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The current book describes the chemical and physical behaviour of
polymers and biopolymers that form highly associating structures in
equilibrium solution. It summons the established results known of
polymer complexes in solution, taking into account also the recent
developments in biotechnology concerning this topic, in
technological applications of polymer-protein interactions, in
fluorescence and scattering techniques for the study of intra- and
interpolymer association and in the study of ionomers in solution.
The book covers the whole range from synthesis and fundamental
aspects to applications and technology of associated polymers.
Throughout most of this century, progress in Polymer Science took
place by way of studies of dilute polymer solutions and of the
solid state. More recently, attention has been focused on the
semi-dilute regime. The elucidation of transi- ent network and
temporal gel states under conditions of moderate concentra- tion by
numerous hydrodynamic and optical techniques is now well
established and a solid theoretical underpinning for these
phenomena is in place. However, in most of the systems studied,
interpolymer interactions are relatively weak forces, because in
solutions oftypical polymers, strong interpolymer interactions lead
to bulk phase separation. However, polymers that form highly
associating structures in equilibrium solution now constitute an
important class of synthetic macromolecules, and it is evident that
strong intermacromolecular interactions - without accompanying
phase separation - are prevalent in biopolymer sys- tems as well.
This behavior is generally characteristic of amphiphilic polymers,
which contain both hydrophilic and hydrophobic repeat units. It is
also charac- teristic of systems in which two macromolecular
species are complementary, such as hydrogen-bond-donating and
hydrogen-bond-accepting polymers, or polycations and polyanions.
Interest in associating polymer systems currently derives from both
applied and fundamental questions. Synthetic water-soluble polymers
bearing hydro- phobic groups exhibit special rheological properties
that make them well-suited as thickeners and viscosity-modifiers.
Drag-reduction effects may arise in such polymer solutions, and may
also be observed in polymer complexes based on hydrogen-bonding.
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