Stoichiometric polyelectrolyte complexes
(PECs) of the strong polyelectrolytes
poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS) and poly(diallyldimethylammonium) (PDADMA)
were dissociated and dissolved in aqueous KBr. Water was added to
dilute the salt, allowing polyelectrolytes to reassociate. After appropriate
equilibration, these mixtures yielded compositions spanning complexes
(solid) to coacervates (elastic liquid) to dissolved solutions with
increasing [KBr]. These compositions were defined by a ternary polymer/water/salt
phase diagram. For coacervates, transient microphase separation could
be induced by a small departure from equilibration temperature. A
boundary between complex and coacervate states was defined by the
crossover point between loss and storage modulus. Salt ions within
the complex/coacervate were identified as either ion paired with polyelectrolytes
(“doping”) or unassociated. The fraction of ion pair
cross-links between polyelectrolytes as a function of KBr concentration
was used to account for viscosity using a model of “sticky”
reptation