Submicrometric Films of Surface-Attached Polymer Network with Temperature-Responsive Properties
Mengxing Li (SIMM), Bruno Bresson (SIMM), F Cousin (LLB - UMR 12),, Christian Fretigny (SIMM), Yvette Tran (SIMM)

TL;DR
This study investigates temperature-responsive surface-attached PNIPAM hydrogel films of various thicknesses, revealing how film thickness influences swelling behavior and phase transition sharpness, with potential applications in smart surface coatings.
Contribution
It presents a controlled synthesis method for surface-attached PNIPAM films across a wide thickness range and analyzes their swelling and phase transition properties in detail.
Findings
Sharp phase transition observed in all films
Swelling depends on film thickness below 150 nm
Thicker films swell similarly regardless of attachment
Abstract
Temperature-responsive properties of surface-attached poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) network films with well-controlled chemistry are investigated. The synthesis consists of cross-linking and grafting preformed ene-reactive polymer chains through thiol--ene click chemistry. The formation of surface-attached and cross-linked polymer films has the advantage of being wellcontrolled without any caution of no-oxygen atmosphere or addition of initiators. PNIPAM hydrogel films with same cross-link density are synthesized on a wide range of thickness, from nanometers to micrometers. The swelling-collapse transition with temperature is studied by using ellipsometry, neutron reflectivity, and atomic force microscopy as complementary surface-probing techniques. Sharp and high amplitude temperature-induced phase transition is observed for all submicrometric PNIPAM hydrogel films. For…
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