Institute of Particle Technology, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Cauerstrasse 4, 91058 Erlangen, Germany.
Soft Matter. 2017 Nov 29;13(46):8717-8727. doi: 10.1039/c7sm01558e.
Microgels are colloidal hydrogel particles that exhibit a pronounced softness, which arises from the swollen nature of the constituent polymer network. This softness leads to a substantial deformability of such particles at liquid interfaces, which, in turn translates into a complex phase behaviour that can exhibit a phase transition between a non-close packed and a close packed arrangement. Here, we explore how the degree of swellability and deformability - and therefore the softness of the particles - affects the phase behaviour of microgels at the air/water interface upon compression. We use precipitation polymerization to synthesize poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) microgels with similar hydrodynamic radii in the collapsed state and systematically vary the degree of swellability by changing the crosslinking density. We spread these microgels onto the air/water interface of a Langmuir trough and characterize their interfacial properties by surface pressure - area isotherms. Furthermore, we continuously transfer the interfacial microgel monolayer during compression onto a solid substrate, thus encoding the complete phase diagram of the microgels with increasing particle density as a function of the position on the solid substrate. We investigate the microgel arrangement by atomic force microscopy and scanning electron microscopy and use image analysis to extract quantitative information on the interparticle distance and degree of order. We find that the phase transition is very sensitive to the crosslinking density and occurs at much lower surface pressures for less deformable particles. The softest microgels do not undergo any phase transition. Instead, the system exhibits pronounced local conformation changes around point defects with local five- and sevenfold symmetries, indicating that the geometry of the assembled structure effectively controls the local pressure experienced by the microgels.
微凝胶是具有明显柔软性的胶体水凝胶颗粒,这种柔软性源于组成聚合物网络的溶胀性质。这种柔软性导致这些颗粒在液体界面处具有很大的可变形性,进而转化为复杂的相行为,可以表现出非密堆积和密堆积排列之间的相转变。在这里,我们探讨了溶胀度和变形性(即颗粒的柔软性)如何影响在压缩时微凝胶在空气/水界面上的相行为。我们使用沉淀聚合来合成具有相似的在塌陷状态下的流体力学半径的聚(N-异丙基丙烯酰胺)微凝胶,并通过改变交联密度系统地改变溶胀度。我们将这些微凝胶铺展在Langmuir 槽的空气/水界面上,并通过表面压-面积等温线来表征它们的界面性质。此外,我们在压缩过程中连续将界面微凝胶单层转移到固体基底上,从而将微凝胶的完整相图作为粒子密度随固体基底上位置的函数进行编码。我们通过原子力显微镜和扫描电子显微镜研究微凝胶的排列,并使用图像分析提取关于粒子间距离和有序度的定量信息。我们发现相转变对交联密度非常敏感,对于较不可变形的粒子,相转变发生在低得多的表面压力下。最柔软的微凝胶不发生任何相转变。相反,系统在具有局部五重和七重对称性的点缺陷周围表现出明显的局部构象变化,表明组装结构的几何形状有效地控制了微凝胶所经历的局部压力。