RSC Publishing


Publishing

 

Cover image for Soft Matter, select for current issue

Soft Matter

Where physics meets chemistry meets biology for fundamental soft matter research.



Subscribers

  • PDF
  • HTML article

Non-subscribers

Free access



Paper

Soft Matter, 2008, 4, 534 - 539, DOI: 10.1039/b713660a


CO2-switchable oligoamine patches based on amino acids and their use to build polyelectrolyte containers with intelligent gating

Laura Hartmann, Matthieu Bedard, Hans G. Börner, Helmut Möhwald, Gleb B. Sukhorukov and Markus Antonietti


The synthesis of well-defined, homodisperse oligoamine structures based on natural basic amino acids, so-called oligoamine patches, is presented. They contain an intermediary number of cationic groups (exactly 11 amine groups) to allow sufficiently strong, but reversible, binding to anionic surfaces and polymers and are shown to be non-cytotoxic. Their overall charge can be switched in the ordinary pH range (5.5–7.5) between cationic and anionic by CO2 complexation and carbamate formation. This process turned out to be completely reversible, i.e. it can be used for the chemical gating of structures. Polyelectrolyte containers built with these patches as structural interlayers showed overall stability of the architecture, but a reversible gating of the permeation towards large water-soluble polymer species when contacted with CO2, as exemplified with a model dextrane.

Graphical abstract image for this article  (ID: b713660a)