Driving
Forces for Oppositely Charged Polyion Association
in Aqueous Solutions: Enthalpic, Entropic, but Not Electrostatic
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Abstract
Driving
forces for association between oppositely charged biological
or synthetic polymers in aqueous solution have long been identified
as electrostatic in origin. This attraction is broken down into an
entropic component, due to loss of counterions, and an enthalpic component,
stemming from Coulombic attraction between opposite charges. While
the balance between entropic and enthalpic contributions shifts according
to the conditions, the presence of exotherms or endotherms on mixing,
though small, are viewed as signatures of Coulombic interactions which
support theories of polyelectrolyte association rooted in continuum
electrostatics. Here, a head-to-head comparison is made between mechanisms
based on electrostatics and those based on specific ion pairing, or
ion exchange. Using a Hofmeister series of counterions for a common
polycation, poly(diallyldimethylammonium), enthalpy changes on association
with poly(styrenesulfonate) are shown to derive from changes in water
perturbation, revealed by Raman scattering studies of water O–H
vibrations. The free energy for complexation is almost completely
entropic over all salt concentrations