Hydrophobic Polyelectrolytes in Better Polar Solvent. Structure and Chain Conformation as seen by Saxs and Sans
Wafa Essafi (INRAP), Marie Noelle Spiteri (LLB), Claudine Williams, (LPMC, LPFO), Fran\c{c}ois Bou\'e (LLB)

TL;DR
This study investigates how solvent quality affects the structure and conformation of hydrophobic polyelectrolytes in semi-dilute solutions using SAXS and SANS, revealing conformational changes with solvent type and composition.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the conformational behavior of hydrophobic polyelectrolytes in different polar solvents, highlighting the influence of solvent quality on chain structure and conformation.
Findings
Increased THF causes chain conformation to evolve from pearl necklace to string-like.
PSS behaves as a classical polyelectrolyte in DMSO, independent of charge content.
Structural properties depend on solvent polarity and sulfonation rate.
Abstract
We demonstrate in this paper the influence of solvent quality on the structure of the semi-dilute solution of a hydrophobic polyelectrolyte, partially sulfonated Poly-Styrene Sulfonate. Two solvents are used: (i) one mixture of water and an organic solvent: THF, which is also slightly polar; (ii) DMSO, a polar organic solvent. In case (i), it is shown by SAXS study that the structure - namely the scattering from all chains, characterised by a maximum ("polyelectrolyte peak"), of the aqueous hydrophobic polyelectrolyte solutions (PSS) depends on the solvent quality through the added amount of organic solvent THF. This dependence is more pronounced when the sulfonation rate is low (more hydrophobic polyelectrolyte). It is proposed that when THF is added, the chain conformation evolves from the pearl necklace shape already reported in pure water, towards the conformation in pure water for…
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