Ion pairing controls rheological properties of "processionary" polyelectrolyte hydrogels

We demonstrated recently that polyelectrolytes with cationic moieties along the chain and a single anionic head are able to form physical hydrogels due to the reversible nature of the head-to-body ionic bond. Here we generate a variety of such polyelectrolytes with various cationic moieties and counterion combinations starting from a common polymeric platform. We show that the rheological properties (shear modulus, critical strain) of the final hydrogels can be modulated over three orders of magnitude depending on the cation/anion pair. Our data fit remarkably well within a scaling model involving a supramolecular head-to-tail single file between cross-links, akin to the behaviour of pine-processionary caterpillar. This model allows the quantitative measure of the amount of counterion condensation from standard rheology procedure. References:  Ion pairing controls rheological properties of "processionary" polyelectrolyte hydrogels - H. Srour, M. Duvall Ayagou, T. Thanh-Tam Nguyen, N. Taberlet, S. Manneville, C. Andraud, C. Monnereau et M. Leocmach Ion pairing controls rheological properties of "processionary" polyelectrolyte hydrogels (publication in Laboratoire de chimie (chemistry lab) - Laboratoire de physique (physics lab) - Institut Lumière Matière
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