Langmuir, Vol.31, No.18, 5078-5085, 2015
Flipped Polyelectrolyte Multilayer Films: Accessing the Buried Interface
Little is known concerning the interface between a polyelectrolyte multilayer, PEMU, and its substrate. Recent models suggest that excess polymer charge, compensated by counterions, remains buried within the PEMU, especially for thicker films having a nonlinear component to their growth. We report a novel approach for making free-standing multilayers of poly(diallyldimethylammonium) (PDADMA) and poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS): after assembly on aluminum substrates, films were released by brief immersion in aqueous alkali. The multilayers were then flipped, allowing access to the initially buried substrate/PEMU interface. Experiments were performed to show that this method of release, one of many established for PEMUs, perturbed the surface and bulk of the film minimally. Film/solution and film/substrate interfaces were compared using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). AFM was used to record topography and perform nanoindentation, while XPS provided surface elemental composition. All three methods revealed data consistent with an excess of PDADMA at the buried interface. This excess PDADMA was then complexed with additional PSS to yield nanosandwiches of nonstoichiometric PEMU between layers of stoichiometric PEMU.