Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes

Adhesion is a well-studied phenomenon, mainly for its industrial importance. We consider a smart water-based adhesive that is switchable, i.e. the adhesion may be turned on and off by an environmental trigger, in this case the pH. The interaction investigated is between a weak polyacid hydrogel of p...

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Main Author: La Spina, Rita
Published: University of Sheffield 2010
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522341
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5223412017-02-17T03:23:47ZSwitchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytesLa Spina, Rita2010Adhesion is a well-studied phenomenon, mainly for its industrial importance. We consider a smart water-based adhesive that is switchable, i.e. the adhesion may be turned on and off by an environmental trigger, in this case the pH. The interaction investigated is between a weak polyacid hydrogel of poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA) and poly [2-( dimethyl amino )ethyl methacrylate] (PDMAEMA, a weak polybase) chemically grafted to planar silicon substrates (brushes) by atom transfer radical polymerisation. The interaction between PDMAEMA and PMAA is of great interest because it represents a situation where a surface adhesive (a polybase in contact with a polyacid) can be turned on and off simply by changing the external environment. In particular we observe that at pH less than 2, there is no significant interaction between the brush and hydrogel, whereas above pH 3, there is strong adhesion comparable to epoxy glue. The interaction between the brush and the gel is pressure sensitive so that the adhesion energy is a function of the applied load. To understand the mechanism involved in the pressure sensitive behaviour we performed neutron reflectivity experiments of the brush in contact with the hydrogel after known pressures were applied. Comparison of the conformations of brushes of different thicknesses but with the same applied pressure shows that the interaction between the brush and hydrogel takes place at the interface and is mainly due to electrostatic interactions between the carboxylic group of the hydrogel and the amino group into the brush. Viscoelastic dissipation in the hydrogel also contributes to the total work of adhesion.530.417University of Sheffieldhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522341http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/14534/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 530.417
spellingShingle 530.417
La Spina, Rita
Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
description Adhesion is a well-studied phenomenon, mainly for its industrial importance. We consider a smart water-based adhesive that is switchable, i.e. the adhesion may be turned on and off by an environmental trigger, in this case the pH. The interaction investigated is between a weak polyacid hydrogel of poly(methacrylic acid) (PMAA) and poly [2-( dimethyl amino )ethyl methacrylate] (PDMAEMA, a weak polybase) chemically grafted to planar silicon substrates (brushes) by atom transfer radical polymerisation. The interaction between PDMAEMA and PMAA is of great interest because it represents a situation where a surface adhesive (a polybase in contact with a polyacid) can be turned on and off simply by changing the external environment. In particular we observe that at pH less than 2, there is no significant interaction between the brush and hydrogel, whereas above pH 3, there is strong adhesion comparable to epoxy glue. The interaction between the brush and the gel is pressure sensitive so that the adhesion energy is a function of the applied load. To understand the mechanism involved in the pressure sensitive behaviour we performed neutron reflectivity experiments of the brush in contact with the hydrogel after known pressures were applied. Comparison of the conformations of brushes of different thicknesses but with the same applied pressure shows that the interaction between the brush and hydrogel takes place at the interface and is mainly due to electrostatic interactions between the carboxylic group of the hydrogel and the amino group into the brush. Viscoelastic dissipation in the hydrogel also contributes to the total work of adhesion.
author La Spina, Rita
author_facet La Spina, Rita
author_sort La Spina, Rita
title Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
title_short Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
title_full Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
title_fullStr Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
title_full_unstemmed Switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
title_sort switchable adhesion between oppositely charged polyelectrolytes
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2010
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.522341
work_keys_str_mv AT laspinarita switchableadhesionbetweenoppositelychargedpolyelectrolytes
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