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Dive into the research topics where Brady T. Worrell is active.

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Featured researches published by Brady T. Worrell.


Advanced Materials | 2017

Photoinduced Plasticity in Cross-Linked Liquid Crystalline Networks

Matthew K. McBride; Matthew Hendrikx; Danqing Liu; Brady T. Worrell; Dirk J. Broer; Christopher N. Bowman

Photoactivated reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT)-based dynamic covalent chemistry is incorporated into liquid crystalline networks (LCNs) to facilitate spatiotemporal control of alignment, domain structure, and birefringence. The RAFT-based bond exchange process, which leads to stress relaxation, is used in a variety of conditions, to enable the LCN to achieve a near-equilibrium structure and orientation upon irradiation. Once formed, and in the absence of subsequent triggering of the RAFT process, the (dis)order in the LCN and its associated birefringence are evidenced at all temperatures. Using this approach, the birefringence, including the formation of spatially patterned birefringent elements and surface-active topographical features, is selectively tuned by adjusting the light dose, temperature, and cross-linking density.


Nature Communications | 2018

Bistable and photoswitchable states of matter

Brady T. Worrell; Matthew K. McBride; Gayla Berg Lyon; Lewis M. Cox; Chen Wang; Sudheendran Mavila; Chern-Hooi Lim; Hannah M. Coley; Charles B. Musgrave; Yifu Ding; Christopher N. Bowman

Classical materials readily switch phases (solid to fluid or fluid to gas) upon changes in pressure or heat; however, subsequent reversion of the stimulus returns the material to their original phase. Covalently cross-linked polymer networks, which are solids that do not flow when strained, do not change phase even upon changes in temperature and pressure. However, upon the addition of dynamic cross-links, they become stimuli responsive, capable of switching phase from solid to fluid, but quickly returning to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Reported here is the first material capable of a bistable switching of phase. A permanent solid to fluid transition or vice versa is demonstrated at room temperature, with inherent, spatiotemporal control over this switch in either direction triggered by exposure to light.Polymers cross-linked with dynamic bonds can switch the phase from solid to fluid upon stimulus but return quickly to the solid state once the stimulus is removed. Here the authors report a light triggered permanent solid to fluid transition at room temperature with inherent spatiotemporal control in either direction


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2018

Amine Induced Retardation of the Radical-Mediated Thiol–Ene Reaction via the Formation of Metastable Disulfide Radical Anions

Dillon M. Love; Kangmin Kim; John Taylor Goodrich; Benjamin D. Fairbanks; Brady T. Worrell; Mark P. Stoykovich; Charles B. Musgrave; Christopher N. Bowman

The effect of amines on the kinetics and efficacy of radical-mediated thiol-ene coupling (TEC) reactions was investigated. By varying the thiol reactant and amine additive, it was shown that amines retard thiyl radical-mediated reactions when the amine is adequately basic enough to deprotonate the thiol affording the thiolate anion, e.g., when the weakly basic amine tetramethylethylenediamine was incorporated in the TEC reaction between butyl 2-mercaptoacetate and an allyl ether at 5 mol %, the final conversion was reduced from quantitative to <40%. Alternatively, no effect is observed when the less acidic thiol butyl 3-mercaptopropionate is employed. The thiolate anion was established as the retarding species through the introduction of ammonium and thiolate salt additives into TEC formulations. The formation of a two-sulfur three-electron bonded disulfide radical anion (DRA) species by the reaction of a thiyl radical with a thiolate anion was determined as the cause for the reduction in catalytic radicals and the TEC rate. Thermodynamic and kinetic trends in DRA formations were computed using density functional theory and by modeling the reaction as an associative electron transfer process. These trends correlate well with the experimental retardation trends of various thiolate anions in TEC reactions.


Science Advances | 2018

A readily programmable, fully reversible shape-switching material

Matthew K. McBride; Alina M. Martinez; Lewis M. Cox; Marvin D. Alim; Kimberly K. Childress; Michael Beiswinger; Maciej Podgórski; Brady T. Worrell; Jason P. Killgore; Christopher N. Bowman

Liquid crystalline elastomers programmed with light-activated bond exchange allowing controlled shape change. Liquid crystalline (LC) elastomers (LCEs) enable large-scale reversible shape changes in polymeric materials; however, they require intensive, irreversible programming approaches in order to facilitate controllable actuation. We have implemented photoinduced dynamic covalent chemistry (DCC) that chemically anneals the LCE toward an applied equilibrium only when and where the light-activated DCC is on. By using light as the stimulus that enables programming, the dynamic bond exchange is orthogonal to LC phase behavior, enabling the LCE to be annealed in any LC phase or in the isotropic phase with various manifestations of this capability explored here. In a photopolymerizable LCE network, we report the synthesis, characterization, and exploitation of readily shape-programmable DCC-functional LCEs to create predictable, complex, and fully reversible shape changes, thus enabling the literal square peg to fit into a round hole.


RSC Advances | 2018

Liposomes formed from photo-cleavable phospholipids: in situ formation and photo-induced enhancement in permeability

Dawei Zhang; Zhenzhen Liu; Danielle Konetski; Chen Wang; Brady T. Worrell; Christopher N. Bowman

Photocleavable liposomes were formed in situ through the coupling of an o-nitrobenzyl-containing azide tail precursor and an alkyne-functionalized lysolipid by the copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction. Inclusion of the photolabile o-nitrobenzyl-structure enables control over the permeability and morphology of the liposomes. Photolysis of the o-nitrobenzyl group changes the molecular structure of the photolabile phospholipids, inducing phase transitions and permeability increases in the bilayer membrane, ultimately disrupting the liposome entity.


