(20f) Macromolecular Sequence of Nonionic Surface-Active Polypeptoids As a Tool to Control on Properties of Fluid-Fluid Interfaces
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
Symposium in Memory of Bill Russel - 1/2 (Invited Talks)
Sunday, October 27, 2024 - 5:00pm to 5:20pm
We use sequence-specific polypeptoids to characterize the impact of monomer sequence on the adsorption of surface-active polymers at fluid/fluid interfaces. Sets of 36 repeat unit polypeptoids with identical chemical composition but different sequences of hydrophobic moieties along the oligomer chain (taper, inverse taper, blocky, and evenly distributed) are designed and characterized at air/water interfaces. Polypeptoids are driven to the interfaces by decreasing the solvent quality of the aqueous solution. In situ processing of the adsorbed layers causes a collapse of polypeptoids and the formation of irreversibly adsorbed, solvent-avoiding, layers at interfaces. Differences in thermodynamic properties, driven by solubility, between the collapsed structures at interfaces are studied with measurements of interfacial tension. The dilatational modulus of polypeptoid-coated interfaces is used as a proxy to probe the extent of the coil-globule collapse at the interface. The role of hydrophobicity is investigated by comparing four sequences of polypeptoids with an increased size of the hydrophilic sidechains. In each set of polypeptoids, the composition of molecules, and not the sequence, controls the surface concentration. The molecules are described in terms of distribution of the hydrophobic monomers on the backbone of the polymer. Inverse taper (IT) and blocky (B) sequences of hydrophobic moieties favor the formation of highly elastic interfaces after processing, while taper (T) and distributed (D) showed lower elasticity after processing, which is achieved by replacing good solvent with poor solvent, and then nonsolvent. These structures allow for the study of the impact of chemical composition and sequence of monomers on the properties of polymer-coated interfaces.