Abstract

The anomalous volume expansion of poly-(N-isopropyl acrylamide) (PNIPAM) solutions was observed during the thermally induced polymer phase transition of aqueous solutions having concentrations in the 3–7 wt % range. The process occurred on a millisecond time scale, and a laser temperature-jump time-resolved technique was used to bring about the process. After heating a solution with a pulse laser exploiting light absorption by dyes added to the solution itself, a phase transition was observed to take place, and the temporal changes associated with it were visualized through the transient grating imaging technique, whereby the solution was heated with a stripe pattern. We found several processes occurring on a millisecond time scale, all of which clearly took place after each PNIPAM molecule had collapsed structurally from a coiled to a globular conformation. During the so-called demixing process, the globular polymers aggregated with each other within 10 ms, and suddenly the polymer phase expanded as aggregation progressed further. After this process, the individual globular polymers reverted to their coiled conformation via hydration during the remixing process. We proposed that solution expansion was caused by the mutual entangling of multiple globular PNIPAM molecules, instead each globule polymer was separated.

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