4.7 Article

Polymer brushes with reversibly tunable grafting density

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 154, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0038202

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [20-53-12020 NNIO_a]
  2. German Science Foundation [Schm 985/23]

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A novel class of responsive polymer brushes with controllable grafting density has been proposed in this study, using end-grafted polymer chains that have an affinity to the substrate. The dense layer and the outer brush can be seen as coexisting microphases, with the effective grafting density controlled by adsorption strength. Numerical self-consistent field calculations and scaling arguments demonstrate the reversible and controlled changes in grafting density in response to environmental parameters.
We propose a novel class of responsive polymer brushes, where the effective grafting density can be controlled by external stimuli. This is achieved by using end-grafted polymer chains that have an affinity to the substrate. For sufficiently strong surface interactions, a fraction of chains condenses into a near-surface layer, while the remaining ones form the outer brush. The dense layer and the more tenuous outer brush can be seen as coexisting microphases. The effective grafting density of the outer brush is controlled by the adsorption strength and can be changed reversibly and in a controlled way as a response to changes in environmental parameters. The effect is demonstrated by numerical self-consistent field calculations and analyzed by scaling arguments. Since the thickness of the denser layer is about a few monomer sizes, its capacity to form a microphase is limited by the product of the brush chain length and the grafting density. We explore the range of chain lengths and grafting densities where the effect is most pronounced. In this range, the SCF studies suggest that individual chains inside the brush show large rapid fluctuations between two states that are separated by only a small free energy barrier. The behavior of the brush as a whole, however, does not reflect these large fluctuations, and the effective grafting density varies smoothly as a function of the control parameters.

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