Isostaticity and the solidification of semiflexible polymer melts
ORAL
Abstract
Using molecular dynamics simulations of a tangent-soft-sphere bead-spring polymer model, we examine the degree to which semiflexible polymer melts solidify at isostaticity. Flexible and stiff chains crystallize when they are isostatic as defined by appropriate degree-of-freedom-counting arguments. Semiflexible chains also solidify when isostatic if a generalized isostaticity criterion that accounts for the slow freezing out of configurational freedom as chain stiffness increases is employed. The configurational freedom associated with bond angles (θ) can be associated with chains’ characteristic ratio C∞ = <1+cos(θ)> /<1-cos(θ)> . We find that the dependence of the average coordination number at solidification Z(Ts) on C∞ has the same functional form [Z = a - b*ln(C∞)] as the dependence of the average coordination number at jamming Z(φJ) on C∞ in athermal systems, suggesting that jamming-related phenomena play a significant role in thermal polymer solidification.
*This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos. DMR-1555242 and DMR-1560090.
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Presenters
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Christian Plaza-Rivera
- Physics, Univ of South Florida