Influence of charges on the behavior of polyelectrolyte microgels confined to oil-water interfaces
Maximilian M. Schmidt, Steffen Bochenek, Alexey A. Gavrilov, Igor I., Potemkin, Walter Richtering

TL;DR
This study investigates how electrostatic charges influence the interfacial behavior of polyelectrolyte microgels at oil-water interfaces using experiments and simulations, revealing size-dependent effects on compressibility.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the charge-dependent interfacial properties of microgels, combining experimental and simulation approaches to clarify electrostatic effects.
Findings
Charged microgels are more compressible at low compression than uncharged ones.
At high compression, charged microgels are less compressible than uncharged microgels.
Microgel size influences charge-dependent compressibility at low compression.
Abstract
The role of electrostatics on the interfacial properties of polyelectrolyte microgels has been discussed controversially in the literature. It is not yet clear if, or how, Coulomb interactions affect their behavior under interfacial confinement. In this work, we combine compression isotherms, atomic force microscopy imaging, and computer simulations to further investigate the behavior of pH-responsive microgels at oil-water interfaces. At low compression, charged microgels can be compressed more than uncharged microgels. The in-plane effective area of charged microgels is found to be smaller in comparison to uncharged ones. Thus, the compressibility is governed by in-plane interactions of the microgels with the interface. At high compression, however, charged microgels are less compressible than uncharged microgels. Microgel fractions located in the aqueous phase interact earlier for…
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