Hypothesis: The peculiar swelling behaviour of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)
(PNIPAM)-based responsive microgels provides the possibility to tune both
softness and volume fraction with temperature, making these systems of great
interest for technological applications and theoretical implications. Their
intriguing phase diagram can be even more complex if poly(acrylic acid) (PAAc)
is interpenetrated within PNIPAM network to form Interpenetrating Polymer
Network (IPN) microgels that exhibit an additional pH-sensitivity. The effect
of the PAAc/PNIPAM polymeric ratio on both swelling capability and dynamics is
still matter of investigation. Experiments: Here we investigate the role of
PAAc in the behaviour of IPN microgels across the volume phase transition
through dynamic light scattering (DLS), transmission electron microscopy (TEM)
and electrophoretic measurements as a function of microgel concentration and
pH. Findings: Our results highlight that aggregation is favored at increasing
weight concentration, PAAc content and pH and that a crossover PAAc content
C*_{PAAc} exists above which the ionic charges on the microgel become relevant.
Moreover we show that the softness of IPN microgels can be tuned ad hoc by
changing the PAAc/PNIPAM ratio. These findings provide new insights into the
possibility to control experimentally aggregation properties, charge and
softness of IPN microgels by varying PAAc content.Comment: preprint versio