Abstract

Poly (methacrylic acid) (PMAA) solutions are known to exhibit a lower critical solution temperature (LCST). A temperature-composition phase diagram of PMAA has been constructed by standard cloud point determination through transmittance measurements, and also by studying the steady states reached under phase separation. This allows us to reconstruct the binodal curve describing the phase behavior of PMAA for both low and high concentration regimes, and to determine accurately the LCST temperature. In a second step, the structures formed following a temperature jump above the cloud point and their evolution in time have been investigated at the nanoscale using small angle neutron scattering (SANS). This approach shows that the formation of phase-separated nanostructures is a slow process, requiring more than 12 h. The formed structures are then shown to depend on the amplitude of the temperature jump above the cloud point. An original mechanism of phase separation is identified in the semi-dilute regime. The growth of micrometric-size droplets with an inner structure displaying the rheological properties of a gel leads to the formation of a percolating network which hinders the influence of gravity. Such a result can explain the slow kinetics of the PMAA LCST transition.

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