Abstract

Coated hydroxyethyl methacrylate-sodium sulfoalkyl methacrylate copolymer films were surface characterized. The contact angle hysteresis increases and the receding angle decreases with increasing alkyl side-chain length, while the advancing angle decreases with hydration time. It was found that the buoyancy slopes of the advancing ( r a) and receding ( r r) process determined by the Wilhelmy plate method were not parallel. The ratio of r a to r r was greater than 1, and increases with the alkyl side-chain length and the hydration time, contrary to that of polyhydroxyethyl methacrylate, where r a r r was less than 1. The slope ratio would be suppressed in solution with added salt, revealing that the reorientation and expansion of the polymer chain in water is being suppressed. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis of the surface of these copolymers showed a striking enrichment of the sulfonate groups in the surface. The zeta potential was between −40 and −50 mV as measured by the streaming potential method. During dehydration, along with a decrease in sulfur and sodium concentration in the surface, the carbon 1s peak at the high binding energy decreased and the alkyl carbon main peak increased. The surface tension of aqueous solutions of sulfoalkyl methacrylate monomers and homopolymers decreases with increasing alkyl side-chain length, which may contribute to the decrease in water-polymer film interfacial tension and thus the increase in the slope ratio.

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