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A polymer brush is the name given to a surface coating consisting of
polymer A polymer (; Greek '' poly-'', "many" + '' -mer'', "part") is a substance or material consisting of very large molecules called macromolecules, composed of many repeating subunits. Due to their broad spectrum of properties, both synthetic a ...
s tethered to a surface. The brush may be either in a solvated state, where the tethered polymer layer consists of polymer and solvent, or in a melt state, where the tethered chains completely fill up the space available. These polymer layers can be tethered to flat substrates such as silicon wafers, or highly curved substrates such as nanoparticles. Also, polymers can be tethered in high density to another single polymer chain, although this arrangement is normally named a bottle brush. Additionally, there is a separate class of
polyelectrolyte Polyelectrolytes are polymers whose repeating units bear an electrolyte group. Polycations and polyanions are polyelectrolytes. These groups dissociate in aqueous solutions (water), making the polymers charged. Polyelectrolyte properties are ...
brushes, when the polymer chains themselves carry an electrostatic charge. The brushes are often characterized by the high density of grafted chains. The limited space then leads to a strong extension of the chains. Brushes can be used to stabilize
colloid A colloid is a mixture in which one substance consisting of microscopically dispersed insoluble particles is suspended throughout another substance. Some definitions specify that the particles must be dispersed in a liquid, while others extend ...
s, reduce friction between surfaces, and to provide lubrication in artificial
joint A joint or articulation (or articular surface) is the connection made between bones, ossicles, or other hard structures in the body which link an animal's skeletal system into a functional whole.Saladin, Ken. Anatomy & Physiology. 7th ed. McGraw- ...
s. Polymer brushes have been modeled with Molecular Dynamics, Monte Carlo methods,
Brownian dynamics Brownian dynamics (BD) can be used to describe the motion of molecules for example in molecular simulations or in reality. It is a simplified version of Langevin dynamics and corresponds to the limit where no average acceleration takes place. Thi ...
simulations, and molecular theories.


Structure

Polymer molecules within a brush are stretched away from the attachment surface as a result of the fact that they repel each other (steric repulsion or osmotic pressure). More precisely, they are more elongated near the attachment point and unstretched at the free end, as depicted on the drawing. More precisely, within the approximation derived by Milner, Witten, Cates, the average density of all monomers in a given chain is always the same up to a prefactor: \phi(z,\rho)=\frac n(z,\rho)=\frac\arcsin\left(\frac\right) where \rho is the altitude of the end monomer and N the number of monomers per chain. The averaged density profile \epsilon(\rho) of the end monomers of all attached chains, convoluted with the above density profile for one chain, determines the density profile of the brush as a whole: \phi(z)=\int_z^\infty \frac\,\epsilon(\rho)\,\rho A dry brush has a uniform monomer density up to some altitude H. One can show that the corresponding end monomer density profile is given by: \epsilon_(\rho,H)=\frac where a is the monomer size. The above monomer density profile n(z,\rho) for one single chain minimizes the total elastic energy of the brush, U=\int_0^\infty\epsilon(\rho)\,\rho\,\int_0^N\,n\,\frac\left(\frac\right)^2 regardless of the end monomer density profile \epsilon(\rho), as shown in.


From a dry brush to any brush

As a consequence, the structure of any brush can be derived from the brush density profile \phi(z). Indeed, the free end distribution is simply a convolution of the density profile with the free end distribution of a dry brush: \epsilon(\rho)=\int_\rho^\infty -\frac\epsilon_(\rho,H). Correspondingly, the brush elastic free energy is given by: \frac=\frac\int_0^\infty\left\z. This method has been used to derive wetting properties of polymer melts on polymer brushes of the same species and to understand fine interpenetration asymmetries between copolymer lamellae that may yield very unusual non-centrosymmetric
lamellar structure In materials science, lamellar structures or microstructures are composed of fine, alternating layers of different materials in the form of lamellae. They are often observed in cases where a phase transition front moves quickly, leaving behin ...
s.


Applications

Polymer brushes can be used in Area-selective deposition. Area-selective deposition is a promising technique for positional self-alignment of materials at a prepatterned surface.


See also

*
Dendronized polymer Dendronized polymers (or dendronised polymers) are linear polymers to every repeat unit of which dendrons are attached. Dendrons are regularly branched, tree-like fragments and for larger ones the polymer backbone is wrapped to give sausage-like, cy ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Polymer Brush Surface science Soft matter Polymer chemistry