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Dive into the research topics where Alper Nese is active.

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Featured researches published by Alper Nese.


ACS Nano | 2012

Preparation of Polymeric Nanoscale Networks from Cylindrical Molecular Bottlebrushes

Dingcai Wu; Alper Nese; Joanna Pietrasik; Yeru Liang; Hongkun He; Michal Kruk; Liang Huang; Tomasz Kowalewski; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski

The design and control of polymeric nanoscale network structures at the molecular level remains a challenging issue. Here we construct a novel type of polymeric nanoscale networks with a unique microporous nanofiber unit employing the intra/interbrush carbonyl cross-linking of polystyrene side chains for well-defined cylindrical polystyrene molecular bottlebrushes. The size of the side chains plays a vital role in the tuning of nanostructure of networks at the molecular level. We also show that the as-prepared polymeric nanoscale networks exhibit high specific adsorption capacity per unit surface area because of the synergistic effect of their unique hierarchical porous structures. Our strategy represents a new avenue for the network unit topology and provides a new application for molecular bottlebrushes in nanotechnology.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

How far can we push polymer architectures

Patrick J. M. Stals; Yuanchao Li; Joanna Burdyńska; Renaud Nicolaÿ; Alper Nese; Anja R. A. Palmans; E. W. Meijer; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Sergei S. Sheiko

We here report the synthesis and characterization of a complex polymeric architecture based on a block copolymer with a cylindrical brush block and a single-chain polymeric nanoparticle block folded due to strong intramolecular hydrogen-bonds. The self-assembly of these constructs on mica surfaces was studied with atomic force microscopy, corroborating the distinct presence of block copolymer architectures.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Molecular tensile machines: intrinsic acceleration of disulfide reduction by dithiothreitol.

Yuanchao Li; Alper Nese; Natalia V. Lebedeva; Tyler A. Davis; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Sergei S. Sheiko

Significant tension on the order of 1 nN is self-generated along the backbone of bottlebrush macromolecules due to steric repulsion between densely grafted side chains. The intrinsic tension is amplified upon adsorption of bottlebrush molecules onto a substrate and increases with grafting density, side chain length, and strength of adhesion to the substrate. These molecules were employed as miniature tensile machines to study the effect of mechanical force on the kinetics of disulfide reduction by dithiothreitol (DTT). For this purpose, bottlebrush macromolecules containing a disulfide linker in the middle of the backbone were synthesized by atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). The scission reaction was monitored through molecular imaging by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The scission rate constant increases linearly with the concentration of DTT and exponentially with mechanical tension along the disulfide bond. Moreover, the rate constant at zero force is found to be significantly lower than the reduction rate constant in bulk solution, which suggests an acidic composition of the water surface with pH = 3.7. This work demonstrates the ability of branched macromolecules to accelerate chemical reactions at specific covalent bonds without applying an external force.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2009

Dangling Chain Elastomers as Repeatable Fibrillar Adhesives

Metin Sitti; Brian Cusick; Burak Aksak; Alper Nese; Hyung-il Lee; Hongchen Dong; Tomasz Kowalewski; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski

This work reports on repeatable adhesive materials prepared by controlled grafting of dangling hetero chains from polymer elastomers. The dangling chain elastomer system was prepared by grafting poly(n-butyl acrylate) (PBA) chains from prefunctionalized polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomer networks using atom transfer radical polymerization. To study the effects of chain growth and network strain as they relate to network adhesion mechanics, various lengths of PBA chains with degree of polymerizations (DP) of 65, 281, 508, and 1200 were incorporated into the PDMS matrix. PBA chains with a DP value of 281 grafted from a flat PDMS substrate showed the highest (approximately 3.5-fold) enhancement of nano- and macroscale adhesion relative to a flat raw (ungrafted and not prefunctionalized) PDMS substrate. Moreover, to study the effect of PBA dangling chains on adhesion in fibrillar elastomer structures inspired by gecko foot hairs, a dip-transfer fabrication method was used to graft PBA chains with a DP value of 296 from the tip endings of mushroom-shaped PDMS micropillars. A PBA chain covered micropillar array showed macroscale adhesion enhancement up to approximately 7 times relative to the flat ungrafted prefunctionalized PDMS control substrate, showing additional nonoptimized approximately 2-fold adhesion enhancement due to fibrillar structuring and mushroom-shaped tip ending. These dangling hetero chains on elastomer micro-/nanofibrillar structures may provide a novel fabrication platform for multilength scale, repeatable, and high-strength fibrillar adhesives inspired by gecko foot hairs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Anti-Arrhenius cleavage of covalent bonds in bottlebrush macromolecules on substrate

Natalia V. Lebedeva; Alper Nese; Frank C. Sun; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Sergei S. Sheiko

