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Dive into the research topics where Axel H. E. Müller is active.

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Featured researches published by Axel H. E. Müller.


Nature Communications | 2012

Precise hierarchical self-assembly of multicompartment micelles

André H. Gröschel; Felix H. Schacher; Holger Schmalz; Oleg V. Borisov; Ekaterina B. Zhulina; Andreas Walther; Axel H. E. Müller

Hierarchical self-assembly offers elegant and energy-efficient bottom-up strategies for the structuring of complex materials. For block copolymers, the last decade witnessed great progress in diversifying the structural complexity of solution-based assemblies into multicompartment micelles. However, a general understanding of what governs multicompartment micelle morphologies and polydispersity, and how to manipulate their hierarchical superstructures using straightforward concepts and readily accessible polymers remains unreached. Here we demonstrate how to create homogeneous multicompartment micelles with unprecedented structural control via the intermediate pre-assembly of subunits. This directed self-assembly leads to a step-wise reduction of the degree of conformational freedom and dynamics and avoids undesirable kinetic obstacles during the structure build-up. It yields a general concept for homogeneous populations of well-defined multicompartment micelles with precisely tunable patchiness, while using simple linear ABC triblock terpolymers. We further demonstrate control over the hierarchical step-growth polymerization of multicompartment micelles into micron-scale segmented supracolloidal polymers as an example of programmable mesoscale colloidal hierarchies via well-defined patchy nanoobjects.


Nature | 2013

Guided hierarchical co-assembly of soft patchy nanoparticles

André H. Gröschel; Andreas Walther; Tina I. Löbling; Felix H. Schacher; Holger Schmalz; Axel H. E. Müller

The concept of hierarchical bottom-up structuring commonly encountered in natural materials provides inspiration for the design of complex artificial materials with advanced functionalities. Natural processes have achieved the orchestration of multicomponent systems across many length scales with very high precision, but man-made self-assemblies still face obstacles in realizing well-defined hierarchical structures. In particle-based self-assembly, the challenge is to program symmetries and periodicities of superstructures by providing monodisperse building blocks with suitable shape anisotropy or anisotropic interaction patterns (‘patches’). Irregularities in particle architecture are intolerable because they generate defects that amplify throughout the hierarchical levels. For patchy microscopic hard colloids, this challenge has been approached by using top-down methods (such as metal shading or microcontact printing), enabling molecule-like directionality during aggregation. However, both top-down procedures and particulate systems based on molecular assembly struggle to fabricate patchy particles controllably in the desired size regime (10–100 nm). Here we introduce the co-assembly of dynamic patchy nanoparticles—that is, soft patchy nanoparticles that are intrinsically self-assembled and monodisperse—as a modular approach for producing well-ordered binary and ternary supracolloidal hierarchical assemblies. We bridge up to three hierarchical levels by guiding triblock terpolymers (length scale ∼10 nm) to form soft patchy nanoparticles (20–50 nm) of different symmetries that, in combination, co-assemble into substructured, compartmentalized materials (>10 μm) with predictable and tunable nanoscale periodicities. We establish how molecular control over polymer composition programs the building block symmetries and regulates particle positioning, offering a route to well-ordered mixed mesostructures of high complexity.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Color Tunability and Electrochemiluminescence of Silver Nanoclusters

Isabel Díez; Matti Pusa; Sakari Kulmala; Hua Jiang; Andreas Walther; Anja S. Goldmann; Axel H. E. Müller; Olli Ikkala; Robin H. A. Ras

Colorful clusters: Silver nanoclusters consisting of only a few atoms exhibit large chemical-environment-responsive shifts of their optical absorption and emission bands, that is, large solvatochromism (see picture). The photophysical characteristics and electrochemiluminescence of the Ag clusters give them remarkable advantages over larger nanoparticles in applications such as molecular sensing.


