4,914 research outputs found

    Rheological Study of Transient Networks with Junctions of Limited Multiplicity II. Sol/Gel Transition and Rheology

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    Viscoelastic and thermodynamic properties of transient gels formed by telechelic polymers are studied on the basis of the transient network theory that takes account of the correlation among polymer chains via network junctions. The global information of the gel is incorporated into the theory by introducing the elastically effective chains according to the criterion by Scanlan and Case. We also consider effects of superbridges whose backbone is formed by several chains connected in series with several breakable junctions inside. Near the critical concentration for the sol/gel transition, superbridges becomes infinitely long along the backbone, thereby leading to the short relaxation time τ\tau of the network. It is shown that τ\tau is proportional to the concentration deviation Δ\Delta near the gelation point. The plateau modulus GG_{\infty} increases as the cube of Δ\Delta near the gelation point as a result of the mean-field treatment, and hence the zero-shear viscosity increases as η0GτΔ4\eta_0\sim G_{\infty}\tau\sim\Delta^4. The dynamic shear moduli are well described in terms of the Maxwell model, and it is shown that the present model can explain the concentration dependence of the dynamic moduli for aqueous solutions of telechelic poly(ethylene oxide).Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 2 table

    On the chain length dependence of local correlations in polymer melts and a perturbation theory of symmetric polymer blends

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    The self-consistent field (SCF) theory of dense polymer liquids assumes that short-range correlations are almost independent of how monomers are connected into polymers. Some limits of this idea are explored in the context of a perturbation theory for mixtures of structurally identical polymer species, A and B, in which the AB pair interaction differs slightly from the AA and BB interaction, and the difference is controlled by a parameter alpha Expanding the free energy to O(\alpha) yields an excess free energy of the form alpha z(N)ϕAϕBz(N)\phi_{A}\phi_{B}, in both lattice and continuum models, where z(N) is a measure of the number of inter-molecular near neighbors of each monomer in a one-component liquid. This quantity decreases slightly with increasing N because the self-concentration of monomers from the same chain is slightly higher for longer chains, creating a deeper correlation hole for longer chains. We analyze the resulting NN-dependence, and predict that z(N)=z[1+βNˉ1/2]z(N) = z^{\infty}[1 + \beta \bar{N}^{-1/2}], where Nˉ\bar{N} is an invariant degree of polymerization, and β=(6/π)3/2\beta=(6/\pi)^{3/2}. This and other predictions are confirmed by comparison to simulations. We also propose a way to estimate the effective interaction parameter appropriate for comparisons of simulation data to SCF theory and to coarse-grained theories of corrections to SCF theory, which is based on an extrapolation of coefficients in this perturbation theory to the limit NN \to \infty. We show that a renormalized one-loop theory contains a quantitatively correct description of the NN-dependence of local structure studied here.Comment: submitted to J. Chem. Phy

    Three-phase coexistence with sequence partitioning in symmetric random block copolymers

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    We inquire about the possible coexistence of macroscopic and microstructured phases in random Q-block copolymers built of incompatible monomer types A and B with equal average concentrations. In our microscopic model, one block comprises M identical monomers. The block-type sequence distribution is Markovian and characterized by the correlation \lambda. Upon increasing the incompatibility \chi\ (by decreasing temperature) in the disordered state, the known ordered phases form: for \lambda\ > \lambda_c, two coexisting macroscopic A- and B-rich phases, for \lambda\ < \lambda_c, a microstructured (lamellar) phase with wave number k(\lambda). In addition, we find a fourth region in the \lambda-\chi\ plane where these three phases coexist, with different, non-Markovian sequence distributions (fractionation). Fractionation is revealed by our analytically derived multiphase free energy, which explicitly accounts for the exchange of individual sequences between the coexisting phases. The three-phase region is reached, either, from the macroscopic phases, via a third lamellar phase that is rich in alternating sequences, or, starting from the lamellar state, via two additional homogeneous, homopolymer-enriched phases. These incipient phases emerge with zero volume fraction. The four regions of the phase diagram meet in a multicritical point (\lambda_c, \chi_c), at which A-B segregation vanishes. The analytical method, which for the lamellar phase assumes weak segregation, thus proves reliable particularly in the vicinity of (\lambda_c, \chi_c). For random triblock copolymers, Q=3, we find the character of this point and the critical exponents to change substantially with the number M of monomers per block. The results for Q=3 in the continuous-chain limit M -> \infty are compared to numerical self-consistent field theory (SCFT), which is accurate at larger segregation.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figures, version published in PRE, main changes: Sec. IIIA, Fig. 14, Discussio

