Systematic design of unimolecular star copolymer micelles using molecular dynamics simulations. Huynh, L., Neale, C., Pomès, R., & Allen, C. Soft Matter, 6(21):5491-5501, 2010.
Systematic design of unimolecular star copolymer micelles using molecular dynamics simulations [pdf]Paper  Systematic design of unimolecular star copolymer micelles using molecular dynamics simulations [link]Website  abstract   bibtex   
Star copolymers (SCPs) have recently attracted considerable attention due to their unique applicability in a wide range of biomedical fields. With the intention of rationally designing a stable unimolecular SCP, atomistic molecular dynamics simulations of thirteen SCPs are conducted. The SCPs each have six identical arms of methoxypoly(ethylene glycol)-b-polycaprolactone (MePEGx-b-PCLy) and systematically vary in terms of total molecular weight and ratio of hydrophobic to hydrophilic block length. For all hydrated SCPs, the simulations predict a densely packed hydrophobic PCL core that excludes water and is phase separated from a highly mobile hydrophilic PEG corona. The radii of the hydrophobic PCL core and the PEG blocks are independent of each other and can be predicted over a broad molecular weight range. A linear relationship between the hydration and the molecular weight of the PEG blocks is observed with the average number of water molecules bound per PEG repeat unit within the range of that determined experimentally. As well, a quantitative relationship relates the water accessed surface area of the hydrophobic PCL core to the molecular weights of PCL and PEG moieties. We postulate that the propensity for aggregation of SCPs into multimolecular micelles is correlated with the partial hydration of the hydrophobic core of unimers. Our results suggest that SCPs with a hydrophobic PCL core ≤2 kDa per arm are fully protected from water when the hydrophilic PEG blocks approach 14.6 kDa per arm. We therefore predict that SCPs of this composition yield unimolecular micelles that are thermodynamically stable at low concentrations.

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