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A fully automated platform for photoinitiated RAFT polymerization

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Title: A fully automated platform for photoinitiated RAFT polymerization
Authors: Lee, J
Mulay, P
Tamasi, MJ
Yeow, J
Stevens, MM
Gormley, AJ
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: Oxygen tolerant polymerizations including Photoinduced Electron/Energy Transfer-Reversible Addition–Fragmentation Chain-Transfer (PET-RAFT) polymerization allow for high-throughput synthesis of diverse polymer architectures on the benchtop in parallel. Recent developments have further increased throughput using liquid handling robotics to automate reagent handling and dispensing into well plates thus enabling the combinatorial synthesis of large polymer libraries. Although liquid handling robotics can enable automated polymer reagent dispensing in well plates, photoinitiation and reaction monitoring require automation to provide a platform that enables the reliable and robust synthesis of various polymer compositions in high-throughput where polymers with desired molecular weights and low dispersity are obtained. Here, we describe the development of a robotic platform to fully automate PET-RAFT polymerizations and provide individual control of reactions performed in well plates. On our platform, reagents are automatically dispensed in well plates, photoinitiated in individual wells with a custom-designed lightbox until the polymerizations are complete, and monitored online in real-time by tracking fluorescence intensities on a fluorescence plate reader, with well plate transfers between instruments occurring via a robotic arm. We found that this platform enabled robust parallel polymer synthesis of both acrylate and acrylamide homopolymers and copolymers, with high monomer conversions and low dispersity. The successful polymerizations obtained on this platform make it an efficient tool for combinatorial polymer chemistry. In addition, with the inclusion of machine learning protocols to help navigate the polymer space towards specific properties of interest, this robotic platform can ultimately become a self-driving lab that can dispense, synthesize, and monitor large polymer libraries.
Issue Date: 5-Jan-2023
Date of Acceptance: 3-Jan-2023
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/101733
DOI: 10.1039/d2dd00100d
ISSN: 2635-098X
Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry
Start Page: 219
End Page: 233
Journal / Book Title: Digital Discovery
Volume: 2
Issue: 1
Copyright Statement: © 2023 The Author(s). Published by the Royal Society of Chemistry. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.
Publication Status: Published
Online Publication Date: 2023-01-05
Appears in Collections:Materials
Bioengineering
Faculty of Natural Sciences



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