3,464 research outputs found
Shear stress relaxation and ensemble transformation of shear stress autocorrelation functions revisited
We revisit the relation between the shear stress relaxation modulus ,
computed at finite shear strain , and the shear stress
autocorrelation functions and computed,
respectively, at imposed strain and mean stress . Focusing on
permanent isotropic spring networks it is shown theoretically and
computationally that in general
for with being the static equilibrium shear modulus.
and thus must become different for solids and it is impossible
to obtain alone from as often assumed. We comment
briefly on self-assembled transient networks where must vanish for
a finite scission-recombination frequency . We argue that should reveal an intermediate plateau set by the
shear modulus of the quenched network.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Are polymer melts "ideal"?
It is commonly accepted that in concentrated solutions or melts
high-molecular weight polymers display random-walk conformational properties
without long-range correlations between subsequent bonds. This absence of
memory means, for instance, that the bond-bond correlation function, , of
two bonds separated by monomers along the chain should exponentially decay
with . Presenting numerical results and theoretical arguments for both
monodisperse chains and self-assembled (essentially Flory size-distributed)
equilibrium polymers we demonstrate that some long-range correlations remain
due to self-interactions of the chains caused by the chain connectivity and the
incompressibility of the melt. Suggesting a profound analogy with the
well-known long-range velocity correlations in liquids we find, for instance,
to decay algebraically as . Our study suggests a precise
method for obtaining the statistical segment length \bstar in a computer
experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Distance dependence of angular correlations in dense polymer solutions
Angular correlations in dense solutions and melts of flexible polymer chains
are investigated with respect to the distance between the bonds by
comparing quantitative predictions of perturbation calculations with numerical
data obtained by Monte Carlo simulation of the bond-fluctuation model. We
consider both monodisperse systems and grand-canonical (Flory-distributed)
equilibrium polymers. Density effects are discussed as well as finite chain
length corrections. The intrachain bond-bond correlation function is
shown to decay as for \xi \ll r \ll \r^* with being
the screening length of the density fluctuations and a novel
length scale increasing slowly with (mean) chain length .Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication at Macromolecule
Shear modulus of simulated glass-forming model systems: Effects of boundary condition, temperature and sampling time
The shear modulus G of two glass-forming colloidal model systems in d=3 and
d=2 dimensions is investigated by means of, respectively, molecular dynamics
and Monte Carlo simulations. Comparing ensembles where either the shear strain
gamma or the conjugated (mean) shear stress tau are imposed, we compute G from
the respective stress and strain fluctuations as a function of temperature T
while keeping a constant normal pressure P. The choice of the ensemble is seen
to be highly relevant for the shear stress fluctuations mu_F(T) which at
constant tau decay monotonously with T following the affine shear elasticity
mu_A(T), i.e. a simple two-point correlation function. At variance,
non-monotonous behavior with a maximum at the glass transition temperature T_g
is demonstrated for mu_F(T) at constant gamma. The increase of G below T_g is
reasonably fitted for both models by a continuous cusp singularity, G(T) is
proportional to (1-T/T_g)^(1/2), in qualitative agreement with some recent
replica calculations. It is argued, however, that longer sampling times may
lead to a sharper transition. The additive jump discontinuity predicted by
mode-coupling theory and other replica calculations thus cannot ultimately be
ruled out
Static Rouse Modes and Related Quantities: Corrections to Chain Ideality in Polymer Melts
Following the Flory ideality hypothesis intrachain and interchain excluded
volume interactions are supposed to compensate each other in dense polymer
systems. Multi-chain effects should thus be neglected and polymer conformations
may be understood from simple phantom chain models. Here we provide evidence
against this phantom chain, mean-field picture. We analyze numerically and
theoretically the static correlation function of the Rouse modes. Our numerical
results are obtained from computer simulations of two coarse-grained polymer
models for which the strength of the monomer repulsion can be varied, from full
excluded volume (`hard monomers') to no excluded volume (`phantom chains'). For
nonvanishing excluded volume we find the simulated correlation function of the
Rouse modes to deviate markedly from the predictions of phantom chain models.
This demonstrates that there are nonnegligible correlations along the chains in
a melt. These correlations can be taken into account by perturbation theory.
Our simulation results are in good agreement with these new theoretical
predictions.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in EPJ
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