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"The Pandora's box is that you have so many monomers that you can put
together and in so many block sequences," said Fredrickson, a professor
of chemical engineering, explaining that the properties will vary
according to sequence and by virtue of the interactions among the
blocks. Because multiblock copolymers can "self-assemble" into
nanometer-sized domains, these materials can exhibit remarkable
combinations of properties, such as soft, strong, and elastic -- as in
tennis shoe soles or skateboard wheels. For higher-tech applications,
the researchers are currently partnering with the company Intel to
develop multiblock polymers that will enable patterning of
microelectronic devices at finer scales and lower cost.
"It is a counting problem," said Fredrickson, referring to the potential for millions of different polymers that could be created with today's chemistry, a number that increases by leaps and bounds for every new block and monomer species added to the selection.
"Our simulation methods for predicting the self-assembled structures of
multiblock polymers are quite advanced, and we are getting better at
relating those nano-structures to the properties of the material," said
Fredrickson. "Multiblock polymers are extremely versatile -- there is
enormous latitude of design freedom, and it's very promising in terms of
developing materials with truly unique properties."
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