746c Prediction of Phase Behavior In Surface-Tethered Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) Networks from Demixing Behavior of Linear Poly(NIPAAm) Solutions

Ajay Vidyasagar and Ryan Toomey. Chemical Engineering, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Ave. ENB 118, Tampa, FL 33620

Lower critical solution temperature (LCST) polymers experience a volume-phase transition when subjected to small perturbations in external stimuli. For example, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (poly(NIPAAm)) undergoes a hydrophilic/hydrophobic transition at roughly 32oC. The critical point of poly(NIPAAm) occurs at a temperature of 29.5 oC and a volume fraction, c, of 0.43. As the polymer concentration is reduced towards zero, the demixing temperature approaches 34 oC. To explain this phenomenon, the effective Flory interaction parameter c must be expanded in powers of f, with a minimum of three terms, wherein each term is a function of temperature.

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.