Co-non-solvency: Depletion forces or preferential adsorption?

ORAL

Abstract

Co-non-solvency is a phenomenon that occurs when a polymer is added to a mixture of two (perfectly) miscible and competing good solvents. As a result, the same polymer collapses into a globule within intermediate mixing ratios. More interestingly, polymer collapses despite the fact that the solvent quality remains good or even gets increasingly better by the addition of the better cosolvent [1]. This puzzling phenomenon, where the solvent quality is completely decoupled from the polymer conformation, is driven by strong local preferential adsorption of the better cosolvent to the polymer [1,2,3]. Because a polymer collapses in good solvent, the depletion forces, that are responsible for standard poor solvent collapse, do not play any role in describing co-non-solvency [4]. [1] D. Mukherji and K. Kremer, Macromolecules (2013). [2] D. Mukherji, C. M. Marques, and K. Kremer, Nature Communications (2014). [3] D. Mukherji, C. M. Marques, T. Stuehn and K. Kremer, Journal of Chemical Physics (2015). [4] T. E. de Oliveira, P. A. Netz, D. Mukherji, and K. Kremer, Soft Matter (2015).

Authors

  • Carlos Marques

    Institut Charles Sadron, CNRS

  • Tiago Oliveira

    Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Paulo Netz

    Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

  • Torsten Stuehn

    Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Germany

  • Debashish Mukherji

    Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Germany

  • Kurt Kremer

    Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz, Germany, Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research, Germany, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research