posted on 2011-12-16, 10:21authored byEduardo Guzman, Francisco Ortega, Margarita G. Prolongo, Victor Starov, Ramon Rubio
The processes of adsorption of grafted copolymers onto negatively charged surfaces were studied
using a dissipative quartz crystal microbalance (D-QCM) and ellipsometry. The control
parameters in the study of the adsorption are the existence or absence on the molecular
architecture of grafted polyethyleneglycol (PEG) chains with different lengths and the chemical
nature of the main chain, poly(allylamine) (PAH) or poly(L-lysine) (PLL). It was found out that
the adsorption kinetics of the polymers showed a complex behavior. The total adsorbed amount
depends on the architecture of the polymer chains (length of the PEG chains), on the polymer
concentration and on the chemical nature of the main chain. The comparison of the thicknesses
of the adsorbed layers obtained from D-QCM and from ellipsometry allowed calculation of the
water content of the layers that is intimately related to the grafting length. The analysis of
D-QCM results also provides information about the shear modulus of the layers, whose values
have been found to be typical of a rubber-like polymer system. It is shown that the adsorption of
polymers with a charged backbone is not driven exclusively by the electrostatic interactions, but
the entropic contributions as a result of the trapping of water in the layer structure are of
fundamental importance.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
Chemical Engineering
Published in
PHYS CHEM CHEM PHYS
Volume
13
Issue
36
Pages
16416 - 16423
Citation
GUZMAN. E. ... et al, 2011. Influence of the molecular architecture on the adsorption onto solid surfaces: comb-like polymers. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 13, pp. 16416–16423