    Three Bead Rotating Chain model shows universality in the stretching of proteins

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    We introduce a model of proteins in which all of the key atoms in the protein backbone are accounted for, thus extending the Freely Rotating Chain model. We use average bond lengths and average angles from the Protein Databank as input parameters, leaving the number of residues as a single variable. The model is used to study the stretching of proteins in the entropic regime. The results of our Monte Carlo simulations are found to agree well with experimental data, suggesting that the force extension plot is universal and does not depend on the side chains or primary structure of proteins

    Equilibrium properties of charged microgels: a Poisson-Boltzmann-Flory approach

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    The equilibrium properties of ionic microgels are investigated using a combination of the Poisson-Boltzmann and Flory theories. Swelling behavior, density profiles, and effective charges are all calculated in a self-consistent way. Special attention is given to the effects of salinity on these quantities. It is found that the equilibrium microgel size is strongly influenced by the amount of added salt. Increasing the salt concentration leads to a considerable reduction of the microgel volume, which therefore releases its internal material -- solvent molecules and dissociated ions -- into the solution. Finally, the question of charge renormalization of ionic microgels in the context of the cell model is briefly addressed

    Kinetics and thermodynamics of first-order Markov chain copolymerization

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    We report a theoretical study of stochastic processes modeling the growth of first-order Markov copolymers, as well as the reversed reaction of depolymerization. These processes are ruled by kinetic equations describing both the attachment and detachment of monomers. Exact solutions are obtained for these kinetic equations in the steady regimes of multicomponent copolymerization and depolymerization. Thermodynamic equilibrium is identified as the state at which the growth velocity is vanishing on average and where detailed balance is satisfied. Away from equilibrium, the analytical expression of the thermodynamic entropy production is deduced in terms of the Shannon disorder per monomer in the copolymer sequence. The Mayo-Lewis equation is recovered in the fully irreversible growth regime. The theory also applies to Bernoullian chains in the case where the attachment and detachment rates only depend on the reacting monomer

    Monte Carlo Algorithm for Simulating Reversible Aggregation of Multisite Particles

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    We present an efficient and exact Monte Carlo algorithm to simulate reversible aggregation of particles with dedicated binding sites. This method introduces a novel data structure of dynamic bond tree to record clusters and sequences of bond formations. The algorithm achieves a constant time cost for processing cluster association and a cost between O(logM)\mathcal{O}(\log M) and O(M)\mathcal{O}(M) for processing bond dissociation in clusters with MM bonds. The algorithm is statistically exact and can reproduce results obtained by the standard method. We applied the method to simulate a trivalent ligand and a bivalent receptor clustering system and obtained an average scaling of O(M0.45)\mathcal{O}(M^{0.45}) for processing bond dissociation in acyclic aggregation, compared to a linear scaling with the cluster size in standard methods. The algorithm also demands substantially less memory than the conventional method.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure

    Collapse transition of a square-lattice polymer with next nearest-neighbor interaction

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    We study the collapse transition of a polymer on a square lattice with both nearest-neighbor and next nearest-neighbor interactions, by calculating the exact partition function zeros up to chain length 36. The transition behavior is much more pronounced than that of the model with nearest-neighbor interactions only. The crossover exponent and the transition temperature are estimated from the scaling behavior of the first zeros with increasing chain length. The results suggest that the model is of the same universality class as the usual theta point described by the model with only nearest-neighbor interaction.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure

    Asymptotic behavior of the entropy of chains placed on stripes

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    By using the transfer matrix approach, we investigate the asymptotic behavior of the entropy of flexible chains with MM monomers each placed on stripes. In the limit of high density of monomers, we study the behavior of the entropy as a function of the density of monomers and the width of the stripe, inspired by recent analytical studies of this problem for the particular case of dimers (M=2). We obtain the entropy in the asymptotic regime of high densities for chains with M=2,..,9M=2,..,9 monomers, as well as for the special case of polymers, where MM\to\infty, and find that the results show a regular behavior similar to the one found analytically for dimers. We also verify that in the low-density limit the mean-field expression for the entropy is followed by the results from our transfer matrix calculations
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