic polymer films. The thickness of nanocoral layer is controllable by repeating the growth reaction of rutile nanocorals. TiO(2) nanocorals show photocatalytic activity as demonstrated by site-specific reduction of Ag(I) ions, which proceeds preferentially on the rutile nanowire layer. The rutile nanowire layer also shows photocatalytic decomposition of acetaldehyde, which is promoted upon increase of the thickness of the nanowire layer. The use of temporally transforming reaction media allows the formation of biphasic TiO(2) nanocoral structures, and the concept of nonequilibrium synthetic approach would be widely applicable to developing structurally graded inorganic nanointerfaces.
Assuntos
Peróxido de Hidrogênio/química , Nanoestruturas/química , Sulfatos/química , Titânio/química , Estrutura Molecular , Tamanho da Partícula , Propriedades de Superfície , Água/químicaRESUMO
Photoluminescent polymers can be divided into two types of structures: one is the well-known conventional π-conjugated rigid chain polymers bearing π-conjugated chromophores in their side chains, and the other is the common flexible polymers without π-conjugated chromophores in their main or side chains but with a feature of clustering electron-rich and/or dipole groups in their main and/or side chains. In this work, we found a new photoluminescent polymer comprising theophylline (T) and imidazole (I) residues in a suitable ratio in the side chains on the common polystyrenic block (PVB-T/I). We synthesized a block copolymer (denoted as P2) consisting of hydrophobic PVB-T/I and hydrophilic poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), and we investigated its self-assembly into micelles and their micellar features, such as thermo-responsibility, fluorescence emission, pH, and metal ion-dependent photoluminescence, in detail. Especially, the micelles self-assembled from P2 showed intrinsic blue emission which was emitted from the charge transfer association between T and I residues in the intra-chains. Weakening the association by adjustment of the pH or addition of metal ions could evidently reduce the photoluminescence in the micellar state. Very interestingly, among many metal cations, only Pd2+, which can chelate strongly with theophylline, strongly quenched the photoluminescence from the micelles. Therefore, the polymer micelles functioned as an optical sensor for Pd(ii) ion not only by spectroscopy but also with the naked eye.
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Comb-like copolymers are usually structured by grafting polymeric side chains onto main polymer chain. There are few reports of comb-on-comb polymers in which dense secondary side chains are grafted onto primary side chain. In this work, we synthesized comb polymers with grafted-on-graft side chains (c-PEI-g-Acyl) via an effective acylation reaction of comb polymers possessing polyethyleneimine (PEI) side chain with long-alkyl acyl chlorides. For comparison, we also synthesized homopolymers l-PEI-g-Acyls via reaction of linear PEI with long-alkyl acyl chlorides. Then, we investigated their crystalline feature in the film formation by XRD, DSC and SEM, and found that the polymers tend to form hexagonal lamella structures with bilayer alkyl spacing. The comb polymers c-PEI-g-Acyls and linear polymers l-PEI-g-Acyls were used in preparation of honeycomb film by the "breath-figure" process by dropping chloroform solution of the polymers on substrate. Different to many honeycomb polymeric films which are supported by amorphous phase, interestingly, our polymers easily afford honeycomb films which are supported by crystalline lamellae frames under higher humidity condition. It was found that the comb polymers of c-PEI-g-Acyls with longer PEI primary side chain and long alkyl secondary side chain have advantages in producing honeycomb film than linear polymers of l-PEI-g-Acys.
Assuntos
Polietilenoimina , Polímeros , Cloretos , Clorofórmio , Polietilenoimina/química , Polímeros/químicaRESUMO
The formation of silica films on the glass plate whose surface was precoated by crystalline linear poly(ethylenimine) (LPEI) in advance was systematically investigated via controlling the surface-specific crystallization of the LPEI on the glass plate. Immersing glass substrates into a hot aqueous solution of LPEI containing additives such as transition metal ions and acidic compounds and retaining them on 30 °C for desired periods resulted in the formation of crystalline LPEI layers on the substrates. Subsequently dipping this LPEI-coated glass into silica source solutions afforded successfully hierarchically structured silica film which coated continuously the surface of the substrates. In this two-step process, we found that the formation of hierarchically structured silica films strongly depended on the LPEI layer formed from the LPEI aqueous solutions containing different additives. The LPEI layer formed by changing the kinds of additives and their concentrations provides the differently structured silica films composed of turbine-like structures flatly lying-on and/or vertically standing-on as well as ribbon network structures on the surface of the substrates. Moreover, we functionalized these silica films by the introduction of hydrophobic alkyl chains or emissive Eu(III) complexes and investigated their wettability and emission properties.
