High-molecular-weight polysaccharide
microgels were synthesized
at a range of temperatures above the polymer lower critical solution
temperature (LCST) (ΔT = 0.6–18.1 °C),
and ΔT was found to strongly influence the
structure, dynamics, and volume phase transition temperature of the
resulting particles. Static and dynamic light scattering studies and
mean field theory analysis of the microgels below and above volume
phase transition revealed several distinct regimes. At small ΔT, lower density, larger, and more polydisperse microgels
that deswell by a factor 10 in volume were synthesized. At intermediate
ΔT = 5–8 °C, the formed microgels
were the smallest, densest, and most monodisperse below the transition,
but exhibited deswelling only by a factor of 5 above the transition.
Synthesis at high ΔT led to the formation of
nonuniform microgels with small density, a high degree of polydispersity,
and in some cases the apparent presence of the un-cross-linked polymer.
Furthermore, the volume phase transition temperature dropped significantly
as ΔT increased. This work suggests that synthesis
temperature can be used to tune the size, deswelling capacity, and
volume phase transition temperature of the polymeric microgels.