Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5208350 | Progress in Polymer Science | 2011 | 35 Pages |
Abstract
Dye-labelled polymer chains are extremely useful in many fields, such as optical imaging, signal amplification in biological diagnostics, light-harvesting and photochromic materials as well as in fluorescence studies about intra- and inter-molecular polymer chain associations, conformations and dynamics of polymer chains. However, in many cases, it is particularly useful that the dye is localized at a specific site, such as the chain-end or the junction between blocks. With the development of living/controlled polymerization techniques, end- and junction-functionalized polymers can be prepared with controlled molecular weights from a huge variety of monomers. This review highlights the state of the art in the strategies leading to one and only one precisely localized dye per polymer chain. Such dye can be introduced at three different steps of the polymerization: i) at the very beginning via the initiator or a chain transfer agent, ii) during polymerization via a functional monomer or a quencher, or iii) after polymerization via covalent binding of a dye-derivative.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Authors
Mariana Beija, Marie-Thérèse Charreyre, José M.G. Martinho,