521 research outputs found
Principes en rhéologie des polymères fondus
URL: http://www-spht.cea.fr/articles/T93/082En théorie des polymères, pour des temps suffisamment longs, on peut s'attendre à observer un comportement universel qui intègre le concept de reptation valide pour des temps très longs et la relaxation de Rouse qui s'applique aux temps moins longs. Nous discutons ici l'agencement de ces principes
Self-Organization of Vortex Length Distribution in Quantum Turbulence: An Approach from the Barabasi-Albert Model
The energy spectrum of quantum turbulence obeys Kolmogorov's law. The vortex
length distribution (VLD), meaning the size distribution of the vortices, in
Kolmogorov quantum turbulence also obeys a power law. We propose here an
innovative idea to study the origin of the power law of the VLD. The nature of
quantized vortices allows one to describe the decay of quantum turbulence with
a simple model that is similar to the Barabasi-Albert model of large networks.
We show here that such a model can reproduce the power law of the VLD well.Comment: 4 pages including 5 figure
Scattering functions of knotted ring polymers
We discuss the scattering function of a Gaussian random polygon with N nodes
under a given topological constraint through simulation. We obtain the Kratky
plot of a Gaussian polygon of N=200 having a fixed knot for some different
knots such as the trivial, trefoil and figure-eight knots. We find that some
characteristic properties of the different Kratky plots are consistent with the
distinct values of the mean square radius of gyration for Gaussian polygons
with the different knots.Comment: 4pages, 3figures, 3table
Individual Entanglements in a Simulated Polymer Melt
We examine entanglements using monomer contacts between pairs of chains in a
Brownian-dynamics simulation of a polymer melt. A map of contact positions with
respect to the contacting monomer numbers (i,j) shows clustering in small
regions of (i,j) which persists in time, as expected for entanglements. Using
the ``space''-time correlation function of the aforementioned contacts, we show
that a pair of entangled chains exhibits a qualitatively different behavior
than a pair of distant chains when brought together. Quantitatively, about 50%
of the contacts between entangled chains are persistent contacts not present in
independently moving chains. In addition, we account for several observed
scaling properties of the contact correlation function.Comment: latex, 12 pages, 7 figures, postscript file available at
http://arnold.uchicago.edu/~ebn
Polymers as compressible soft spheres
We consider a coarse-grained model in which polymers under good-solvent
conditions are represented by soft spheres whose radii, which should be
identified with the polymer radii of gyrations, are allowed to fluctuate. The
corresponding pair potential depends on the sphere radii. This model is a
single-sphere version of the one proposed in Vettorel et al., Soft Matter 6,
2282 (2010), and it is sufficiently simple to allow us to determine all
potentials accurately from full-monomer simulations of two isolated polymers
(zero-density potentials). We find that in the dilute regime (which is the
expected validity range of single-sphere coarse-grained models based on
zero-density potentials) this model correctly reproduces the density dependence
of the radius of gyration. However, for the thermodynamics and the
intermolecular structure, the model is largely equivalent to the simpler one in
which the sphere radii are fixed to the average value of the radius of gyration
and radiiindependent potentials are used: for the thermodynamics there is no
advantage in considering a fluctuating sphere size.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Elastic Lattice Polymers
We study a model of "elastic" lattice polymer in which a fixed number of
monomers is hosted by a self-avoiding walk with fluctuating length . We
show that the stored length density scales asymptotically
for large as , where is the
polymer entropic exponent, so that can be determined from the analysis
of . We perform simulations for elastic lattice polymer loops with
various sizes and knots, in which we measure . The resulting estimates
support the hypothesis that the exponent is determined only by the
number of prime knots and not by their type. However, if knots are present, we
observe strong corrections to scaling, which help to understand how an entropic
competition between knots is affected by the finite length of the chain.Comment: 10 page
Polymer desorption under pulling: a novel dichotomic phase transition
We show that the structural properties and phase behavior of a self-avoiding
polymer chain on adhesive substrate, subject to pulling at the chain end, can
be obtained by means of a Grand Canonical Ensemble (GCE) approach. We derive
analytical expressions for the mean length of the basic structural units of
adsorbed polymer, such as loops and tails, in terms of the adhesive potential
and detachment force, and determine values of the universal exponents which
govern their probability distributions. Most notably, the hitherto
controversial value of the critical adsorption exponent is found to
depend essentially on the interaction between different loops. The chain
detachment transition turns out to be of the first order, albeit dichotomic,
i.e., no coexistence of different phase states exists. These novel theoretical
predictions and the suggested phase diagram of the adsorption-desorption
transformation under external pulling force are verified by means of extensive
Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
A multi-blob representation of semi-dilute polymer solutions
A coarse-grained multi-blob description of polymer solutions is presented,
based on soft, transferable effective interactions between bonded and
non-bonded blobs. The number of blobs is chosen such that the blob density does
not exceed their overlap threshold, allowing polymer concentrations to be
explored deep into the semi-dilute regime. This quantitative multi-blob
description is shown to preserve known scaling laws of polymer solutions and
provides accurate estimates of amplitudes, while leading to orders of magnitude
increase of simulation efficiency and allowing analytic calculations of
structural and thermodynamic properties.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Phase diagram of mixtures of colloids and polymers in the thermal crossover from good to solvent
We determine the phase diagram of mixtures of spherical colloids and neutral
nonadsorbing polymers in the thermal crossover region between the
point and the good-solvent regime. We use the generalized free-volume theory
(GFVT), which turns out to be quite accurate as long as
( is the radius of gyration of the polymer and is the colloid
radius). Close to the point the phase diagram is not very sensitive to
solvent quality, while, close to the good-solvent region, changes of the
solvent quality modify significantly the position of the critical point and of
the binodals. We also analyze the phase behavior of aqueous solutions of
charged colloids and polymers, using the extension of GFVT proposed by Fortini
et al., J. Chem. Phys. 128, 024904 (2008)
Renormalization of the one-loop theory of fluctuations in polymer blends and diblock copolymer melts
Attempts to use coarse-grained molecular theories to calculate corrections to
the random-phase approximation (RPA) for correlations in polymer mixtures have
been plagued by an unwanted sensitivity to the value of an arbitrary cutoff
length, {\it i.e.}, by an ultraviolet (UV) divergence. We analyze the UV
divergence of the inverse structure factor predicted by a
`one-loop' approximation similar to that used in several previous studies. We
consider both miscible homopolymer blends and disordered diblock copolymer
melts. We show, in both cases, that all UV divergent contributions can be
absorbed into a renormalization of the values of the phenomenological
parameters of a generalized self-consistent field theory (SCFT). This
observation allows the construction of a UV convergent theory of corrections to
SCFT phenomenology. The UV-divergent one-loop contribution to are
shown to be the sum of: (i) a -independent contribution that arises from a
renormalization of the effective parameter, (ii) a -dependent
contribution that arises from a renormalization of monomer statistical segment
lengths, (iii) a contribution proportional to that arises from a
square-gradient contribution to the one-loop fluctuation free energy, and (iv)
a -dependent contribution that is inversely proportional to the degree of
polymerization, which arises from local perturbations in fluid structure near
chain ends and near junctions between blocks in block copolymers.Comment: 35 pages, 2 figure
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