6,158 research outputs found

    Coarse-grained Description of Polymer Blends as Interacting Soft-Colloidal Particles

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    We present a theoretical approach which maps polymer blends onto mixtures of soft-colloidal particles. The analytical mesoscale pair distribution functions reproduce well data from united atom molecular dynamics simulations of polyolefin mixtures without fitting parameters. The theory exactly recovers the analytical expressions for density and concentration fluctuation structure factors of soft colloidal mixtures (liquid alloys).Comment: 27 REVTex4 pages, 8 PostScript figures, 1 table accepted for publication in Journal of Chemical Physic

    Site-averaging in the integral equation theory of interaction site models of macromolecular fluids: An exact approach

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    A simple "trick" is proposed, which allows to perform exactly the site-averaging procedure required when developing integral equation theories of interaction site models of macromolecular fluids. It shows that no approximation is involved when the number of Ornstein-Zernike equations coupling the site-site correlation functions is reduced to one. Its potential practical interest for future theoretical developments is illustrated with a rederivation of the so-called molecular closures.Comment: 2 pages, revTeX

    Polymer-Mode-Coupling Theory of Finite-Size-Fluctuation Effects in Entangled Solutions, Melts and Gels. I. General Formulation and Predictions

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    The transport coefficients of dense polymeric fluids are approximately calculated from the microscopic intermolecular forces. The following finite molecular weight effects are discussed within the Polymer-Mode-Coupling theory (PMC) and compared to the corresponding reptation/ tube ideas: constraint release mechanism, spatial inhomogeneity of the entanglement constraints, and tracer polymer shape fluctuations. The entanglement corrections to the single polymer Rouse dynamics are shown to depend on molecular weight via the ratio N/N_e, where the entanglement degree of polymerization, N_e, can be measured from the plateau shear modulus. Two microscopically defined non-universal parameters, an entanglement strength 1/alpha and a length scale ratio, delta= xi_rho/b, where xi_rho and b are the density screening and entanglement length respectively, are shown to determine the reduction of the entanglement effects relative to the reptation- -like asymptotes of PMC theory. Large finite size effects are predicted for reduced degrees of polymerization up to N/N_e\le10^3. Effective power law variations for intermediate N/N_e of the viscosity, eta\sim N^x, and the diffusion constant, D\sim N^{-y}, can be explained with exponents significantly exceeding the asymptotic, reptation-like values, x\ge 3 and y\ge2, respectively. Extensions of the theory to treat tracer dielectric relaxation, and polymer transport in gels and other amorphous systems, are also presented.Comment: Latex, figures and styles files included; Macromolecules, in press (1997

    Polymer-Mode-Coupling Theory of Finite-Size-Fluctuation Effects in Entangled Solutions, Melts and Gels. II. Comparison with Experiment

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    The predictions of the polymer mode coupling theory for the finite size corrections to the transport coefficients of entangled polymeric systems are tested in comparisons with various experimental data. It is found that quantitative descriptions of the viscosities, eta, dielectric relaxation time, tau_e, and diffusion coefficients, D, of polymer melts can be achieved with two microscopic structural fit parameters whose values are in the range expected from independent theoretical or experimental information. An explanation for the (apparent) power law behaviors of eta, taue, and D in (chemically distinct) melts for intermediate molecular weights as arising from finite size corrections, mainly the self-consistent constraint release mechanism, is given. The variation of tracer dielectric relaxation times from Rouse to reptation-like behavior upon changes of the matrix molecular weight is analyzed. Self and tracer diffusion constants of entangled polymer solutions can be explained by the theory as well, if one further parameter of the theory is adjusted. The anomalous scaling of the tracer diffusion coefficients in semidilute and concentrated polystyrene solutions, D\sim N^{-2.5}, is predicted to arise due to the spatial correlations of the entanglement constraints, termed ``constraint porosity''. Extensions of the theory to polymer tracer diffusion through polyvinylmethylether and polyacrylamide gels provide an explanation of the observation of anomalously high molecular weight scaling exponents in a range where the size of the tracer, R_g, already considerably exceeds the gel pore size, xi_g.Comment: Latex, figures and styles files included; Macromolecules, in press (1997
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