화학공학소재연구정보센터
Langmuir, Vol.22, No.7, 3381-3387, 2006
Efficient synthesis of sterically stabilized pH-responsive microgels of controllable particle diameter by emulsion polymerization
Emulsion polymerization of 2-vinylpyridine (2VP) in the presence of divinylbenzene (DVB) cross-linker, a cationic surfactant, and a hydrophilic macromonomer, monomethoxy-capped poly(ethylene glycol) methacrylate (PEGMA), at around neutral pH and 60 degrees C afforded near-monodisperse, sterically stabilized latexes at approximately 10% solids. Judicious selection of the synthesis parameters enabled the mean latex diameter to be varied over an unusually wide range for one-shot batch syntheses. Scanning electron microscopy studies confirmed near-monodisperse spherical morphologies, with mean weight-average particle diameters ranging from 370 to 970 nm depending on the initiator, polymeric stabilizer, and surfactant concentrations. Particle sizing Studies were also conducted using disk centrifuge photosedimentometry and dynamic light scattering and gave similar data. These lightly cross-linked latexes acquired cationic microgel character at low pH, as expected. The critical pH for this latex-to-microgel transition was around pH 4.1 at 1.0 wt % DVB, which is significantly lower than the pK, of 4.92 estimated for linear P2VP homopolymer by acid titration. H-1 NMR and aqueous electrophoresis studies indicated that substantial swelling occurred at low pH due to protonation of the 2VP groups, while dynamic light scattering (DLS) Studies indicated volumetric swelling ratios of up to 3 orders of magnitude, depending on the initial latex diameter. Systematic variation of the degree of cross-linking led to a monotonic decrease in the pK,, values of the P2VP latexes (as judged by acid titration) and also the critical swelling pH (as judged by Visual inspection). This was attributed to the increasingly branched nature of the P2VP chains in their swollen microgel form. Preliminary studies of the kinetics of acid-induced swelling were also conducted using the pH jump method in conjunction with a stopped-flow apparatus. These P2VP latexes swell significantly faster than P2VP latexes described in the literature and the characteristic time scales observed in the present study are much closer to those predicted by the Tanaka equation.