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Deconvoluting the Optical Response of Biocompatible Photonic Pigments

Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2022 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lukas Schertel, Lukas Schertel, Zhen Wang, Zhen Wang, Chun Lam Clement Chan, Chun Lam Clement Chan, Johannes S. Haataja, Johannes S. Haataja, Lukas Schertel, Richard Parker, Lukas Schertel, Lukas Schertel, Lukas Schertel, Ruiting Li, Silvia Vignolini Ruiting Li, Gea T. van de Kerkhof, Gea T. van de Kerkhof, Silvia Vignolini Oren A. Scherman, Oren A. Scherman, Richard Parker, Richard Parker, Silvia Vignolini Silvia Vignolini

Summary

Researchers developed biocompatible photonic pigments from bottlebrush block copolymers using an inverse photonic glass architecture, demonstrating that this design overcomes refractive index limitations to produce strong structural color, while offering a more environmentally responsible alternative to conventional microplastic-based pigments.

Polymers

To unlock the widespread use of block copolymers as photonic pigments, there is an urgent need to consider their environmental impact (cf. microplastic pollution). Here we show how an inverse photonic glass architecture can enable the use of biocompatible bottlebrush block copolymers (BBCPs), which otherwise lack the refractive index contrast needed for a strong photonic response. A library of photonic pigments is produced from poly(norbornene-graft-polycaprolactone)-block-poly(norbornene-graft-polyethylene glycol), with the color tuned via either the BBCP molecular weight or the processing temperature upon microparticle fabrication. The structure-optic relationship between the 3D porous morphology of the microparticles and their complex optical response is revealed by both an analytical scattering model and 3D finite-difference time domain (FDTD) simulations. Combined, this allows for strategies to enhance the color purity to be proposed and realized with our biocompatible BBCP system.

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