20 research outputs found
Polydisperse star polymer solutions
We analyze the effect of polydispersity in the arm number on the effective
interactions, structural correlations and the phase behavior of star polymers
in a good solvent. The effective interaction potential between two star
polymers with different arm numbers is derived using scaling theory. The
resulting expression is tested against monomer-resolved molecular dynamics
simulations. We find that the theoretical pair potential is in agreement with
the simulation data in a much wider polydispersity range than other proposed
potentials. We then use this pair potential as an input in a many-body theory
to investigate polydispersity effects on the structural correlations and the
phase diagram of dense star polymer solutions. In particular we find that a
polydispersity of 10%, which is typical in experimental samples, does not
significantly alter previous findings for the phase diagram of monodisperse
solutions.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Determination of the exponent gamma for SAWs on the two-dimensional Manhattan lattice
We present a high-statistics Monte Carlo determination of the exponent gamma
for self-avoiding walks on a Manhattan lattice in two dimensions. A
conservative estimate is \gamma \gtapprox 1.3425(3), in agreement with the
universal value 43/32 on regular lattices, but in conflict with predictions
from conformal field theory and with a recent estimate from exact enumerations.
We find strong corrections to scaling that seem to indicate the presence of a
non-analytic exponent Delta < 1. If we assume Delta = 11/16 we find gamma =
1.3436(3), where the error is purely statistical.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX2e, 4 figure
Scaling of Star Polymers with one to 80 Arms
We present large statistics simulations of 3-dimensional star polymers with
up to arms, and with up to 4000 monomers per arm for small values of
. They were done for the Domb-Joyce model on the simple cubic lattice. This
is a model with soft core exclusion which allows multiple occupancy of sites
but punishes each same-site pair of monomers with a Boltzmann factor . We
use this to allow all arms to be attached at the central site, and we use the
`magic' value to minimize corrections to scaling. The simulations are
made with a very efficient chain growth algorithm with resampling, PERM,
modified to allow simultaneous growth of all arms. This allows us to measure
not only the swelling (as observed from the center-to-end distances), but also
the partition sum. The latter gives very precise estimates of the critical
exponents . For completeness we made also extensive simulations of
linear (unbranched) polymers which give the best estimates for the exponent
.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Critical Exponents, Hyperscaling and Universal Amplitude Ratios for Two- and Three-Dimensional Self-Avoiding Walks
We make a high-precision Monte Carlo study of two- and three-dimensional
self-avoiding walks (SAWs) of length up to 80000 steps, using the pivot
algorithm and the Karp-Luby algorithm. We study the critical exponents
and as well as several universal amplitude ratios; in
particular, we make an extremely sensitive test of the hyperscaling relation
. In two dimensions, we confirm the predicted
exponent and the hyperscaling relation; we estimate the universal
ratios , and (68\% confidence
limits). In three dimensions, we estimate with a
correction-to-scaling exponent (subjective 68\%
confidence limits). This value for agrees excellently with the
field-theoretic renormalization-group prediction, but there is some discrepancy
for . Earlier Monte Carlo estimates of , which were , are now seen to be biased by corrections to scaling. We estimate the
universal ratios and ; since , hyperscaling holds. The approach to
is from above, contrary to the prediction of the two-parameter
renormalization-group theory. We critically reexamine this theory, and explain
where the error lies.Comment: 87 pages including 12 figures, 1029558 bytes Postscript
(NYU-TH-94/09/01
A review of Monte Carlo simulations of polymers with PERM
In this review, we describe applications of the pruned-enriched Rosenbluth
method (PERM), a sequential Monte Carlo algorithm with resampling, to various
problems in polymer physics. PERM produces samples according to any given
prescribed weight distribution, by growing configurations step by step with
controlled bias, and correcting "bad" configurations by "population control".
The latter is implemented, in contrast to other population based algorithms
like e.g. genetic algorithms, by depth-first recursion which avoids storing all
members of the population at the same time in computer memory. The problems we
discuss all concern single polymers (with one exception), but under various
conditions: Homopolymers in good solvents and at the point, semi-stiff
polymers, polymers in confining geometries, stretched polymers undergoing a
forced globule-linear transition, star polymers, bottle brushes, lattice
animals as a model for randomly branched polymers, DNA melting, and finally --
as the only system at low temperatures, lattice heteropolymers as simple models
for protein folding. PERM is for some of these problems the method of choice,
but it can also fail. We discuss how to recognize when a result is reliable,
and we discuss also some types of bias that can be crucial in guiding the
growth into the right directions.Comment: 29 pages, 26 figures, to be published in J. Stat. Phys. (2011
Theta-point behavior of diluted polymer solutions: Can one observe the universal logarithmic corrections predicted by field theory?
In recent large scale Monte-Carlo simulations of various models of
Theta-point polymers in three dimensions Grassberger and Hegger found
logarithmic corrections to mean field theory with amplitudes much larger than
the universal amplitudes of the leading logarithmic corrections calculated by
Duplantier in the framework of tricritical O(n) field theory. To resolve this
issue we calculate the universal subleading correction of field theory, which
turns out to be of the same order of magnitude as the leading correction for
all chain lengths available in present days simulations. Borel resummation of
the renormalization group flow equations also shows the presence of such large
corrections. This suggests that the published simulations did not reach the
asymptotic regime. To further support this view, we present results of
Monte-Carlo simulations on a Domb-Joyce like model of weakly interacting random
walks. Again the results cannot be explained by keeping only the leading
corrections, but are in fair accord with our full theoretical result. The
corrections found for the Domb-Joyce model are much smaller than those for
other models, which clearly shows that the effective corrections are not yet in
the asymptotic regime. All together our findings show that the existing
simulations of Theta-polymers are compatible with tricritical field theory
since the crossover to the asymptotic regime is very slow. Similar results were
found earlier for self avoiding walks at their upper critical dimension d=4.Comment: 15 pages,6 figure
Critically evaluated termination rate coefficients for free-radical polymerization, 1 - The current situation
This is the first publication of an IUPAC-sponsored Task Group on "Critically evaluated termination rate coefficients for free-radical polymerization." The paper summarizes the current situation with regard to the reliability of values of termination rate coefficients k(t). It begins by illustrating the stark reality that there is large and unacceptable scatter in literature values of k(t), and it is pointed out that some reasons for this are relatively easily, remedied. However, the major reason for this situation is the inherent complexity of the phenomenon of termination in free-radical polymerization. It is our impression that this complexity is only incompletely grasped by many workers in the field, and a consequence of this tendency to oversimplify is that misunderstanding of and disagreement about termination are rampant. Therefore this paper presents a full discussion of the intricacies of k(t): sections deal with diffusion control, conversion dependence, chain-length, dependence, steady state and non-steady state measurements, activation energies and activation volumes, combination and disproportionation, and theories. All the presented concepts are developed from first principles, and only rigorous, fully-documented experimental results and theoretical investigations are cited as evidence. For this reason it can be said that this paper summarizes all that we, as a cross-section of workers in the, field, agree on about termination in free-radical polymerization. Our discussion naturally leads to a series of recommendations regarding measurement of k(t) and reaching a more satisfactory understanding of this very important rate coefficient. Variation of termination. rate coefficient k(t) with inverse absolute temperature T-1 for bulk, polymerization of methyl methacrylate at ambient pressure.([6]) The plot contains all methacrylate at ambient pressure. tabulated values([6]) (including those categorized as "recalculated") except ones from polymerizations noted as involving. solvent or above-ambient pressures