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Molecular Origin of the Glass Transition in Polyelectrolyte Assemblies
Author(s) -
Yanpu Zhang,
Piotr Batys,
Joshua T. O’Neal,
Fei Li,
Maria Sammalkorpi,
Jodie L. Lutkenhaus
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs central science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.893
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 2374-7951
pISSN - 2374-7943
DOI - 10.1021/acscentsci.8b00137
Subject(s) - polyelectrolyte , chemical physics , relaxation (psychology) , macromolecule , molecular dynamics , ion , chemistry , molecule , glass transition , nanotechnology , materials science , polymer , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , psychology , social psychology , biochemistry
Water plays a central role in the assembly and the dynamics of charged systems such as proteins, enzymes, DNA, and surfactants. Yet it remains a challenge to resolve how water affects relaxation at a molecular level, particularly for assemblies of oppositely charged macromolecules. Here, the molecular origin of water's influence on the glass transition is quantified for several charged macromolecular systems. It is revealed that the glass transition temperature ( T g ) is controlled by the number of water molecules surrounding an oppositely charged polyelectrolyte-polyelectrolyte intrinsic ion pair as 1/ T g ∼ ln( n H 2 O / n intrinsic ion pair ). This relationship is found to be "general", as it holds for two completely different types of charged systems (pH- and salt-sensitive) and for both polyelectrolyte complexes and polyelectrolyte multilayers, which are made by different paths. This suggests that water facilitates the relaxation of charged assemblies by reducing attractions between oppositely charged intrinsic ion pairs. This finding impacts current interpretations of relaxation dynamics in charged assemblies and points to water's important contribution at the molecular level.

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