Spontaneous degradation of bottlebrush macromolecules on aqueous substrates was monitored by atomic force microscopy. Scission of C─C covalent bonds in the brush backbone occurred due to steric repulsion between the adsorbed side chains, which generated bond tension on the order of several nano-Newtons. Unlike conventional chemical reactions, the rate of bond scission was shown to decrease with temperature. This apparent anti-Arrhenius behavior was caused by a decrease in the surface energy of the underlying substrate upon heating, which results in a corresponding decrease of bond tension in the adsorbed macromolecules. Even though the tension dropped minimally from 2.16 to 1.89 nN, this was sufficient to overpower the increase in the thermal energy (kBT) in the Arrhenius equation. The rate constant of the bond-scission reaction was measured as a function of temperature and surface energy. Fitting the experimental data by a perturbed Morse potential V = V0(1 - e-βx)2 - fx, we determined the depth and width of the potential to be V0 = 141 ± 19 kJ/mol and β-1 = 0.18 ± 0.03 Å, respectively. Whereas the V0 value is in reasonable agreement with the activation energy Ea = 80–220 kJ/mol of mechanical and thermal degradation of organic polymers, it is significantly lower than the dissociation energy of a C─C bond De = 350 kJ/mol. Moreover, the force constant Kx = 2β2V0 = 1.45 ± 0.36 kN/m of a strained bottlebrush along its backbone is markedly larger than the force constant of a C─C bond Kl = 0.44 kN/m, which is attributed to additional stiffness due to deformation of the side chains.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Spontaneous and specific activation of chemical bonds in macromolecular fluids.

Insun Park; David Shirvanyants; Alper Nese; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Michael Rubinstein; Sergei S. Sheiko

Mechanical activation of chemical bonds typically involves the application of external forces, which implies a broad distribution of bond tensions. We demonstrate that controlling the flow profile of a macromolecular fluid generates and delineates mechanical force concentration, enabling a hierarchical activation of chemical bonds on different length scales from the macroscopic to the molecular. Bond tension is spontaneously generated within brushlike macromolecules as they spread on a solid substrate. The molecular architecture creates an uneven distribution of tension in the covalent bonds, leading to spatially controlled bond scission. By controlling the flow rate and the gradient of the film pressure, one can sever the flowing macromolecules with high precision. Specific chemical bonds are activated within distinct macromolecules located in a defined area of a thin film. Furthermore, the flow-controlled loading rate enables quantitative analysis of the bond activation parameters.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011

Focusing bond tension in bottle-brush macromolecules during spreading

Insun Park; Alper Nese; Joanna Pietrasik; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Sergei S. Sheiko

The backbone of molecular bottle-brushes undergoes spontaneous degradation upon spreading on a solid substrate. The self-generated tension in the brush backbone is ascribed to steric repulsion between the densely grafted side chains. The paper discusses two approaches for controlling the bond-scission process on the molecular and macroscopic scales, respectively. On the molecular scale, the tension linearly increases with the distance from the backbone ends and attains its maximum value in the middle section of the backbone. When the backbone becomes shorter than the side chains, the tension is focused precisely on the central bond resulting in the predominant mid-chain fracture of the brush backbone. On the macroscopic scale, addition of a linear polymer to a melt of molecular bottle-brushes alters the film pressure and thus allows controllable positioning of the fracture zone within a spreading film.


Langmuir | 2010

Size Separation of Macromolecules during Spreading

Michael Barrett; Frank C. Sun; Alper Nese; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski; Jan Michael Y Carrillo; Andrey V. Dobrynin; Sergei S. Sheiko

Spreading of homogeneous mixtures of bottle-brush and linear macromolecules of poly(n-butylacrylate) on a solid substrate has been monitored on the molecular scale by atomic force microscopy. Despite the nearly identical chemical composition and similar molecular weight, brush-like macromolecules move markedly slower than linear chains. Moreover, smaller bottle-brushes have been shown to flow faster than the larger bottle-brushes, resulting in fractionation of the macromolecules along the spreading direction. This behavior was explained by the difference in sliding friction coefficient between the bottle-brush macromolecules and linear chains with the substrate. A theoretical model of molecular size separation is in a good agreement with experimental data.


Macromolecules | 2009

Molecular Tensile Testing Machines: Breaking a Specific Covalent Bond by Adsorption-Induced Tension in Brushlike Macromolecules

Insun Park; Sergei S. Sheiko; Alper Nese; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski


Macromolecules | 2010

Synthesis, Characterization, and Properties of Starlike Poly(n-butyl acrylate)-b-poly(methyl methacrylate) Block Copolymers

Alper Nese; Jaroslav Mosnáček; Azhar Juhari; Jeong Ae Yoon; Kaloian Koynov; Tomasz Kowalewski; Krzysztof Matyjaszewski

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Sergei S. Sheiko

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Yuanchao Li

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Natalia V. Lebedeva

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Tomasz Kowalewski

Carnegie Mellon University

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Insun Park

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Gleb Yushin

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Joanna Burdyńska

Carnegie Mellon University

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Michael Barrett

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Saadyah Averick

Carnegie Mellon University

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