Abstract
Monodisperse stimuli-responsive hydrogel capsules were synthesized in the 100-nm-diameter to 10-μm-diameter range from poly(4-vinylpyridine) (P4VP) and poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI) through a simple, efficient two-step cross-linking-precipitation template method under conditions of a good solvent. In this method, the core-shell particles were obtained by the deposition (heterocoagulation mechanism) of the cross-linked P4VP, PEI, or their mixtures on the surfaces of the template colloidal silica particles in nitromethane (for PEI) or a nitromethane-acetone mixture (for P4VP and P4VP-PEI mixtures) in the presence of cross-linker 1,4-diiodobutane. The cross-linked polymeric shell swollen in a good solvent stabilized the core-shell colloids. This mechanism provided the conditions for the synthesis of core-shell colloids in a submicrometer range of dimensions with an easily adjusted shell thickness (wall of the capsules) ranging from a few to hundreds of nanometers. The chemical composition of the shell was tuned by varying the ratio of co-cross-linked shell-forming polymers (P4VP and PEI). In the second step, the hollow capsules were obtained by etching the silica core in HF solutions. In this step, the colloidal stability of the hollow capsules was provided by ionized P4VP and PEI cross-linked shells. The hollow capsules demonstrate that the pH- and ionic-strength-triggered swelling and shrinking result in size-selective uptake and release properties. Cross-linked via quaternized functional groups, P4VP capsules undergo swelling and shrinking transitions at a physiologically relevant pH of around 6. The 200-nm-diameter hollow capsule with 25-nm-thick walls demonstrated a factor of 2 greater capacity to accommodate cargo molecules than the core-shell particles of the same dimensions because of an internal compartment and a combination of radial and a circumferential swelling modes in the capsules.
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