The sorption of graft copolymers on surfaces attractive only for the backbone and its effect on the conformational behavior of adsorbed/desorbed chains in solvents good for the grafts and poor for the backbone was studied by coarse-grained computer simulations. It was found that the sorption and conformational behavior are very complex and are results of an intricate interplay of solvent quality (polymer-solvent interactions) and solvent strength (polymer-surface vs. solvent-surface interactions).
Increasing grafting density and length of grafts protect the backbone against adsorption, but the behavior is non-trivial. A decrease in solvent quality promotes the adsorption, because it lowers the overall solubility, but the backbone collapses and the probability of backbone-surface contacts decreases, which simultaneously hinders the adsorption.
The results of simulations are presented in the form of phase diagrams depicting the decisive features of the conformational and sorption behavior.