You are currently on a failover version of the Materials Cloud Archive hosted at CINECA, Italy.
Click here to access the main Materials Cloud Archive.
Note: If the link above redirects you to this page, it means that the Archive is currently offline due to maintenance. We will be back online as soon as possible.
This version is read-only: you can view published records and download files, but you cannot create new records or make changes to existing ones.

Understanding the lower critical solution temperature of amphiphilic synthetic polymers in water: the role of conformation and hydration


JSON Export

{
  "id": "2691", 
  "created": "2025-05-16T15:43:10.877222+00:00", 
  "updated": "2025-05-19T16:27:09.697765+00:00", 
  "revision": 2, 
  "metadata": {
    "_files": [
      {
        "key": "RAWdata.zip", 
        "size": 7440639, 
        "description": "Data presented in the article entitled Understanding the lower critical solution temperature of amphiphilic synthetic polymers in water: the role of conformation and hydration", 
        "checksum": "md5:6c3fcf956d30fd43614bff582b34e3d0"
      }
    ], 
    "license_addendum": null, 
    "edited_by": 576, 
    "publication_date": "May 19, 2025, 18:27:09", 
    "contributors": [
      {
        "email": "letizia.tavagnacco@cnr.it", 
        "affiliations": [
          "CNR Institute of Complex Systems, Uos Sapienza, Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Rome, Italy", 
          "Department of Physics, Sapienza University of Rome, Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Letizia", 
        "familyname": "Tavagnacco"
      }, 
      {
        "email": "sara.delgaldo@uniroma3.it", 
        "affiliations": [
          "Science Department, University of Roma Tre, Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Sara", 
        "familyname": "Del Galdo"
      }, 
      {
        "affiliations": [
          "Department of Chemical Science and Technologies, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Via della Ricerca Scientifica I, 00133 Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Andrea", 
        "familyname": "Galli"
      }, 
      {
        "affiliations": [
          "Science Department, University of Roma Tre, Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Barbara", 
        "familyname": "Capone"
      }, 
      {
        "affiliations": [
          "CNR Institute of Complex Systems, Uos Sapienza, Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Rome, Italy", 
          "Department of Physics, Sapienza University of Rome, Piazzale Aldo Moro 2, 00185 Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Emanuela", 
        "familyname": "Zaccarelli"
      }, 
      {
        "email": "ester.chiessi@uniroma2.it", 
        "affiliations": [
          "Department of Chemical Science and Technologies, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Via della Ricerca Scientifica I, 00133 Rome, Italy"
        ], 
        "givennames": "Ester", 
        "familyname": "Chiessi"
      }
    ], 
    "description": "The thermoresponsiveness of polymer-based soft materials opens perspectives in many applicative fields. This property in hydrated systems has the simple origin of a reversible de-mixing across a lower critical solution temperature, and has been explored for several chemically different amphiphilic polymers, each of them with specific critical conditions and phase behaviours. This work investigates for the first time by extensive atomistic molecular dynamics simulations the temperature dependence of the infinitely diluted aqueous solution of two such thermoresponsive macromolecules, poly(N-isopropyl-methacrylamide), PNIPMAM, and poly(2-isopropyl-2-oxazoline), PIPOX, in comparison to poly(N-isopropylacrylamide), PNIPAM, the much-more studied prototype system for polymers exhibiting a lower consolute boundary in water. The evolution of conformation and hydration water of the macromolecules is detected in a temperature range from well-below to well-above the transition temperature, with a favourable comparison to available experimental data. The resulting molecular description provides an explanation for deviations in solution properties of these macromolecules, including the effect of chaotropic anions and of solvent isotopic composition on the value of the lower critical solution temperature and the transition enthalpy. Overall, simulation findings show how the trade-off between gain in translational entropy of water molecules, associated with the reduction in solvent-excluded volume during the transition, and polymer-specific conformational features, determines the temperature response of these macromolecules in aqueous solution. In light of this molecular characterisation, a correlation between the single chain behaviour across the transition and the type I or type II phase diagram of the polymer aqueous solution can be postulated.", 
    "id": "2691", 
    "owner": 943, 
    "references": [
      {
        "doi": "10.1016/j.molliq.2025.127646", 
        "type": "Journal reference", 
        "citation": "L. Tavagnacco, S. Del Galdo, A. Galli, B. Capone, E. Zaccarelli, E. Chiessi, Journal of Molecular Liquids 429, 127646 (2025)"
      }
    ], 
    "version": 1, 
    "license": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International", 
    "status": "published", 
    "title": "Understanding the lower critical solution temperature of amphiphilic synthetic polymers in water: the role of conformation and hydration", 
    "keywords": [
      "Thermoresponsive polymers", 
      "Coil-to-globule transition", 
      "Hydration water", 
      "LCST"
    ], 
    "doi": "10.24435/materialscloud:4c-3c", 
    "mcid": "2025.76", 
    "is_last": true, 
    "_oai": {
      "id": "oai:materialscloud.org:2691"
    }, 
    "conceptrecid": "2690"
  }
}