(251u) Magnetic Responsive Polymeric Colloids for Advanced Separations
AIChE Annual Meeting
2015
2015 AIChE Annual Meeting Proceedings
Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
Poster Session: Materials Engineering & Sciences (08A - Polymers)
Monday, November 9, 2015 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Surfactants are widely used in industrial separation processes ranging from ore purification to environmental remediation. Separation systems involving surfactants could be made more efficient and / or cost effective with magnetic surfactants. Zubarev’s theory states that a magnetic field can cause significant changes in the size and shape of magnetic polymer coils. In order to test this theory, we synthesized novel magneto-responsive polymer-based surfactants by first synthesizing and adding magnetic functionality to pH-responsive polymeric colloids. We utilized reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization to synthesize a family of pH-responsive cationic ammonium homo- and block copolymers. RAFT provides a facile method for synthesizing advanced polymer architectures from a variety of functional monomers while maintaining precise control over the macromolecular design (molecular weight, copolymer composition, functionality). We examined the pH-response of a poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (PDMAEMA) (pKa ~ 7.3) series using dynamic light scattering to determine the hydrodynamic diameter of the polymers in solution at two pH values. At a solution pH of 4.0, the tertiary amine moieties along the polymer backbone were ionized enough for the polymers to be molecularly dissolved. At a pH of 10.4, however, the tertiary amine functionality is essentially 100% deprotonated. The corresponding decrease in hydrophilicity induced self-assembly into micelles with a diameter of roughly 60 nm. The pH-responsive, cationic polymers were rendered magneto-responsive via an ion exchange paramagnetic ions such as FeCl4- or CoCl42-. Ongoing efforts focus on the effect of magnetic fields on the solubilization capacity of the polymeric micelles and the ability of utilizing the magneto-responsive polymeric micelles to affect low energy extraction and concentration of organics solutes.