Molecular insights on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) coil-to-globule transition induced by pressure

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Abstract

By using extensive all-atom molecular dynamics simulations of an atactic linear polymer chain, we provide microscopic insights into poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) coil-to-globule transition addressing the roles played by both temperature and pressure. We detect a coil-to-globule transition up to large pressures, showing a reentrant behavior of the critical temperature with increasing pressure in agreement with experimental observations. Furthermore, again confirming the experimental findings, we report the existence at high pressures of a new kind of globular state. It is characterized by a more structured hydration shell that is closer to PNIPAM hydrophobic domains, as compared to the globular state observed at atmospheric pressure. Our results highlight that temperature and pressure induce a PNIPAM coil-to-globule transition through different molecular mechanisms, opening the way for a systematic use of both thermodynamic variables to tune the location of the transition and the properties of the associated swollen/collapsed states.

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Tavagnacco, L., Chiessi, E., & Zaccarelli, E. (2021). Molecular insights on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) coil-to-globule transition induced by pressure. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 23(10), 5984–5991. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0cp06452a

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