posted on 2019-02-15, 00:00authored byDaniel
F. Kienle, Daniel K. Schwartz
Polyelectrolyte
multilayers (PEMs) have significant potential in
many technologies, yet the dynamics of the constituent polymer chains
remains poorly understood. We used total internal reflection fluorescence
microscopy to observe microscopic single-molecule transport of fluorescently
labeled poly-l-lysine (PLL) diffusing within the bulk of
a PEM composed of PLL and poly(2-acrylamido-2-methyl-1-propanesulfonic
acid) (PAMPS) when exposed to NaCl solutions ranging in concentration
from 0 to 2 M. Statistical analysis of PLL trajectories revealed motion
that was nonergodic, subdiffusive, and temporally anticorrelated under
all conditions. In contrast with previous macroscopic measurements
of polymer diffusion within PEMs, the microscopic diffusion was 2–3
orders of magnitude faster and varied nonmonotonically with salt concentration
in a way that was similar to trends previously associated with
PEM swelling and viscoelastic properties. This trend in the anomalous
diffusion was attributed to complex salt-dependent changes in the
viscoelastic properties of the film that balanced intermolecular binding
and molecular conformation.