Abstract

Micellar solutions of polystyrene-b-poly(sodium acrylate) copolymers in aqueous NaCl were studied by static light scattering (SLS). It was found that micellar solutions of the copolymer, at concentrations of NaCl at, or above, 2.0 mol dm−3, became turbid on dilution at constant salt concentration and at constant temperature. Turbidity arose from highly dilute solutions (typically at a concentration three orders of magnitude lower than the overlap concentration of the micelle, C*), but at concentrations above the expected critical micellization concentrations (c.m.c.s). The observed turbidity was attributed to the phase separation of the micellar phase. A systematic investigation of the phase separation phenomenon was performed. The effects of various parameters on the solution behavior of the micellar solutions were studied, including the effect of the concentration of NaCl, the effect of temperature, and the effect of the length of the hydrophilic, corona-forming poly(sodium acrylate) block. Phase separation was attributed to the presence of a very large excess of NaCl in the dilute micellar solutions. It was proposed that phase separation arose because of the reduced hydration of the polyion, the decreased electrostatic repulsion between the micelles, and the increase in the amount of ion binding, which occur in highly dilute salt solutions. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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