Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.34, No.18, 1419-1428, 1994
Water-Soluble Copolymers .54. N-Isopropylacrylamide-Co-Acrylamide Copolymers in Drag Reduction - Synthesis, Characterization, and Dilute-Solution Behavior
Copolymers of N-isopropylacrylamide (IPAM) and acrylamide (AM) have been synthesized by free radical polymerization in deionized water using potassium persulfate as the initiator. Copolymer compositions were obtained by elemental analysis and C-13 NMR. An r1r2 value of 0.99 indicates ideal copolymerization with random incorporation of the comonomers in the copolymers. Weight average molecular weights, second virial coefficients, diffusion coefficients, and average diameters were obtained via classical and quasielastic low angle laser light scattering. The molecular weights for all the copolymers and the homopolymers of IPAM and AM ranged from 2.2 x 10(6) to 5.2 x 10(6) g/mol. The second virial coefficients in deionized water increased with increasing acrylamide content in the copolymers. The dilute solution properties of the copolymers were studied by turbidimetry, microcalorimetry and viscometry. All the copolymers, with the exception of IPAM-40 (the copolymer synthesized with 40 mole% IPAM in the feed), showed lower critical solution temperatures below 100-degrees-C. The solution studies were performed in deionized water, 0.514 M NaCl, and 1 M urea. The properties of the IPAM copolymers were influenced by both hydrophobic associations and hydrogen bonding. In 0.2% (approximately 7mM) sodium dodecyl sulfate, the alkyl chain of the surfactant molecules associates with the IPAM moieties on the copolymer backbone, leading to high intrinsic viscosities and the elevation of the LCST above 100-degrees-C.