2008 Annual Meeting
(746c) Prediction of Phase Behavior In Surface-Tethered Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) Networks from Demixing Behavior of Linear Poly(NIPAAm) Solutions
Authors
A key question concerns the use of a concentration dependent c parameter derived from the solution phase diagram to describe the behavior of constrained systems, including end-tethered or cross-linked polymers. We report on the swelling of surface-tethered poly(NIPAAm) networks as characterized by neutron reflectivity. In this study, surface-tethered networks were prepared from photo-cross-linkable poly(NIPAAm) copolymers with benzophenone-pendant monomers. Ultraviolet radiation (£f = 350 nm) triggers the n,p* transition in the benzophenone moieties leading to a biradicaloid triplet state that abstracts a hydrogen from a neighboring aliphatic C-H group, forming a stable C-C bond. Neutron reflection reveals that the discontinuity in the volume transition of the surface-tethered networks coincides with the miscibility gap of non-cross-linked linear poly(NIPAAm). This result signifies that the concentration dependent c interaction parameter is unaffected by cross-linking and can be used to model volume phase transitions in constrained systems.