ACS Nano | 2008

Engineering Nanostructured Polymer Blends with Controlled Nanoparticle Location using Janus Particles

Andreas Walther; Kerstin Matussek; Axel H. E. Müller

Janus particles are used on a multigram scale for the blend compatibilization of two polymers in a twin screw mini-mixer. It is shown that the Janus particles can be located exclusively at the interface of the two polymer phases despite the high temperature and shear conditions. The domain sizes of the dispersed phase decrease with increasing content of Janus particles. The decrease is yet ongoing for high contents of Janus particles. Furthermore, the biphasic particles exhibit an ordered arrangement at the interface. Thus, the approach demonstrates that a nanoscopic structuring of the interface can be achieved under macroscopic processing conditions. The structural order occurs on two levels. The first is the complete adsorption at the interface and the second is the lateral ordering at the interface. The strong adsorption at the interface is explained in terms of the increased desorption energy of Janus particles. Secondly, the compatibilization efficiency is critically compared to state-of-the-art compatibilizers. The efficiency of the Janus particles is found to be superior as compared to block copolymer-based compatibilizers. The efficiency gap between Janus particles and block copolymer compatibilizers widens for larger amounts added.


Progress in Polymer Science | 2003

New polymeric architectures with (meth)acrylic acid segments

Hideharu Mori; Axel H. E. Müller

Abstract This review summarizes recent advances in the design and synthesis of novel complex polymers with (meth)acrylic acid segments using various living and controlled polymerization techniques. As polymeric architectures, we will focus on block copolymers, branched polymers, Janus micelles, and polymer brushes. Characteristic solution behavior and morphologies derived from their amphiphilic properties and three-dimensional architectures will be introduced briefly.


Polymer | 2003

Amphiphilic cylindrical brushes with poly(acrylic acid) core and poly(n-butyl acrylate) shell and narrow length distribution

Mingfu Zhang; Thomas Breiner; Hideharu Mori; Axel H. E. Müller

Core – shell cylindrical polymer brushes with poly(t-butyl acrylate)-b-poly(n-butyl acrylate) (Pt BA-b-Pn BA) diblock copolymer side chains were synthesized via ‘grafting from’ technique using atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). The formation of well-defined brushes was confirmed by GPC and 1 H NMR. Multi-angle light scattering (MALS) measurements on brushes with 240 arms show that the radius of gyration scales with the degree of polymerization of the side chains with an exponent of 0.57 ^ 0.05. The hydrolysis of the Pt BA block of the side chains resulted amphiphilic cylindrical core – shell nanoparticles. In order to obtain a narrow length distribution of the brushes, the backbone, poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate), was synthesized by anionic polymerization in addition to ATRP. The characteristic core – shell cylindrical structure of the brush was directly visualized on mica by scanning force microscopy (SFM). Brushes with 1500 block copolymer side chains and a length distribution of lw=ln ¼ 1:04 at a total length ln ¼ 179 nm were obtained. By choosing the proper solvent in the dip-coating process on mica, the core and the shell can be visualized independently by SFM. q 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.


Nature Materials | 2008

Water-soluble organo-silica hybrid nanowires.

Jiayin Yuan; Youyong Xu; Andreas Walther; Sreenath Bolisetty; Manuela Schumacher; Holger Schmalz; Matthias Ballauff; Axel H. E. Müller

There has been growing interest in the past decade in one-dimensional (1D) nanostructures, such as nanowires, nanotubes or nanorods, owing to their size-dependent optical and electronic properties and their potential application as building blocks, interconnects and functional components for assembling nanodevices. Significant progress has been made; however, the strict control of the distinctive geometry at extremely small size for 1D structures remains a great challenge in this field. The anisotropic nature of cylindrical polymer brushes has been applied to template 1D nanostructured materials, such as metal, semiconductor or magnetic nanowires. Here, by constructing the cylindrical polymer brushes themselves with a precursor-containing monomer, we successfully synthesized hybrid nanowires with a silsesquioxane core and a shell made up from oligo(ethylene glycol) methacrylate units, which are soluble in water and many organic solvents. The length and diameter of these rigid wires are tunable by the degrees of polymerization of both the backbone and the side chain. They show lyotropic liquid-crystalline behaviour and can be pyrolysed to silica nanowires. This approach provides a route to the controlled fabrication of inorganic or hybrid silica nanostructures by living polymerization techniques.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Facile, Solution-Based Synthesis of Soft, Nanoscale Janus Particles with Tunable Janus Balance

André H. Gröschel; Andreas Walther; Tina I. Löbling; Joachim Schmelz; Andreas Hanisch; Holger Schmalz; Axel H. E. Müller

