Theory of self-coacervation in semi-dilute and concentrated zwitterionic polymer solutions
Yu. A. Budkov, P.E. Brandyshev, N.N. Kalikin

TL;DR
This paper develops a molecular theory for self-coacervation in zwitterionic polymer solutions, analyzing electrostatic interactions and phase behavior, with implications for drug delivery and adhesives.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework based on the random phase approximation to describe self-coacervation in zwitterionic polymers, highlighting electrostatic regimes and surface tension calculations.
Findings
Electrostatic correlations lead to liquid-liquid phase separation.
Weak electrostatic interactions follow Keesom regime, strong ones follow Debye-Hückel law.
Surface tension varies with polymer concentration, informing material design.
Abstract
Based on the random phase approximation, we develop a molecular theory of self-coacervation in zwitterionic polymer solutions. We show that the interplay between the volume interactions of the monomeric units and electrostatic correlations of charged groups on a polymer backbone can result in liquid-liquid phase separation (self-coacervation). We analyse the behavior of the coacervate phase polymer concentration depending on the electrostatic interaction strength -- the ratio of the Bjerrum length to the bond length of the chain. We establish that in a wide range of polymer concentration values -- from a semi-dilute to a rather concentrated solution -- the chain connectivity and excluded volume interaction of the monomeric units have an extremely weak effect on the contribution of the electrostatic interactions of the dipolar monomeric units to the total free energy. We show that for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaterial Dynamics and Properties · Surfactants and Colloidal Systems · Polymer Surface Interaction Studies
