Affiliation:
1. Cluster for Advanced Macromolecular Design (CAMD) School of Chemical Engineering The University of New South Wales Sydney NSW 2052 Australia
2. Laboratoire de Chimie des Polymères Organiques (LCPO) CNRS (UMR 5629) ENSCPB Université de Bordeaux 16 avenue Pey Berland 33607 Pessac France
3. CSIRO Manufacturing Bag 10 Clayton South VIC 3169 Australia
Abstract
AbstractSynthetic polymers are of paramount importance in modern life ‐ an incredibly wide range of polymeric materials possessing an impressive variety of properties have been developed to date. The recent emergence of artificial intelligence and automation presents a great opportunity to significantly speed up discovery and development of the next generation of advanced polymeric materials. We have focused on the high‐throughput automated synthesis of multiblock copolymers that comprise three or more distinct polymer segments of different monomer composition bonded in linear sequence. The present work has exploited automation to prepare high molar mass multiblock copolymers (typically>100,000 g mol−1) using reversible addition‐fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization in aqueous emulsion. A variety of original multiblock copolymers have been synthesised via a Chemspeed robot, exemplified by a multiblock copolymer comprising thirteen constituent blocks. Moreover, libraries of copolymers of randomized monomer compositions (acrylates, acrylamides, methacrylates, and styrenes), block orders, and block lengths were also generated, thereby demonstrating the robustness of our synthetic approach. One multiblock copolymer contained all four monomer families listed in the pool, which is unprecedented in the literature. The present work demonstrates that automation has the power to render complex and laborious syntheses of such unprecedented materials not just possible, but facile and straightforward, thus representing the way forward to the next generation of complex macromolecular architectures.
Funder
Australian Research Council