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Electroresponse of weak polyelectrolyte brushes

Christopher Balzer, Zhen‐Gang Wang

2023The European Physical Journal E17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

End-tethered polyelectrolytes are widely used to modify substrate properties, particularly for lubrication or wetting. External stimuli, such as pH, salt concentration, or an electric field, can induce profound structural responses in weak polyelectrolyte brushes, which can be utilized to further tune substrate properties. We study the structure and electroresponsiveness of weak polyacid brushes using an inhomogeneous theory that incorporates both electrostatic and chain connectivity correlations at the Debye-Hückel level. Our calculation shows that a weak polyacid brush swells under the application of a negative applied potential, in agreement with recent experimental observation. We rationalize this behavior using a scaling argument that accounts for the effect of the surface charge. We also show that the swelling behavior has a direct influence on the differential capacitance, which can be modulated by the solvent quality, pH, and salt concentration.

Topics & Concepts

PolyelectrolytePolymer scienceMaterials sciencePolymerComposite materialElectrostatics and Colloid InteractionsMicrofluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis ApplicationsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications
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