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Vertical Phase Segregation Induced by Dipolar Interactions in Planar Polymer Brushes...

by Jyoti P Mahalik, Bobby G Sumpter, Rajeev Kumar
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Macromolecules
Publication Date
Page Numbers
7096 to 7107
Volume
49
Issue
18

We present a generalized theory for studying structural properties of a planar dipolar polymer brush immersed in a polar solvent. We show that an explicit treatment of the dipolar interactions yields a macroscopic concentration dependent effective “chi” (the Flory-Huggins like interaction) parameter. Furthermore, it is shown that the concentration dependent chi parameter promotes phase segregation in polymer solutions and brushes so that the polymer-poor phase consists of a finite/non-zero polymer concentration. Such a destabilization of the homogeneous phase by the dipolar interactions appears as vertical phase segregation in a planar polymer brush. In a vertically phase segregated polymer brush, the polymer-rich phase near the grafting surface coexist with the polymer-poor phase at the other end. Predictions of the theory are directly compared with prior reported experimental results for dipolar polymers in polar solvents. Excellent agreements with the experimental results are found, hinting that thedipolar interactions play a significant role in vertical phase segregation of planar polymer brushes. We also compare our field theoretical approach with the two-state and other models invoking ad hoc concentration dependence of the chi parameter. Interplay between the short-ranged excluded volume interactions and long-ranged dipolar interactions are shown to play an important role in affecting the vertical phase separation. Effects of mismatch between the dipole moments of the polymer segments and
the solvent molecules are investigated in detail.