Electric double layer electrostatics of pH-responsive spherical polyelectrolyte brushes in the decoupled regime

Colloids Surf B Biointerfaces. 2016 Nov 1:147:180-190. doi: 10.1016/j.colsurfb.2016.07.049. Epub 2016 Jul 27.

Abstract

Understanding the behavior and properties of spherical polyelectrolyte brushes (SPEBs), which are polyelectrolyte brushes grafted to a spherical core, is fundamental to many applications in biomedical, chemical and petroleum engineering as well as in pharmaceutics. In this paper, we study the pH-responsive electrostatics of such SPEBs in the decoupled regime. In the first part of the paper, we derive the scaling conditions in terms of the grafting density of the PEs on the spherical core that ensure that the analysis can be performed in the decoupled regime. In such a regime the elastic and the excluded volume effects of polyelectrolyte brushes (PEBs) can be decoupled from the electrostatic effects associated with the PE charge and the induced EDL. As a consequence the PE brush height, assumed to be dictated by the balance of the elastic and excluded volume effects, can be independent of the electrostatic effects. In the second part, we quantify the pH-responsive electrostatics of the SPEBs - we pinpoint that the radial monomer distribution for a given brush molecule exhibit a non-unique cubic distribution that decays away from the spherical core. Such a monomer distribution ensures that the hydrogen ion concentration is appropriately accounted for in the description of the SPEB thermodynamics. We anticipate that the present analysis, which provides possibly one of the first models for probing the electrostatics of pH-responsive SPEBs in a thermodynamically-consistent framework, will be vital for understanding the behavior of a large number of entities ranging from PE-coated NPs and stealth liposomes to biomolecules like bacteria and viruses.

Keywords: Electric double layer; Grafting density; Spherical polyelectrolyte brush; pH.

MeSH terms

  • Electricity*
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
  • Models, Chemical
  • Polyelectrolytes / chemistry*
  • Static Electricity*
  • Surface Properties
  • Thermodynamics

Substances

  • Polyelectrolytes