Artículo de revista
Adsorption of anionic amphiphilic polyelectrolytes onto amino-terminated solid surfaces
Fecha
2010-06-02Registro en:
POLYMER, Volume: 51, Issue: 15, Pages: 3445-3452, 2010
0032-3861
Autor
Urzúa Acevedo, Marcela
Briones, X. G.
Carrasco, L. P.
Encinas, M. V.
Petri, D. F. S.
Institución
Resumen
The adsorption behavior of several amphiphilic polyelectrolytes of poly(maleic anhydride-alt-styrene)
functionalized with naphthyl and phenyl groups, onto amino-terminated silicon wafer has been studied
by means of null- ellipsometry, atomic force microscopy (AFM) and contact angle measurements. The
maximum of adsorption, Gplateau, varies with the ionic strength, the polyelectrolyte structure and the
chain length. Values of Gplateau obtained at low and high ionic strengths indicate that the adsorption
follows the “screening-reduced adsorption” regime. Large aggregates were detected in solution by means
of dynamic light scattering and fluorescence measurements. However, AFM indicated the formation of
smooth layers and the absence of aggregates. A model based on a two-step adsorption behavior was
proposed. In the first one, isolated chains in equilibrium with the aggregates in solution adsorbed onto
amino-terminated surface. The adsorption is driven by electrostatic interaction between protonated
surface and carboxylate groups. This first layer exposes naphtyl or phenyl groups to the solution. The
second layer adsorption is now driven by hydrophobic interaction between surface and chains and
exposes carboxylate groups to the medium, which repel the forthcoming chain by electrostatic repulsion.
Upon drying some hydrophobic naphtyl or phenyl groups might be oriented to the air, as revealed by
contact angle measurements. Such amphiphilic polyelectrolyte layers worked well for the building-up of
multilayers with chitosan.