Abstract
INTERACTIONS between macromolecules fall into four categories: ionic, hydrophobic, van der Waals and hydrogen bonding. Phase transitions in polymer gels provide a means of studying these interactions. Many gels will undergo reversible, discontinuous volume changes in response to changes in, for example, temperature, gel composition or light irradiation1–5. These transitions result from the competition between repulsive intermolecular forces, usually electrostatic in nature, that act to expand the polymer network, and an attractive force that acts to shrink it. Volume transitions in gels have been observed that are driven by all of the above-mentioned forces except hydrogen bonding (ref 6–10; T.T. et al, unpublished data; H. Inomata et al., personal communication). Here we report on a phase transition in an interpenetrating polymer network of poly(acrylamide) and poly(acrylic acid) that completes this picture—it is controlled by cooperative 'zipping' interactions between the molecules which result from hydrogen bonding. Cooperativity is an essential feature of the interactions, in that independent hydrogen bonds would not provide a sufficient driving force for the transition. A further novel characteristic of this phase transition is that the swelling (in water) is induced by an increase rather than a decrease in temperature.
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Ilmain, F., Tanaka, T. & Kokufuta, E. Volume transition in a gel driven by hydrogen bonding. Nature 349, 400–401 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1038/349400a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/349400a0
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