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We report our new achievement on the direct generation of linear polyethylenimine@silica hybrid and silica thin films on various substrates, which is composed of 10 nm nanowire silica structure with tunable micro/nano hierarchical surface morphology. We found that a process for the rapid and controlled self-assembly of crystalline template layer of linear polyethylenimine on substrate surface is critical for the formation of ultrathin silica nanowire structure and micro/nano hierarchical morphology, since the template linear polyethylenimine layer directly promotes the hydrolytic condensation of alkoxysilanes. Templated silica mineralization on the self-assembled linear polyethylenimine layer was confirmed by the studies of X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and thin film X-ray diffraction (XRD). The surface of silica nanostructure and hierarchy could be well controlled by simply adjusting the conditions for LPEI assembly, such as the polymer concentrations and substrate surface property. After a simple fluorocarbon modification, the hierarchical silica nanowire thin film demonstrated robust and reliable super-repelling property toward a series of aqueous liquids (such as commercial inkjet (IJ) ink, soy source, milk). Comparative studies clearly confirmed the critical importance of surface hierarchy for enhancing super-repelling property. Moreover, we found that the forcibly formed dirty sports (both wet and dry) from the complexly composed liquids on the super-antiwetting surface could be easily and completely cleaned by simple water drop flow. We expect these tailored nanosurfaces would have the potentials for practical technological applications, such as liquid transferring, self-cleaning, microfluid, and biomedical-related devices.
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The Pd catalyst for Suzuki-Miyaura or the other C-C coupling reactions is one of the central tools in organic synthesis related to medicine, agricultural chemicals and advanced materials. However, recycling palladium is a bottleneck for developing the extreme potential of Pd in chemistry. Herein, we established a new heterogeneous Pd catalytic system in which the catalyst is a nanopetal-gathered flower-like microsphere self-assembled from PdCl2 and alkyl-linked bis-theophyllines. The microflowers catalyzed quantitatively the reaction of aryl bromides and phenylboronic acid in aqueous media at room temperature. It was found that the reaction proceeds better in an air atmosphere than in nitrogen gas even though the Pd(ii) species employed was lowered to 0.001 mol% in the substance. Very interestingly, the microflowers could be recycled 20 times without deactivation in the C-C coupling reaction between bromobenzene and phenylboronic acid in the presence of sodium chloride. We found that the sodium chloride added played an important role in maintaining the morphology of microflowers and preventing the formation of metallic Pd particles.
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We report using the substrates covered with self-organized linear polyethylenimine (PEI) layer as biomimetic template to direct the formation of high-quality titania coat with well-defined nanofiber-based network structure. The titania deposition was simply achieved by dipping the PEI substrates into aqueous solution of titanium bislactate under ambient conditions. We found that crystalline PEI layer on the substrates is important for achieving titania coat with nanofiber-based structure. Compared to the titania powder formed by solution deposition, the interface-mediated nanostructured titania exhibited dramatically improved thermostability with being able to maintain anatase phase in majority even at 900 degrees C. Moreover, the nanostructures of titania coat could be well controlled by simply adjusting the formation conditions of crystalline PEI layer on substrates. Because of high-efficiency photocatalysis of anatase titania, the nanostructured surface exhibited good photoresponsive surface wettability through hydrophobic modification and light irradiation.
Assuntos
Nanofibras , Polietilenoimina , Titânio/química , Catálise , Microscopia de Força Atômica , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Microscopia Eletrônica de Transmissão , Fotoquímica , Análise Espectral Raman , Difração de Raios XRESUMO
We report that a simple fabrication of a superhydrophobic nanosurface consisted of a grass-like silica thin film on the inner wall of a glass tube and its feature in water motion and water movement. The glass tube with a superhydrophobic inner wall can make the water flow with friction-drag reduction and completely preventing water sticking. Transferring water by this tube did not cause weight loss at all. Therefore, aqueous solutions containing high content metal ions were cross-moved without washing the tube used and no cross-contamination occurred after cross-movement. Furthermore, in an inside diameter of 6.0 mm glass tube where the half-length of the inner surface is covered by superhydrophobic nanograss and the other half is an unmodified hydrophilic surface, the water droplets flowing down from the hydrophilic side can be stopped spontaneously at the hydrophilic-superhydrophobic boundary as if there is an invisible flow-stopping fence built inside the glass tube.
Assuntos
Água/química , Fricção , Vidro/química , Interações Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Movimento (Física)RESUMO
In this work, we synthesized a new comb-like copolymer (c-iMP) possessing amphiphilic diblock side chains consisting of poly(methyloxazoline) (PMOZ) and poly(phenyloxazoline) (PPOZ) via reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer (RAFT) polymerization of p-choloromethylstyene (CMS) and cationic ring-opening polymerization (CROP) of 2-methyl-2-oxazoline (MOZ) and 2-phenyl-2-oxazoline (POZ). Then, by performing selective hydrolysis of the hydrophilic PMOZ block, the PMOZ block was transformed into PEI (polyethylenimine) from which comb-like copolymers (c-iEP) possessing two blocks of PEI (E) and PPOZ (P) were produced. The comb-copolymers c-iEP showed unique self-assembling behavior in water to give an unusual polymersome covered by a loop-cluster polyamine corona. The polymersome showed extreme toughness and stability without collapse and fusion even at dry conditions and could be transformed into capsules. This is the first example of polymesome without free-ends on the vesicle wall which could include Ag ions inside and could deposit silica around the wall to form hybrid hollow spheres.