1 research outputs found
Binding of Functionalized Polymers to Surface-Attached Polymer Networks Containing Reactive Groups
To study diffusion and binding of
polymers into surface-attached
networks containing reactive groups, surface-attached polymer networks
bound to oxidized silicon surfaces are generated, which contain succinimide
ester groups. The surface-attached polymer layers are brought into
contact with polyĀ(ethylene glycol)Ās (PEG), which carry terminal amine
end groups and which have systematically varied molecular weights.
The coupling reaction between the active ester groups in the polymer
networks and the amine groups in the incoming chains are studied by
ellipsometry, surface plasmon spectroscopy, AFM, and Fourier transform
infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The degree of functionalization of the
reactive layers by the PEG-NH<sub>2</sub> depends strongly on the
cross-link density of the network, the active ester content, and the
molecular weight of the amine-terminated polymer. A model for the
attachment reaction is proposed which suggests that the incoming polymer
chains bind only at the outer periphery of the network in a narrow
penetration zone. According to this model, when the incoming polymers
are rather short, penetration into the layer and binding are prohibited
by the high segment density and the anisotropic stretching of the
surface-attached networks (āentropic shieldingā). For
incoming chains with a higher molecular weight and/or networks with
a small mesh sizes, size exclusion effects determine diffusion and
binding