Polymer Chemistry | 2018

A user's guide to the thiol-thioester exchange in organic media: scope, limitations, and applications in material science

Brady T. Worrell; Sudheendran Mavila; Chen Wang; Taylor M. Kontour; Chern-Hooi Lim; Matthew K. McBride; Charles B. Musgrave; Richard K. Shoemaker; Christopher N. Bowman

The exchange of thiolates and thiols has long been held as a nearly ideal reaction in dynamic covalent chemistry. The ability for the reaction to proceed smoothly in neutral aqueous media has propelled its widespread use in biochemistry, however, far fewer applications and studies have been directed towards its use in material science which primarily is performed in organic media. Herein, we present the exploration of this dynamic exchange in both small molecule and polymer settings with a wide sampling of thiols, thioesters, organic bases, and nucleophilic catalysts in various organic solvents. Effects of the character of the thiol and thioester, pKa or nucleophilicity of the catalyst, and heat on the reaction were investigated. The mechanism regarding the previously unexplored effectiveness of nucelophilic catalysts, such as quinuclidine or DABCO, to affect the thiol-thioester exchange was also explored. Finally, the use of the thiol-thioester exchange in a network polymer to reduce applied stresses or change shape of the material following polymerization was shown and the ability of basic and nucleophilic catalysts to promote these effects were benchmarked. The influence of polarity in these networks was also explored, with the rate of exchange shown to be easily tuned by the addition of diluents with varying polarities. Presented here is a so-called “users guide” to the thiol-thioester exchange; we hope that this guide is instructive to practitioners in the field of material science which seek to utilize the thiol-thioester exchange in both linear and network polymers.


Nature Communications | 2018

Publisher Correction: Bistable and photoswitchable states of matter

Brady T. Worrell; Matthew K. McBride; Gayla Berg Lyon; Lewis M. Cox; Chen Wang; Sudheendran Mavila; Chern-Hooi Lim; Hannah M. Coley; Charles B. Musgrave; Yifu Ding; Christopher N. Bowman

The original version of this Article contained errors in Fig. 3. In Fig. 3a, the word ‘fluid’ in grey was incorrectly given as ‘solid’ in green, below that, ‘solid’ in green was previously ‘fluid’ in grey. Also, the label on the arrow incorrectly read ‘TMG (1 mol%) HABI-Cl (3 mol%) 455 nm, 1 min’; the correct version reads ‘TMG (1 mol%) HABI-O-n-oct (4 mol%) 455 nm, 4 min’. In the accompanying legend, the word ‘photobase’ was originally incorrectly given as ‘photoacid’. Additionally, in Fig. 3b, the label on the central image was ‘As is: solid’, rather than the correct ‘As is: fluid’. This has been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Materials horizons | 2018

Recyclable and repolymerizable thiol–X photopolymers

Chen Wang; Trevor M. Goldman; Brady T. Worrell; Matthew K. McBride; Marvin D. Alim; Christopher N. Bowman

We demonstrate a class of rapidly photopolymerizable step-growth cross-linked networks that incorporate thioesters into the backbone. The thioester functional groups enable complete degradation of the network into oligomers that can subsequently be recycled into a nearly indistinguishable material with no change in material behavior.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Dynamic and Responsive DNA-like Polymers

Sudheendran Mavila; Brady T. Worrell; Heidi R. Culver; Trevor M. Goldman; Chen Wang; Chern-Hooi Lim; Dylan W. Domaille; Sankha Pattanayak; Matthew K. McBride; Charles B. Musgrave; Christopher N. Bowman

The synthesis of thiolactone monomers that mimic natural nucleosides and engage in robust ring opening polymerizations (ROP) is herein described. As each repeat unit contains a thioester functional group, dynamic rearrangement of the polymer is feasible via thiol-thioester exchange, demonstrated here by depolymerization of the polymers and coalescing of two polymers of different molecular weight or chemical composition. This approach constitutes the first step toward a platform that enables for the routine synthesis of sequence controlled polymers via dynamic template directed synthesis.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Secondary Photocrosslinking of Click Hydrogels To Probe Myoblast Mechanotransduction in Three Dimensions

Tobin E. Brown; Jason S. Silver; Brady T. Worrell; Ian A. Marozas; F. Max Yavitt; Kemal Arda Günay; Christopher N. Bowman; Kristi S. Anseth

Muscle cells sense the mechanical properties of their microenvironment, and these properties can change in response to injury or disease. Hydrogels with dynamic material properties can be used to study the effect of such varying mechanical signals. Here, we report the ability of azadibenzocyclooctyne to undergo a cytocompatible, photoinitiated crosslinking reaction. This reaction is exploited as a strategy for on-demand stiffening of three-dimensional cell scaffolds formed through an initial strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition. Myoblasts encapsulated in these networks respond to increased matrix stiffness through decreased cell spreading and nuclear localization of Yes-associated protein 1 (YAP). However, when the photocrosslinking reaction is delayed to allow cell spreading, elongated myoblasts display increased YAP nuclear localization.

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Christopher N. Bowman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Chen Wang

University of Colorado Boulder

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Matthew K. McBride

University of Colorado Boulder

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Sudheendran Mavila

University of Colorado Boulder

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Charles B. Musgrave

University of Colorado Boulder

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Chern-Hooi Lim

University of Colorado Boulder

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Gayla Berg Lyon

University of Colorado Boulder

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Lewis M. Cox

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Trevor M. Goldman

University of Colorado Boulder

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Austin Baranek

University of Colorado Boulder

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