RESUMEN
The synthesis of complex polymer architectures using relatively facile experimental protocols provides access to materials with the opportunity to control functionality and physical behaviour. The scope of hyperbranched-polydendron chemistries has been expanded here to include primary chains comprising amine-functional 'homopolymer', 'statistical copolymer' and amphiphilic 'block copolymer' analogues using 2-(diethyl amino)ethyl methacrylate, 2-hydroxy propyl methacrylate and t-butyl methacrylate. The different primary chain chemistry and architectures leads to a marked variation in nanoprecipitation behaviour and the response of the resulting amine-functional nanoparticles to varying pH. When acid-sensitive and acid-stable branchers, 1,4-butanediol di(methacryoyloxy)-ethyl ether and ethylene glycol dimethacrylate respectively, are utilised, nanoparticles with encapsulation properties are formed and may be triggered to either release-and-disassemble or release-disassemble-degrade to form a solution of lower molecular weight constituent primary chains.
RESUMEN
The combination of linear polymers with dendritic chain-ends has led to numerous studies of linear-dendritic polymer hybrid materials. Interchain branching within the linear segment of these materials has recently extended this concept to the formation of soluble hyperbranched-polydendrons. Here, the introduction of amphiphilicity into hyperbranched-polydendrons has been achieved for the first time through the use of tertiary amine functional dendritic chain-ends and branched hydrophobic polymer segments. The synthesis and aqueous nanoprecipitation of these branched materials is compared with their linear-dendritic polymer analogues, showing that chain-end chemistry/generation, precipitation medium pH and polymer architecture are all capable of influencing the ability to generate nanoparticles, the resulting nanoparticle diameter and dispersity, and subsequent response to changes in pH.