We present a novel, versatile, and simple solution-based routine to produce soft, nanosized Janus particles with tunable structural and physical properties at high volume yield. This process is based on the cross-linking of compartments within precisely defined multicompartment micelles (MCMs), which are themselves formed by the self-assembly of ABC triblock terpolymers. Therein, the C blocks form the stabilizing corona emanating from B compartments, which in turn reside on an A core. Cross-linking of the B compartments allows to permanently fixate the phase-separated state and dissolution in a good solvent for all blocks breaks up the MCMs into single Janus particles. They now consist of a core of cross-linked B blocks and two phase-separated hemispheres of A and C. The process gives access to unprecedented structural features such as tunable core diameter and control over the Janus balance ranging from dominant A side to equal hemispheres to dominant C side. We demonstrate that this simple one-pot approach can be extended to a range of triblock terpolymers with different block lengths and block chemistries to furnish a library of tailor-made Janus particles with widely tunable physical properties. Such a diversity and simplicity has remained unreachable with our previously developed approach using the controlled cross-linking of bulk morphologies. We show that this new synthetic route can be upscaled to a high volume yield of 10 wt %, thereby enabling large-scale applications. We further demonstrate the effect of the Janus balance on colloidal self-assembly. Janus particles with a dominant hydrophobic and a small hydrophilic patch aggregate into large clusters in water, but merely di- or trimerize in chloroform.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Self-Assembly of Janus Cylinders into Hierarchical Superstructures

Andreas Walther; Markus Drechsler; Sabine Rosenfeldt; Ludger Harnau; Matthias Ballauff; Volker Abetz; Axel H. E. Müller

We present in-depth studies of the size tunability and the self-assembly behavior of Janus cylinders possessing a phase segregation into two hemicylinders. The cylinders are prepared by cross-linking the lamella-cylinder morphology of a polystyrene-block-polybutadiene-block-poly(methyl methacrylate) block terpolymer. The length of the Janus cylinders can be adjusted by both the amplitude and the duration of a sonication treatment from the micro- to the nanometer length. The corona segregation into a biphasic particle is evidenced by selective staining of the PS domains with RuO(4) and subsequent imaging. The self-assembly behavior of these facial amphiphiles on different length scales is investigated combining dynamic light scattering (DLS), small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), and imaging procedures. Cryogenic transmission electron microscopy images of the Janus cylinders in THF, which is a good solvent for both blocks, exhibit unimolecularly dissolved Janus cylinders with a core-corona structure. These results are corroborated by SANS measurements. Supramolecular aggregation takes place in acetone, which is a nonsolvent for polystyrene, leading to the observation of fiber-like aggregates. The length of these fibers depends on the concentration of the solution. A critical aggregation concentration is found, under which unimolecularly dissolved Janus cylinders exist. The fibers are composed of 2-4 Janus cylinders, shielding the inner insoluble polystyrene hemicylinder against the solvent. Herein, the SANS data reveal a core-shell structure of the aggregates. Upon deposition of the Janus cylinders from more concentrated solution, a second type of superstructure is formed on a significantly larger length scale. The Janus cylinders form fibrillar networks, in which the pore size depends on the concentration and deposition time of the sample.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Influence of Polymer Architecture and Molecular Weight of Poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) Polycations on Transfection Efficiency and Cell Viability in Gene Delivery

Christopher V. Synatschke; Anja Schallon; Valérie Jérôme; Ruth Freitag; Axel H. E. Müller

Nonviral gene delivery with the help of polycations has raised considerable interest in the scientific community over the past decades. Herein, we present a systematic study on the influence of the molecular weight and architecture of poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (PDMAEMA) on the transfection efficiency and the cytotoxicity in CHO-K1 cells. A library of well-defined homopolymers with a linear and star-shaped topology (3- and 5-arm stars) was synthesized via atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). The molecular weights of the polycations ranged from 16 to 158 kDa. We found that the cytotoxicity at a given molecular weight decreased with increasing number of arms. For a successful transfection a minimum molecular weight was necessary, since the polymers with a number-average molecular weight, M(n), below 20 kDa showed negligible transfection efficiency at any of the tested polyelectrolyte complex compositions. From the combined analysis of cytotoxicity and transfection data, we propose that polymers with a branched architecture and an intermediate molecular weight are the most promising candidates for efficient gene delivery, since they combine low cytotoxicity with acceptable transfection results.

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Youyong Xu

University of Bayreuth

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