Swelling of a Responsive Network within Different Constraints in Multi- Thermosensitive Microgels
M Brugnoni and A Scotti and AA Rudov and APH Gelissen and T Caumanns and A Radulescu and T Eckert and A Pich and II Potemkin and W Richtering, MACROMOLECULES, 51, 2662-2671 (2018).
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.7b02722
We report on the swelling of a polymeric network in doubly thermoresponsive microgels. Silica-core double-shell and hollow double- shell microgels made of an inner poly(N-isopropylmethacrylamide) and an outer poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) shell are studied by exploiting the distinct temperature sensitivities of the polymers. The swelling states of the two shells can be tuned by temperature changes enabling three different swelling states: above, below, and between the distinct volume phase transition temperatures of the two polymers. This enables to investigate the effect of different constraints on the swelling of the inner network. Small-angle neutron scattering with contrast variation in combination with computer simulation discloses how the expansion of the inner shell depends on the material and swelling state of its constraints. In the presence of the stiff core, the microgels show a considerable interpenetration of the polymeric shells: the inner network expands into the outer deswollen shell. This interpenetration vanishes when the outer network is swollen. Furthermore, as predicted by our computer simulations, an appropriate choice of cross-linking density enables the generation of hollow double-shell nanocapsules. Here, the inner shell undergoes a push pull effect. At high temperature, the collapsed outer shell pushes the swollen inner network into the cavity. At lower temperature, the swelling of the outer network contrary pulls the inner shell back toward the external periphery.
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