Abstract

Changes in the free-volume parameters of polyacrylamide (PAAm) gels during the volume phase transition (VPT) were studied with the positron annihilation lifetime technique. The VPT was induced through the variation of the solvent composition in a mixture of acetone and water. The PAAm gels containing 0 and 4 mol % carboxyl groups in their polymer chains were adapted to compare the effect of the presence of ionic groups on the microscopic environment. The change of the free-volume property is discussed on a nanoscopic scale, with attention paid to the interactions between the polymer chains and the solvent molecules. It is proven that the variations of the free-volume parameters correlate significantly with the VPT phenomenon. The results of the free volume for both gels are well-explained when an interaction parameter, εg, is assumed. The interpretation suggests that the state of the interactions among the components (the polymer chain, acetone, and water molecules) plays an important role in the change of the free volume of PAAm gels during the VPT. An increase of the dispersion of the free-volume size near the VPT point was observed for the ionized PAAm gel. The broadened size distribution of the free volume of the ionized PAAm gel around the VPT point lay between those of pure water and the corresponding mixed solvent, suggesting that a local minimum of the average free-volume size at the VPT point is caused by the increase of a specific interaction, hydrogen bonding. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 38: 922–933, 2000

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