19F NMR experiments are used to study the aggregation behavior of two telechelic polymer
systems. These polymer systems consist of a water−soluble chain, here poly(ethylene glycol), with two
hydrophobic endgroups. Because of the hydrophobic interaction of the fluorocarbon endgroups, these
polymer chains associate in water to form aggregates at low concentrations. The aggregate comprises a
core formed from the insoluble hydrophobic endgroups that are surrounded by a corona of long water-soluble polymer chains. With increasing polymer concentration, the polymer chains start bridging so
that a three-dimensional, physical network with fluorinated aggregate cores as cross-link points is formed.
This effect can be substantially enhanced by replacing the hydrophobic endgroup C6F13 with C8F17, a
consequence of the stronger association of C8F17 in aqueous solution. By different 19F NMR parameters,
i.e., 19F transverse relaxation and 19F chemical shift, we can distinguish aggregated and nonaggregated
chain ends. This enables us to follow the formation of an infinite network.
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