Literature DB >> 26619003

Mechanism of Polymer Collapse in Miscible Good Solvents.

Francisco Rodríguez-Ropero1, Timir Hajari1, Nico F A van der Vegt1.   

Abstract

We propose a physical mechanism for co-nonsolvency of a stimulus-responsive polymer in water/methanol mixed solution based on results obtained with molecular simulations. Even though the phenomenon is well known, the mechanism behind co-nonsolvency is still under debate. Herein, we study co-nonsolvency of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNiPAM) in methanol aqueous solutions, the most widely studied and experimentally well-characterized system. Our results show that at low alcohol content of the solution methanol preferentially binds to the PNiPAM globule and drives polymer collapse. The energetics of electrostatic, hydrogen bonding, or bridging-type interactions with the globule is found to play no role. Instead, preferential methanol binding results in a significant increase in the globule's configurational entropy, stabilizing methanol-enriched globular structures over wet globular structures in neat water. This mechanism drives the reduction of the lower critical solution temperature with increasing methanol content in the co-nonsolvency regime and eventually leads to polymer collapse. The globule-to-coil re-entrance at high methanol concentrations is instead driven by changes in solvent-excluded volume of the coil and globular states imparted by a decrease in solvent density with increasing methanol content of the solution: with increasing proportion of larger solvent particles (methanol), the entropic (cavity formation) cost of redistributing solvent molecules upon polymer re-entrance becomes smaller. This effect provides a natural explanation for the experimentally observed dependence of the re-entrance transition on chain molecular weight.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 26619003     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b10684

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  6 in total

Review 1.  Fundamentals and Applications of Polymer Brushes in Air.

Authors:  Guido C Ritsema van Eck; Leonardo Chiappisi; Sissi de Beer
Journal:  ACS Appl Polym Mater       Date:  2022-01-14

2.  Guanidinium can both Cause and Prevent the Hydrophobic Collapse of Biomacromolecules.

Authors:  Jan Heyda; Halil I Okur; Jana Hladílková; Kelvin B Rembert; William Hunn; Tinglu Yang; Joachim Dzubiella; Pavel Jungwirth; Paul S Cremer
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2017-01-05       Impact factor: 15.419

3.  Poly(NIPAM-co-MPS)-grafted multimodal porous silica nanoparticles as reverse thermoresponsive drug delivery system.

Authors:  Sushilkumar A Jadhav; Valentina Brunella; Dominique Scalarone; Gloria Berlier
Journal:  Asian J Pharm Sci       Date:  2017-02-21       Impact factor: 6.598

4.  The effect of saccharides on equilibrium swelling of thermo-responsive gels.

Authors:  A D Drozdov; J deClaville Christiansen
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2020-08-20       Impact factor: 3.361

5.  Time-resolved structural evolution during the collapse of responsive hydrogels: The microgel-to-particle transition.

Authors:  Rico Keidel; Ali Ghavami; Dersy M Lugo; Gudrun Lotze; Otto Virtanen; Peter Beumers; Jan Skov Pedersen; Andre Bardow; Roland G Winkler; Walter Richtering
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2018-04-06       Impact factor: 14.136

6.  Thermosensitive Hydration of Four Acrylamide-Based Polymers in Coil and Globule Conformations.

Authors:  Patrick K Quoika; Maren Podewitz; Yin Wang; Anna S Kamenik; Johannes R Loeffler; Klaus R Liedl
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2020-10-15       Impact factor: 2.991

  6 in total

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