Adsorption and Friction Behavior of Amphiphilic Polymers
on Hydrophobic Surfaces
Posted on 2013-04-16 - 00:00
The ability of amphiphilic
polymers to self-assemble and form a
gel or gel-like layer has been investigated by means of both experimental
and theoretical studies on alkylated derivatives of poly(acrylic acid).
Experiments were performed to determine the relationship between amphiphilic
polymer chemistry, structure, water retention, and friction in the
presence of hydrophobic substrates. The results indicate that the
amphiphilic polymer forms a water-enriched, friction-reducing adsorbed
layer on hydrophobic surfaces. The shear moduli and viscosities of
the adsorbed layers, as determined by fitting the Voigt model to QCM-D
data, were consistent with the presence of a gel. Computational studies
on HPAA-12 were performed and are consistent with the presence of
adsorbed conformations, in which the lowest free energy in the model
corresponded to a partially adsorbed molecule, with a small fraction
of hydrophobic side chains being compelled, for configurational reasons,
to point into the bulk water. This would support the possibility of
the formation of either a gel-like layer or surface aggregation. However,
because the adsorption experiments showed no evidence of aggregation,
this strongly suggests the formation of a gel.
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Fontani, Giacomo; Gaspari, Roberto; Spencer, Nicholas
D.; Passerone, Daniele; Crockett, Rowena (2016). Adsorption and Friction Behavior of Amphiphilic Polymers
on Hydrophobic Surfaces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/la400263r