Abstract We developed the dynamic assembly of the hydrogen‐bonded multilayers of (poly(N‐vinylpyrrolidone/poly(methacrylic acid)) (PVPON/PMAA)) and compared their properties to the static multilayers. We found that dynamic multilayers, wherein a planar substrate is shaken during polymer adsorption, leads to a 15‐time faster deposition of the planar coatings. The thicknesses and roughness of the dynamic coatings were found to be ⁓30% larger than those of static (no shaking) multilayer films as measured by spectroscopic ellipsometry and atomic force microscopy. We examined the film growth, mechanical properties, wettability, hydration, and pH stability of the planar static and dynamic multilayers and demonstrated that these properties were insignificantly affected by the assembly mode. Both static and dynamic coatings produced microporous films when exposed to pH = 5.9, close to the film critical dissolution pH = 6. We discovered that during the release of the multilayer films into a solution to produce free‐standing films either as planar membranes or multilayer capsule shells, the molecular chain rearrangements result in the decreased roughness for both static and dynamic multilayers and lead to a decreased thickness of the dynamic multilayers. Our findings can help develop a rapid synthesis of thicker nanostructured polymer coatings for sensing and controlled delivery applications.
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Influence of Side Chain Hydrolysis on the Evolution of Nanoscale Roughness and Porosity in Amine-Reactive Polymer Multilayers
We report the influence of side chain hydrolysis on the evolution of nanoscale structure in thin films fabricated by the reactive layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly of branched poly(ethylenimine) (PEI) and poly(2-vinyl-4,4-dimethylazlactone) (PVDMA). LbL assembly of PEI and PVDMA generally leads to the linear growth of thin, smooth films. However, assembly using PVDMA containing controlled degrees of side chain hydrolysis leads to the growth of thicker films that exhibit substantial nanoscale roughness, porosity, and have resulting physicochemical behaviors (e.g., superhydrophobicity) that are similar to those of some thicker PEI/PVDMA coatings reported in past studies. Our results reveal that the degree of PVDMA partial hydrolysis (or carboxylic acid group content) influences the extent to which complex film features develop, suggesting that ion-pairing interactions between hydrolyzed side chains and amines in PEI promote the evolution of bulk and surface morphology. Additional experiments demonstrate that these features likely arise from polymer/polymer interactions at the surfaces of the films during assembly, and not from the formation and deposition of solution-phase polymer aggregates. When combined, our results suggest that nanoporous structures and rough features observed in past studies likely arise, at least in part, from some degree of adventitious side chain hydrolysis in the PVDMA used for film fabrication. Our results provide useful insight into molecular-level features that govern the growth and structures of these reactive materials, and provide a framework to promote nanoscale morphology reliably and reproducibly. The principles and tools reported here should prove useful for further tuning the porosities and tailoring the physicochemical behaviors of these reactive coatings in ways that are important in applied contexts.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1720415
- PAR ID:
- 10180244
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Chemistry of materials
- ISSN:
- 0897-4756
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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