Langmuir, Vol.31, No.11, 3333-3342, 2015
Dendrimer Nanofluids in the Concentrated Regime: From Polymer Melts to Soft Spheres
Understanding dendrimer structures and their interactions in concentrated solutions is important to a wide range of applications, such as drug delivery and lubrication. However, controversy has persisted concerning whether, when confined to proximity, dendrimers would entangle as observed for polymer systems, or act as deformable spheres. Furthermore, how such behavior may be related to their size-dependent molecular architecture remains unclear. Using small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), the intermolecular interactions and structures in aqueous nanofluids containing three generations of carboxyl-terminated poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers (G0.5, R-g = 9.3 angstrom; G3.5, R-g = 22.6 angstrom; G5.5, R-g = 39.9 angstrom, where Rg is the radius of gyration) over a mass fraction range 0.005 <= x <= 0.316 have been studied. In the highly concentrated regime (x (3) 0.157), we observe that the solution properties depend on the dendrimer generation. Our results suggest that the smaller G0.5 dendrimers form a highly entangled polymer melt, while the larger dendrimers, G3.5 and G5.5, form densely packed and ordered structures, in which the individual dendrimers exhibit some degree of mutual overlap or deformation. Our results demonstrate the tunability of interdendrimer interactions via their molecular architecture, which in turn may be harnessed to control and tailor the physical properties of dendrimer nanofluids.