In Situ Layer-by-Layer Film Formation Kinetics under an Applied Voltage Measured by Optical Waveguide Lightmode Spectroscopy
- 13 May 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Langmuir
- Vol. 21 (13) , 5865-5871
- https://doi.org/10.1021/la050066d
Abstract
Layer-by-layer (LbL) thin film assembly occurs via the alternate adsorption of positively and negatively charged macromolecular species. We investigate here the control of LbL film growth through the electric potential of the underlying substrate. We employ optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (OWLS) to obtain in situ kinetic measurements of poly(allylamine hydrochloride)/poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) (PAH/PSS) and poly(l-lysine)/dextran sulfate (PLL/DXS) multilayer film formation in the presence of an applied voltage difference (ΔV) between the adsorbing substrate, an indium tin oxide- (ITO-) coated waveguiding sensor chip, and a parallel platinum counterelectrode. We find initial layer adsorption to be significantly enhanced by an applied potential for both polyelectrolyte systems: the mass and thickness of (positively charged) PAH and PLL layers on ITO are about 60% and 500% larger, respectively, at ΔV = 2 V than at open circuit potential (OCP), in apparent violation of electrostatics. A kinetic analysis reveals the initial attachment rate constant to decrease with voltage, in agreement with electrostatics. To reconcile these results, we propose a more coiled and loosely bound adsorbed polymer conformation at higher applied potential. Following 10 adsorption steps, the mass and thickness of a PAH/PSS film grown under ΔV = 2 V are about 15% less than those of a comparable film grown under OCP, reflecting a lower degree of complexation between adsorbing polyanions and more highly coiled adsorbed polycations. Following 14 adsorption steps, the mass and thickness of a PLL/DXS film grown under ΔV = 2 V are about 70% greater than those of a comparable film grown under OCP, reflecting the increased charge overcompensation in the initial layer. We find the scaling of film mass (Γ) with the number of adsorption steps (n) to be linear in the PAH/PSS system and exponential (i.e., Γ ∼ eyn) in the PLL/DXS system, irrespective of applied voltage. We observe γ to decrease with applied voltage and to exhibit a crossover to a smaller value around n = 5. Extrapolation reveals PLL/DXS multilayer films to be suppressed by increased voltage in the limit of large n: the mass of films grown at OCP and ΔV = 1 V would surpass that of a film grown under ΔV = 2 V at about the 23rd and 18th adsorption steps, respectively. The formation kinetics of PLL/DXS, but not PAH/PSS, change qualitatively under voltage: PLL adsorption is slow to reach a plateau, possibly due to the formation of secondary structure, and a decrease in film mass occurs toward the end of each DXS adsorption step, suggesting spontaneous removal of some PLL/DXS complexes from the film.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adsorption of Charged Macromolecules at a Gold ElectrodeLangmuir, 2004
- Measurement of film thickness up to several hundreds of nanometers using optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopyBiosensors and Bioelectronics, 2004
- Electrochemical optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy (EC‐OWLS): A pilot study using evanescent‐field optical sensing under voltage control to monitor polycationic polymer adsorption onto indium tin oxide (ITO)‐coated waveguide chipsBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 2003
- Secondary Structure of Polypeptide Multilayer Films: An Example of Locally Ordered Polyelectrolyte MultilayersLangmuir, 2002
- Kinetic Regimes of Protein AdsorptionLangmuir, 2001
- Detailed Structure of Molecularly Thin Polyelectrolyte Multilayer Films on Solid Substrates as Revealed by Neutron ReflectometryMacromolecules, 1998
- Erratum: Determination of optical constants of molecular films assembled via alternate polyion adsorption (Thin Solid Films (1995) 254 (246-251))Thin Solid Films, 1995
- Internal structure of layer-by-layer adsorbed polyelectrolyte films: a neutron and x-ray reflectivity studyMacromolecules, 1993
- Soliton model for dielectric relaxation in crystalline polyethylene. Comparison with experimentMacromolecules, 1984
- Limiting Laws and Counterion Condensation in Polyelectrolyte Solutions II. Self-Diffusion of the Small IonsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1969