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Effect of Polyelectrolyte Charge Density on the Adsorption and Desorption Behavior on Mica

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TLDR
In this article, the effect of polyelectrolyte charge density on the surface cation exchange at the mica basal plane from low ionic strength solutions was analyzed using the XPS (ESCA) method.
Abstract
The XPS (ESCA) method was employed to quantitatively determine polyelectrolyte adsorption on the mica basal plane from low ionic strength solutions. Particular emphasis was given to the effect of the polyelectrolyte charge density. By combining the results obtained from XPS and surface force measurements it was possible to analyze the cation exchange at the surface that occurs as a result of polyelectrolyte adsorption. AFM-imaging was used to obtain information on the structure of the adsorbed layer when the polyelectrolyte coverage was low. Further, the desorption of preadsorbed polyelectrolyte layers by addition of inorganic salt and by addition of an anionic surfactant was investigated by XPS and some complementary surface force measurements. The results demonstrate that the lower the polyelectrolyte charge density is, the easier it is to remove the polyelectrolyte from the surface. The surfactant, which by itself does not adsorb to the mica surface, is more efficient in this respect than the inorganic salt. This observation can be rationalized by considering that the surfactant and polyelectrolyte form complexes with each other. Thus, the surfactant brings negative charges into the adsorbed layer that reduces the affinity to the surface. However, high-charge-density polyelectrolytes are removed to a very limited degree even when the surfactant concentration is above the critical micellar concentration, which is explainable by the poor solubility of the polyelectrolyte-surfactant complexes formed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Triggering the sintering of silver nanoparticles at room temperature.

TL;DR: It was discovered that silver nanoparticles behave as soft particles when they come into contact with oppositely charged polyelectrolytes and undergo a spontaneous coalescence process, even without heating, and using this finding in printing conductive patterns, enables achieving high conductivities even at room temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behaviors and mechanisms of copper adsorption on hydrolyzed polyacrylonitrile fibers.

TL;DR: The FTIR and XPS results suggest that the adsorption of copper ions to the HPANF is attributed to the imine groups on the surface of theHPANF.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polyelectrolyte-mediated surface interactions

TL;DR: The current understanding of interactions between surfaces coated with polyelectrolytes is reviewed, and a topic of particular interest is the presence of trapped non-equilibrium states that often is encountered in experiments, but difficult to treat theoretically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visco-elastic and adhesive properties of adsorbed polyelectrolyte multilayers determined in situ with QCM-D and AFM measurements.

TL;DR: A link has been established between the conformability or rigidity of a multilayer covered surface and the adhesion between such surfaces and theAdhesion measurements showed a greater pull-off force when the more viscous PAH was present in the outermost layer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measurement of forces between two mica surfaces in aqueous electrolyte solutions in the range 0–100 nm

TL;DR: The main results and conclusions of experimental measurements of the forces between molecularly smooth mica surfaces in aqueous electrolyte solutions are as follows: as mentioned in this paper, and they are based on the following assumptions:
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Quartz crystal microbalance setup for frequency and Q‐factor measurements in gaseous and liquid environments

TL;DR: In this paper, an experimental setup has been constructed for simultaneous measurements of the frequency, the absolute Q factor, and the amplitude of oscillation of a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM).
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Adsorption of proteins from solution at the solid-liquid interface.

TL;DR: Thermodynamic analysis reveals that, under many conditions, the adsorption is driven by an entropy increase that is (partly) related to changes in the structure of the protein molecules.
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Imaging crystals, polymers, and processes in water with the atomic force microscope.

TL;DR: Images of mica demonstrate that atomic resolution is possible on rigid materials, thus opening the possibility of atomic-scale corrosion experiments on nonconductors and showing the potential of the AFM for revealing the structure of molecules important in biology and medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Forces in atomic force microscopy in air and water

TL;DR: In this article, an atomic force microscope with an optical lever detection system was used to measure the absolute force applied by a tip on a surface, which can be as low as 10−9 N or less in water and 10−7 N in air.
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