4.6 Article

Reversible Adhesion with Polyelectrolyte Brushes Tailored via the Uptake and Release of Trivalent Lanthanum Ions

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 119, Issue 26, Pages 14805-14814

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.5b02121

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Program in Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science and Engineering

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Applications of end-tethered polyelectrolyte brushes to modify solid surfaces have been developed and studied for their colloidal stabilization and high lubrication properties. Current efforts have expanded into biological realms and stimuli-responsive materials. Our work explores responsive and reversible aspects of polyelectrolyte brush behavior when polyelectrolyte chains interact with oppositely charged multivalent ions and complexes, which act as counterions. There is a significant void in the polyelectrolyte literature regarding interactions with multivalent species. This paper demonstrates that interactions between solid surfaces bearing negatively charged polyelectrolyte brushes are highly sensitive to the presence of trivalent lanthanum, La3+. Lanthanum cations have unique interactions with polyelectrolyte chains, in part due to their small size and hydration radius which results in a high local charge density. Using La3+ in conjunction with the surface forces apparatus (SFA), adhesion has been observed to reversibly appear and disappear upon the uptake and release, respectively, of these multivalent cations acting as counterions. In media of fixed ionic strength set by monovalent sodium salt, at I-0 = 0.003 M and I-0 = 0.3 M, the sign of the interaction forces between overlapping brushes changes from repulsive to attractive when La3+ concentrations reach 0.1 mol % of the total ion concentration. These results are also shown to be generally consistent with, but subtlety different from, previous polyelectrolyte brush experiments using trivalent ruthenium hexamine in the role of the multivalent counterion.

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