Responsive Thin Hydrogel Layers from Photo-Cross-Linkable Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) Terpolymers

Abstract
The structural features and swelling properties of responsive hydrogel films based on poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) copolymers with a photo-cross-linkable benzophenone unit were investigated by surface plasmon resonance, optical waveguide mode spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy. The temperature-dependent swelling behavior was studied with respect to the chemical composition of the hydrogel polymers containing either sodium methacrylate or methacrylic acid moieties. In the sodium methacrylate system, a refractive index gradient was found that was not present in the free acid gel. This refractive index gradient, perpendicular to the swollen hydrogel film surface, could be analyzed in detail by application of the reversed Wentzel−Kramers−Brillouin (WKB) approximation to the optical data. This novel approach to analyzing thin-film gradients with the WKB method presents a powerful tool for the characterization of inhomogeneous hydrogels, which would otherwise be very difficult to capture experimentally. In AFM images of the hydrogel layers, a macroscopic pore structure was observed that depended on the polymer composition as well as on the swelling history. This pore structure apparently prevents the often-observed skin barrier effect and leads to a quickly responding hydrogel.