Start Publications Two-Fluid Model for the Interpretation of Quartz Crystal ...
QSense

Two-Fluid Model for the Interpretation of Quartz Crystal Microbalance Response: Tuning Properties of Polymer Brushes with Solvent Mixtures

Year: 2013

Journal: J. Phys. Chem. C, 2013, 117 (9), pp 4533–4543, 20130403

Authors: Prathima C. Nalam 1, Leonid Daikhin 2, Rosa M. Espinosa-Marzal 1, Jarred Clasohm 1, Michael Urbakh 2, and Nicholas D. Spencer *1

Last authors: Nicholas D. Spencer

Organizations: 1 Laboratory for Surface Science and Technology, Department of Materials, ETH Zurich, Wolfgang-Pauli-Strasse 10, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland 2 School of Chemistry, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel-Aviv University, 69978 Ramat-Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel

Country: Switzerland, Israel

A new approach, involving a two-fluid model, has been developed to interpret the quartz crystal microbalance response of adsorbed viscoelastic polymers. The model utilizes the Navier–Stokes–Brinkmann equation to describe the motion of a porous, semirigid, viscoelastic polymer-brush film with a viscous solvent flowing through it. The two phases, solid (polymer brush) and liquid (solvent mixture), hydrodynamically interact with each other, as represented by means of a Darcy term with a characteristic correlation factor. The two-fluid model is used to estimate structural changes in polymer brushes consisting of the copolymers poly(l-lysine)-graft-poly(ethylene glycol) (PLL-g-PEG) or poly(l-lysine)-graft-dextran (PLL-g-dextran) adsorbed on an amorphous SiO2-coated quartz surface in aqueous solutions of glycerol, ethylene glycol (EG), and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Layer thickness, polymer volume fraction, and shear modulus of the polymer films with varying co-solvent concentration are determined with this approach. It was found that preferential hydrogen-bonding interactions of solvent mixtures with the polymers leads to variation in the structural properties of the polymer brushes upon changing the co-solvent composition. Furthermore, the conformation of polymer brushes in solvent mixtures is influenced by the solvent–solvent interactions, which can be explained in terms of the free energy of solvent mixing.