Polyelectrolyte
coacervates, obtained by mixing solutions of oppositely
charged polyions, and layer-by-layer films, produced by sequential
adsorption of polyelectrolytes on a surface, are two types of closely
related soft materials. While both types of materials are produced
by polyelectrolyte complexation, their theoretical description had
so far followed divergent paths. This work reports a unifying theoretical
treatment of polyelectrolyte complexation in solution and layer-by-layer
self-assembled thin films using a molecular theory that describes
polyelectrolyte complexation by using a chemical-equilibrium formalism.
The theory is shown to predict both the phase diagrams of polyelectrolyte
mixtures in solution and the formation of layer-by-layer thin films
in good agreement with experimental evidence. In the latter case,
the theory correctly captures the effects of solution pH and ionic
strength on the mass of the deposited films as well as the possibility
of layer-by-layer deposition without full charge reversal at extreme
pHs. The theory is then used to revisit the “universal curve”
for the effect of salt concentration on layer-by-layer deposition
previously proposed on experimental grounds by Salehi et al. [Macromolecules 2015, 48, 400–409].
This universal curve makes predictions about the growth rate of a
layer-by-layer film for a given polyanion/polycation pair by using
only information obtained from a mixture of the same polyelectrolytes
in solution, thereby linking both phenomena. Our theoretical results
confirm the validity of the curve. This achievement demonstrates the
practical importance of describing polyelectrolyte coacervates and
multilayer films within a unified theoretical framework