Atomic Force Microscopy and Molecular Dynamic Simulation of Adsorption of Polyacrylamide with Different Chemistries onto Calcium Carbonate

被引:2
|
作者
Lew, Jin Hau [1 ]
Hue, Keat Yung [1 ]
Matar, Omar K. [1 ]
Mueller, Erich A. [1 ]
Luckham, Paul F. [1 ]
Santos, Adrielle Sousa [1 ]
Thant, Maung Maung Myo [2 ]
机构
[1] Imperial Coll London, Dept Chem Engn, London SW7 2AZ, England
[2] PETRONAS Res Sdn Bhd, Kawasan Inst Bangi, Lot 3288 & 3289,Off Jalan Ayer Itam, Kajang 43000, Selangor, Malaysia
关键词
atomic force microscopy (AFM); force spectroscopy; molecular dynamic (MD) simulation; hydrolysed polyacrylamide; sulfonated polyacrylamide; adsorption; salt; SULFONATED POLYACRYLAMIDE; CATIONIC POLYACRYLAMIDE; AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS; PORE COLLAPSE; BEHAVIOR; SURFACE; POLYMER; SILICA; CHARGE; GLASS;
D O I
10.3390/polym16040494
中图分类号
O63 [高分子化学(高聚物)];
学科分类号
070305 ; 080501 ; 081704 ;
摘要
This study investigates the interaction of polyacrylamide (PAM) of different functional groups (sulfonate vs. carboxylate) and charge density (30% hydrolysed vs. 10% hydrolysed) with calcium carbonate (CaCO3) via atomic force microscopy (AFM) and partly via molecular dynamic (MD) simulations. The PAM used were F3330 (30% hydrolysed), AN125 (25% sulfonated), and AN910 (% hydrolysed). A total of 100 ppm of PAMs was prepared in 0.1% NaCl, 3% NaCl, and 4.36% NaNO3 to be employed in AFM experiments, while oligomeric models (30 repeating units) of hydrolysed polyacrylamide (HPAM), sulfonated polyacrylamide (SPAM), and neutral PAM (NPAM) were studied on a model calcite surface on MD simulations. AFM analysis indicated that F3330 has a higher average adhesion and interaction energy with CaCO3 than AN125 due to the bulky sulfonate side group of AN125 interfering with SPAM adsorption. Steric repulsion of both PAMs was similar due to their comparable molecular weights and densities of the charged group. In contrast, AN910 showed lower average adhesion and interaction energy, along with slightly longer steric repulsion with calcite than F3330, suggesting AN910 adopts more loops and tails than the slightly flatter F3330 configuration. An increase in salt concentration from 0.1% to 3% NaCl saw a reduction in adhesion and interaction energy for F3330 and AN125 due to charge screening, while AN910 saw an increase, and these values increased further at 4.36% NaNO3. MD simulations revealed that the salt ions in the system formed salt bridges between PAM and calcite, indicating that the adhesion and interaction energy observed from AFM are likely to be the net balance between PAM charged group screening and salt bridging by the salt ions present. Salt ions with larger bare radii and smaller hydrated radii were shown to form stronger salt bridges.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Atomic Force Microscopy of Hydrolysed Polyacrylamide Adsorption onto Calcium Carbonate
    Lew, Jin Hau
    Matar, Omar K.
    Mueller, Erich A.
    Luckham, Paul F.
    Sousa Santos, Adrielle
    Myo Thant, Maung Maung
    POLYMERS, 2023, 15 (20)
  • [2] Adsorption of Hydrolysed Polyacrylamide onto Calcium Carbonate
    Lew, Jin Hau
    Matar, Omar K.
    Mueller, Erich A.
    Maung, Myo Thant Maung
    Luckham, Paul F.
    POLYMERS, 2022, 14 (03)
  • [3] Computer simulation of dynamic atomic force microscopy
    Abetkovskaia, S. O.
    Pozdnyakov, A. P.
    Siroezkin, S. V.
    Chizhik, S. A.
    RECENT ADVANCES IN MECHATRONICS, 2007, : 551 - +
  • [4] Direct imaging of lysozyme adsorption onto mica by atomic force microscopy
    Kim, DT
    Blanch, HW
    Radke, CJ
    LANGMUIR, 2002, 18 (15) : 5841 - 5850
  • [5] Molecular dynamics simulation of bimodal atomic force microscopy
    Dou, Zhipeng
    Qian, Jianqiang
    Li, Yingzi
    Wang, Zhenyu
    Zhang, Yingxu
    Lin, Rui
    Wang, Tingwei
    ULTRAMICROSCOPY, 2020, 212
  • [6] Adsorption of Humic Acid onto Carbonaceous Surfaces: Atomic Force Microscopy Study
    Liu, Zhiguo
    Zu, Yuangang
    Meng, Ronghua
    Xing, Zhimin
    Tan, Shengnan
    Zhao, Lin
    Sun, Tongze
    Zhou, Zhen
    MICROSCOPY AND MICROANALYSIS, 2011, 17 (06) : 1015 - 1021
  • [7] Atomic Force Microscopy as a Tool to Study the Adsorption of DNA Onto Lipid Interfaces
    Luque-Caballero, German
    Maldonado-Valderrama, Julia
    Quesada-Perez, Manuel
    Martin-Molina, Alberto
    MICROSCOPY RESEARCH AND TECHNIQUE, 2017, 80 (01) : 11 - 17
  • [8] Conformation of a single polyacrylamide molecule adsorbed onto a mica surface studied with atomic force microscopy
    Haschke, H
    Miles, MJ
    Koutsos, V
    MACROMOLECULES, 2004, 37 (10) : 3799 - 3803
  • [9] Simulation of Atomic Force Microscopy of Molecular Structures and Interplay with Experiment
    Belikov, Sergey
    Magonov, Sergei
    2010 AMERICAN CONTROL CONFERENCE, 2010, : 5745 - 5750
  • [10] Molecular dynamics simulation of amplitude modulation atomic force microscopy
    Hu, Xiaoli
    Egberts, Philip
    Dong, Yalin
    Martini, Ashlie
    NANOTECHNOLOGY, 2015, 26 (23)