Abstract

AbstractAmphiphilic comb polymers were prepared through grafting poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether (MPEG 2000) onto acrylic and methacrylic copolymers. The graft copolymers were purified from unreacted MPEG by partition chromatography on methanol pretreated fibrous cellulose using ethyl acetate and methanol as eluents. The separation was found to depend on the water contents of the cellulose and the eluents. It is proposed that one parameter of importance for the chromatographic separation is the formation of hydrated inverted micelles. The amphiphilic comb polymers were shown by gel chromatography on Sepharose to form high molecular weight aggregates in water. On addition of sodium lauryl sulphate or inorganic salts to the eluent at low ionic strengths these aggregates dissociated and were fractionated by the gel. It was also shown that on GPC in THF solution on Styragel columns the polymers exhibited apparent molecular weights equal or smaller than those of the corresponding backbones. This effect may be a consequence of the graft copolymers having relatively small hydrodynamic volumes, and this idea is supported by the fact that their intrinsic viscosities generally were lower than those of the backbones. However, adsorption on the Styragel columns also may be of importance.

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