Kinetics of adsorption of polyvinylamine on cellulose fibers. II. Adsorption from electrolyte solutions

J Colloid Interface Sci. 2003 Feb 15;258(2):228-34. doi: 10.1016/s0021-9797(02)00154-6.

Abstract

Adsorption from electrolyte solutions of fully hydrolyzed polyvinylamine on cellulose fibers was investigated by supplying the polymer to the fibers at controlled rate. This was implemented by employing a reactor only open to the fluid in which the fiber dispersion were confined and homogenized. The adsorbed layers may be defined as diffuse or dense layers. Diffuse layers are characterized by a surface coverage limited to 0.65 mg/g cellulose in salt-free solutions. Addition of NaCl or CaCl(2) to the fiber dispersion and the polymer solution promotes the adsorption rate and increases the amount of adsorption to 1.5 mg/g cellulose. For dense polymer layers, for which the coverage amounts to values close to 10 mg/g cellulose in salt-free systems, addition of electrolyte does not change the kinetic and adsorption characteristics. Insofar as the variation of the molecular areas of the polymer within the diffuse layers as a function of the ionic strength parallels the variation of the molecular characteristics of solute molecules, the formation of diffuse layers is expected to proceed by random deposition of solute molecules which later individually sustain strong reconformation. Adsorption isotherms show a limited influence of the ionic strength. Obviously, the passage from dense layers of high surface coverage to low adsorption values at equilibrium requires extended reconformation of adsorbed macromolecules and desorption of a great part of the molecules already adsorbed.