Covalent monolayer sheets in 2 hours: spreading of threefold anthracene-equipped shape-persistent and amphiphilic monomers at the air/water interface followed by a short photochemical treatment provides access to infinitely sized, strictly monolayered, covalent sheets with in-plane elastic modulus in the range of 19 N/m.
Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) macromolecules
(PNIPAM) dissolve in water at temperatures
below 33 °C; at higher temperatures, due to hydrophobic interactions,
they precipitate out of solution.
Addition of a small quantity of charged surfactant resolubilizes
the precipitated polymer. We have used
small angle neutron scattering to determine the structures of aqueous
solutions of PNIPAM and sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS). At temperatures above the precipitation
temperature of the pure polymer solution,
two different structures have been found, depending on the ratio of
surfactant to polymer. At high ratios,
SDS micelles bind to individual macromolecules and pull them into
solution; the distance between
consecutive micelles in a “necklace” is found to remain constant at
around 60 Å. At low ratios, the
macromolecules collapse to form small colloidal particles rather than
forming necklaces with micelles
spaced further apart. The collapse transition is abrupt in the
sense that no intermediate states between
the stretched necklaces and the collapsed colloidal particles have been
found. A critical number of micelles
per unit length of polymer is required for complete
solubilization.
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