Salt-induced reentrant stability of polyion-decorated particles with tunable surface charge density
Simona Sennato, Laura Carlini, Domenico Truzzolillo, Federico Bordi

TL;DR
This study investigates how salt concentration influences the stability and charge behavior of liposome-polyelectrolyte complexes, revealing a reentrant stability phenomenon driven by polyelectrolyte desorption and adsorption mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of salt-induced reentrant stability in liposome-polyelectrolyte systems, combining experimental data with theoretical models to explain the phenomena.
Findings
Salt addition first destabilizes then stabilizes liposome suspensions.
Reentrant condensation is driven by polyelectrolyte desorption and adsorption.
Theoretical models accurately describe the observed stability behavior.
Abstract
The electrostatic complexation between DOTAP-DOPC unilamellar liposomes and an oppositely charged polyelectrolyte (NaPA) has been investigated in a wide range of the liposome surface charge density. We systematically characterized the "reentrant condensation" and the charge inversion of polyelectrolyte-decorated liposomes by means of dynamic light scattering and electrophoresis. We explored the stability of this model polyelectrolyte/colloid system by fixing each time the charge of the bare liposomes and by changing two independent control parameters of the suspensions: the polyelectrolyte/colloid charge ratio and the ionic strength of the aqueous suspending medium. The progressive addition of neutral DOPC lipid within the liposome membrane gave rise to a new intriguing phenomenon: the stability diagram of the suspensions showed a novel reentrance due to the crossing of the desorption…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions · Polymer Surface Interaction Studies · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
