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Hydrophobic polyelectrolyte

Approximately a minimum of 1 to 5,000 is required before complexation is no longer dependent on molecular weight for small anions such as KI and l-ariiLinonaphthaLine-8-sulfonate (ANS) (86,87). The latter anion is a fluorescent probe that, when bound in hydrophobic environments, will display increased fluorescence and, as expected, shows this effect in the presence of aqueous PVP. PVP, when complexed with Hl, shrinks in si2e as it loses hydrodynamic volume, possibly because of interchain complexation. ANS, on the other hand, causes the polymer to swell by charge repulsion because it behaves like a typical polyelectrolyte (88). [Pg.531]

By covalently attaching reactive groups to a polyelectrolyte main chain the uncertainty as to the location of the associated reactive groups can be eliminated. The location at which the reactive groups experience the macromolecular environment critically controls the reaction rate. If a reactive group is covalently bonded to a macromolecular surface, its reactivity would be markedly influenced by interfacial effects at the boundary between the polymer skeleton and the water phase. Those effects may vary with such factors as local electrostatic potential, local polarity, local hydrophobicity, and local viscosity. The values of these local parameters should be different from those in the bulk phase. [Pg.53]

Besides the electrostatic potential effect on reactivity, functionalized polyelectrolytes have a variety of interesting features worthy of study. If a polyelectrolyte is covalently modified with highly hydrophobic functional groups, it provides an unusual opportunity to study the chemical reactions of normally otherwise water insoluble functional groups in aqueous solution. Furthermore, a structural organization via hydrophobic interactions may occur in aqueous solution [25 — 31], which is of general scientific importance and is worth studying for its own sake. [Pg.55]

The pioneering work on amphiphilic polyelectrolytes goes back to 1951, when Strauss et al. [25] first synthesized amphiphilic polycations by quaternization of poly(2-vinylpyridine) with n-dodecyl bromide. They revealed that the long alkyl side chains attached to partially quaternized poly(vinylpyridine)s tended to aggregate in aqueous solution so that the polymers assumed a compact conformation when the mole fraction of the hydrophobic side chains exceeded a certain critical value. Thus, Strauss et al. became the first to show experimentally the intramolecular micellation of amphiphilic polymers and the existence of a critical content of hydrophobic residues which may be compared to the critical micelle concentration of ordinary surfactants. They called such amphiphilic polyelectrolytes polysoaps [25],... [Pg.63]

As has been described in Chapter 4, random copolymers of styrene (St) and 2-(acrylamido)-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid (AMPS) form a micelle-like microphase structure in aqueous solution [29]. The intramolecular hydrophobic aggregation of the St residues occurs when the St content in the copolymer is higher than ca. 50 mol%. When a small mole fraction of the phenanthrene (Phen) residues is covalently incorporated into such an amphiphilic polyelectrolyte, the Phen residues are hydrophobically encapsulated in the aggregate of the St residues. This kind of polymer system (poly(A/St/Phen), 29) can be prepared by free radical ter-polymerization of AMPS, St, and a small mole fraction of 9-vinylphenanthrene [119]. [Pg.84]

Cordes et al995 carried out alkaline hydrolyses of p-nitrophenylhexanoate 55 (PNPH) in the presence of poly-4-vinylpyridine partially quaternized with dodecyl-bromide and ethylbromide (QPVP). They also found that the polyelectrolytes are increasingly effective as catalysts with an increasing ratio of dodecyl to ethyl groups, and the hydrophobic interactions are important in determining the catalytic efficiency. They observed the inhibitory effects of several gegen-anions fluoride ions are the weakest inhibitor, and nitrate is the strongest (F- < Cl < S04 [Pg.159]

Since the dyes contain hydrophobic moieties, the fading reactions, which should be decelerated by polyelectrolytes according to the electrostatic model, can even be accelerated by hydrophobic polyelectrolytes. As shown in Fig. 17, the addition of... [Pg.175]

As a polycation, chitosan spontaneously forms macromolecular complexes upon reaction with anionic polyelectrolytes. These complexes are generally water-insoluble and form hydrogels [90,91]. A variety of polyelectrolytes can be obtained by changing the chemical structure of component polymers, such as molecular weight, flexibility, fimctional group structure, charge density, hydrophilicity and hydrophobicity, stereoregularity, and compatibility, as... [Pg.158]

Siegel, R, A, Hydrophobic Weak Polyelectrolyte Gels Studies of Swelling, Equilibria and Kinetics. Vol. L 09, pp. 233-268. [Pg.215]

RA Siegel. Hydrophobic weak polyelectrolyte gels—Studies of swelling equilibria and kinetics. Adv Polym Sci 109 233-267, 1993. [Pg.548]

Recently the wall-PRISM theory has been used to investigate the forces between hydrophobic surfaces immersed in polyelectrolyte solutions [98], Polyelectrolyte solutions display strong peaks at low wavevectors in the static structure factor, which is a manifestation of liquid-like order on long lengths-cales. Consequently, the force between surfaces confining polyelectrolyte solutions is an oscillatory function of their separation. The wall-PRISM theory predicts oscillatory forces in salt-free solutions with a period of oscillation that scales with concentration as p 1/3 and p 1/2 in dilute and semidilute solutions, respectively. This behavior is explained in terms of liquid-like ordering in the bulk solution which results in liquid-like layering when the solution is confined between surfaces. In the presence of added salt the theory predicts the possibility of a predominantly attractive force under some conditions. These predictions are in accord with available experiments [99,100]. [Pg.115]


See other pages where Hydrophobic polyelectrolyte is mentioned: [Pg.411]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.411]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.560]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.371]    [Pg.518]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.655]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.207]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.70 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.70 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.70 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.70 ]




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Conformational transitions hydrophobic polyelectrolytes

Hydrophobic polyelectrolyte systems

Hydrophobic polyelectrolytes, physical

Hydrophobically modified polyelectrolytes

Hydrophobicity polyelectrolyte dynamics

Polyelectrolyte gels hydrophobic interactions

Polyelectrolytes hydrophobic polyacids

Polyelectrolytes, hydrophobically

Polyelectrolytes, hydrophobically

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