“…Polyelectrolyte complex coacervation refers to an associative liquid–liquid phase separation in solutions of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes into a polymer-rich liquid coacervate phase and an equilibrium polymer-deficient supernatant phase. − Due to its fundamental role in a variety of fields such as hydrogel fabrication, − drug delivery, , and formation of membrane-less organelles in cells, − polyelectrolyte complex coacervation has received a great deal of attention in recent years from both the polymer physics and biophysics communities, and significant progresses have been made in understanding the bulk phase behaviors. ,− For example, it is now well accepted that the addition of monovalent salt can weaken the degree of phase separation, and the miscibility gap vanishes above a critical salt concentration. , Likewise, the effects of other parameters such as temperature, charge fraction, chain length, polymer concentration, sequence, and stoichiometry on the bulk properties of complex coacervation have been extensively examined in the literature; we refer to several recent excellent reviews ,− for these progresses.…”