SUMMARY The swelling behavior of weakly crosslinked polyelectrolyte gels based on sodium methacrylate (PMA) and diallyldimethylammonium chloride (DADMAC) in aqueous medium was studied in the presence of different types of salts (NaCl, arginine hydrochloride, cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC), sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDBS)). It is shown that, starting from some characteristic concentration of a salt, a further increase of the salt concentration results in the shrinking of the gels. This characteristic concentration is defined by the gel parameters (polymer concentration in the gel that is a function of the monomer concentration at the conditions of hydrogel synthesis) and does not depend on the kind of salt used, except for the system polyelectrolyte geVoppositely charged surfactant (PMA-CPC and DADMAC-SDS or SDBS). It is shown that the initial rate of gel shrinking for all studied systems, including the system gel/oppositely charged surfactant, is determined by the salt concentration and the gel parameters. For the systems PMA-CPC and DADMAC-SDS the gel collapse is a two-step process.
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