Tzu-Pin Lin
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by Tzu-Pin Lin.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Tzu-Pin Lin; Alice B. Chang; Hsiang-Yun Chen; Allegra L. Liberman-Martin; Christopher M. Bates; Matthew J. Voegtle; Christina A. Bauer; Robert H. Grubbs
Control over polymer sequence and architecture is crucial to both understanding structure-property relationships and designing functional materials. In pursuit of these goals, we developed a new synthetic approach that enables facile manipulation of the density and distribution of grafts in polymers via living ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP). Discrete endo,exo-norbornenyl dialkylesters (dimethyl DME, diethyl DEE, di-n-butyl DBE) were strategically designed to copolymerize with a norbornene-functionalized polystyrene (PS), polylactide (PLA), or polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) macromonomer mediated by the third-generation metathesis catalyst (G3). The small-molecule diesters act as diluents that increase the average distance between grafted side chains, generating polymers with variable grafting density. The grafting density (number of side chains/number of norbornene backbone repeats) could be straightforwardly controlled by the macromonomer/diluent feed ratio. To gain insight into the copolymer sequence and architecture, self-propagation and cross-propagation rate constants were determined according to a terminal copolymerization model. These kinetic analyses suggest that copolymerizing a macromonomer/diluent pair with evenly matched self-propagation rate constants favors randomly distributed side chains. As the disparity between macromonomer and diluent homopolymerization rates increases, the reactivity ratios depart from unity, leading to an increase in gradient tendency. To demonstrate the effectiveness of our method, an array of monodisperse polymers (PLAx-ran-DME1-x)n bearing variable grafting densities (x = 1.0, 0.75, 0.5, 0.25) and total backbone degrees of polymerization (n = 167, 133, 100, 67, 33) were synthesized. The approach disclosed in this work therefore constitutes a powerful strategy for the synthesis of polymers spanning the linear-to-bottlebrush regimes with controlled grafting density and side chain distribution, molecular attributes that dictate micro- and macroscopic properties.
ACS Nano | 2017
Tzu-Pin Lin; Alice B. Chang; Shao-Xiong Luo; Hsiang-Yun Chen; Byeongdu Lee; Robert H. Grubbs
Grafting density is an important structural parameter that exerts significant influences over the physical properties of architecturally complex polymers. In this report, the physical consequences of varying the grafting density (z) were studied in the context of block polymer self-assembly. Well-defined block polymers spanning the linear, comb, and bottlebrush regimes (0 ≤ z ≤ 1) were prepared via grafting-through ring-opening-metathesis polymerization. ω-Norbornenyl poly(d,l-lactide) and polystyrene macromonomers were copolymerized with discrete comonomers in different feed ratios, enabling precise control over both the grafting density and molecular weight. Small-angle X-ray scattering experiments demonstrate that these graft block polymers self-assemble into long-range-ordered lamellar structures. For 17 series of block polymers with variable z, the scaling of the lamellar period with the total backbone degree of polymerization (d* ∼ Nbbα) was studied. The scaling exponent α monotonically decreases with decreasing z and exhibits an apparent transition at z ≈ 0.2, suggesting significant changes in the chain conformations. Comparison of two block polymer systems, one that is strongly segregated for all z (System I) and one that experiences weak segregation at low z (System II), indicates that the observed trends are primarily caused by the polymer architectures, not segregation effects. A model is proposed in which the characteristic ratio (C∞), a proxy for the backbone stiffness, scales with Nbb as a function of the grafting density: C∞ ∼ Nbbf(z). The scaling behavior disclosed herein provides valuable insights into conformational changes with grafting density, thus introducing opportunities for block polymer and material design.
Archive | 2018
Ingrid N. Haugan; Michael J. Maher; Alice B. Chang; Tzu-Pin Lin; Robert H. Grubbs; Marc A. Hillmyer; Frank Steven Bates
The folder below include the NMR, SEC, DSC, SAXS, and rheology data for all reported samples. The zipped folder contains each series of data in a subfolder, and the readme file further describes the individual files.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Alice B. Chang; Tzu-Pin Lin; Niklas B. Thompson; Shao-Xiong Luo; Allegra L. Liberman-Martin; Hsiang-Yun Chen; Byeongdu Lee; Robert H. Grubbs
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018
Crystal K. Chu; Tzu-Pin Lin; Huiling Shao; Allegra L. Liberman-Martin; Peng Liu; Robert H. Grubbs
Archive | 2018
Robert H. Grubbs; Tzu-Pin Lin; Alice Chang; Hsiang-Yun Chen; Christopher M. Bates
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Frank S. Bates; Ingrid N. Haugan; Michael J. Maher; Alice Chang; Tzu-Pin Lin; Robert H. Grubbs; Marc A. Hillmyer
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Zhiyuan Qian; Yung Pyo Koh; Alice Chang; Tzu-Pin Lin; Pablo E. Guzmán; Robert H. Grubbs; Sindee L. Simon; Gregory B. McKenna
Archive | 2017
Tzu-Pin Lin; Alice Chang; Christopher M. Bates; Robert H. Grubbs
Archive | 2017
Tzu-Pin Lin; Alice Chang; Robert H. Grubbs