Ken Kawamoto
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ken Kawamoto.
Science | 2016
Mingjiang Zhong; Rui Wang; Ken Kawamoto; Bradley D. Olsen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
Elasticity, one of the most important properties of a soft material, is difficult to quantify in polymer networks because of the presence of topological molecular defects in these materials. Furthermore, the impact of these defects on bulk elasticity is unknown. We used rheology, disassembly spectrometry, and simulations to measure the shear elastic modulus and count the numbers of topological “loop” defects of various order in a series of polymer hydrogels, and then used these data to evaluate the classical phantom and affine network theories of elasticity. The results led to a real elastic network theory (RENT) that describes how loop defects affect bulk elasticity. Given knowledge of the loop fractions, RENT provides predictions of the shear elastic modulus that are consistent with experimental observations.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Ken Kawamoto; Mingjiang Zhong; Karim Gadelrab; Li-Chen Cheng; Caroline A. Ross; Alfredo Alexander-Katz; Jeremiah A. Johnson
We report the synthesis of Janus bottlebrush block copolymers by graft-through polymerization of branched diblock macromonomers. Self-assembly of the bottlebrushes was characterized by small-angle X-ray scattering, atomic force microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy. Phase separation and packing models of the bottlebrushes were computed, and their self-assembly behavior was corroborated experimentally in bulk and in thin films. Lamellar, hexagonal cylinder, and gyroid phases were observed and modeled. The A-branch-B Janus bottlebrush structure provides several unique advantages in the context of bottlebrush polymer assembly, including access to the first examples of gyroid phases.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Yuwei Gu; Ken Kawamoto; Mingjiang Zhong; Mao Chen; Michael J. A. Hore; Alex M. Jordan; LaShanda T. J. Korley; Bradley D. Olsen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
Significance We demonstrate that slow monomer addition during step-growth polymer network formation changes the fraction of loop defects within the network, thus providing materials with tunable and significantly improved mechanical properties. This phenomenon is general to a range of network-forming reactions and offers a powerful method for tuning the mechanics of materials without changing their composition. Controlling the molecular structure of amorphous cross-linked polymeric materials is a longstanding challenge. Herein, we disclose a general strategy for precise tuning of loop defects in covalent polymer gel networks. This “loop control” is achieved through a simple semibatch monomer addition protocol that can be applied to a broad range of network-forming reactions. By controlling loop defects, we demonstrate that with the same set of material precursors it is possible to tune and in several cases substantially improve network connectivity and mechanical properties (e.g., ∼600% increase in shear storage modulus). We believe that the concept of loop control via continuous reagent addition could find broad application in the synthesis of academically and industrially important cross-linked polymeric materials, such as resins and gels.
ACS Macro Letters | 2018
Hung V.-T. Nguyen; Nolan M. Gallagher; Farrukh Vohidov; Yivan Jiang; Ken Kawamoto; Hui Zhang; Jiwon V. Park; Zhihao Huang; M. Francesca Ottaviani; Andrzej Rajca; Jeremiah A. Johnson
The polymerization of functional monomers provides direct access to functional polymers without need for postpolymerization modification; however, monomer synthesis can become a bottleneck of this approach. New methods that enable rapid installation of functionality into monomers for living polymerization are valuable. Here, we report the three-step convergent synthesis (two-step longest linear sequence) of a divalent exo-norbornene imide capable of efficient coupling with various nucleophiles and azides to produce diversely functionalized branched macromonomers optimized for ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP). In addition, we describe an efficient iterative procedure for the synthesis of tri-and tetra-valent branched macromonomers. We demonstrate the use of these branched macromonomers for the synthesis of Janus bottlebrush block copolymers as well as for the generation of bottlebrush polymers with up to three conjugated small molecules per repeat unit. This work significantly expands the scalability and diversity of nanostructured macromolecules accessible via ROMP.
ACS Macro Letters | 2015
Ken Kawamoto; Scott C. Grindy; Jenny Liu; Niels Holten-Andersen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
Macromolecules | 2015
Ken Kawamoto; Mingjiang Zhong; Rui Wang; Bradley D. Olsen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
Archive | 2015
Jeremiah A. Johnson; Niels Holten-Andersen; Scott C. Grindy; Ken Kawamoto; Aleksandr V. Zhukhovitskiy
Nano Letters | 2018
Li-Chen Cheng; Karim Gadelrab; Ken Kawamoto; Kevin G. Yager; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Alfredo Alexander-Katz; C. A. Ross
Macromolecules | 2018
Yekaterina Rokhlenko; Ken Kawamoto; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Chinedum O. Osuji
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Yekaterina Rokhlenko; Ken Kawamoto; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Chinedum O. Osuji