Explaining giant apparent pKa shifts in weak polyelectrolyte brushes
ORAL
Abstract
Recent experiments on weak polyelectrolyte brushes found marked shifts in the effective pKa that are linear in the logarithm of the salt concentration. Comparing explicit-particle simulations with mean-field calculations we show that for high grafting densities the salt concentration effect can be explained using the ideal Donnan theory, but for low grafting densities the full shift is due to a combination of the Donnan effect and the polyelectrolyte effect. The latter originates from electrostatic correlations which are neglected in the Donnan picture and which are only approximately included in the mean-field theory. Moreover, we demonstrate that the magnitude of the polyelectrolyte effect is almost invariant with respect to salt concentration but depends on the grafting density of the brush. This invariance is due to a complex cancellation of multiple effects. Based on our results, we show how the experimentally determined pKa shifts may be used to infer the grafting density of brushes, a parameter that is difficult to measure directly.
* D.B. and C.H. and P.K. acknowledge funding by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under the grant 397384169 - FOR2811. C.H. furthermore thanks the DFG for funding under Project-No 451980436 and 429529433. P.K. acknowledges funding by the Czech Science Foundation under grant 21-31978J. We thank Andreas Dahlin for helpful discussions concerning his experimental system.
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Presenters
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David Beyer
University of Stuttgart
Authors
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David Beyer
University of Stuttgart
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Peter Košovan
Charles University in Prague
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Christian L Holm
University of Stuttgart, Institute for Computational Physics, University of Stuttgart