Tailoring Antifouling Properties of Nanocarriers via Entropic Collision of Polymer Grafting

ACS Nano. 2021 Mar 23;15(3):5725-5734. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.1c01173. Epub 2021 Mar 12.

Abstract

Polymer graftings (PGs) are widely employed in antifouling surfaces and drug delivery systems to regulate the interaction with a foreign environment. Through molecular dynamics simulations and scaling theory analysis, we investigate the physical antifouling properties of PGs via their collision behaviors. Compared with mushroom-like PGs with low grafting density, we find brush-like PGs with high grafting density could generate large deformation-induced entropic repulsive force during a collision, revealing a microscopic mechanism for the hop motions of polymer-grafted nanoparticles for drug delivery observed in experiment. In addition, the collision elasticity of PGs is found to decay with the collision velocity by a power law, i.e., a concise dynamic scaling despite the complex process involved, which is beyond expectation. These results elucidate the dynamic interacting mechanism of PGs, which are of immediate interest for a fundamental understanding of the antifouling performance of PGs and the rational design of PG-coated nanoparticles in nanomedicine for drug delivery.

Keywords: antifouling; collision; drug delivery; elasticity; polymer grafting; scaling theory.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't