Cloud points of poly( N-isopropylacrylamide) in aqueous mixed solvents, with methanol as the cosolvent, are experimentally measured for polymer concentrations varied up to as high as the weight fraction 0.25. They are shown to form closed loops on the ternary phase plane in the temperature region between 5 and 30 °C, and hence co-nonsolvency is complete. Miscibility loops shrink by cooling, or equivalently, they exhibit lower critical solution temperature behavior. For a fixed polymer concentration, there is a composition of the mixed solvent at which the cloud-point temperature takes the lowest value. This minimum cloud-point temperature composition of the mixed solvent turned out to be almost independent of the polymer concentration, at least within the measured dilute region below the weight fraction 0.25. On the basis of the assumption that the phase separation is closely related to the preferential adsorption of the solvents by hydrogen bonding, we employ a model solution of Flory-Huggins type, augmented with direct and cooperative polymer-solvent hydrogen bonds, to construct the ternary phase diagrams. Theoretical calculation of the spinodal curves is performed, and the results are compared with the obtained experimental cloud-point data. The effect of molecular volume of the cosolvent is also studied within the same theoretical framework. Possibility for a upper critical solution temperature co-nonsolvency to appear for cosolvents with larger molecular volume is discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b03815 | DOI Listing |
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