Composite Entanglement Topology and Extensional Deformation In Ring-Linear Polymer Blends

ORAL

Abstract

Large-scale molecular simulations are applied to characterize the entanglement structure, topology, and dynamics of architectural blends of ring and linear polymer chains. The mixture of the two chain shapes produces a composite network formed by a combination of conventional linear-chain entanglements and threading of linear chains through ring polymers. We systematically study these networks for symmetric blends of well entangled polymers with the ring fraction $\phi_R$ varying from 0.05 to 0.95. Primitive path analyses are used to visualize and quantify the network structure and measure the quantity of ring-linear threading and linear-linear entanglement as a function of $\phi_R$. We find that the density of topological constraints of the network has a maximum with respect to $\phi_R$ at  a ring fraction $\phi_R\approx0.4$, which we can rationalize with simple constraint-counting arguments. Complimentary simulations of blend elongation are also reported and demonstrate how the changing entanglement structure of blends with $\phi_R$ gives rise to qualitative changes in macroscopic extensional stresses during deformation.  

*This work was supported by the Sandia Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program. This work was performed, in part, at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, anOffice of Science User Facility operated for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science.

Presenters

  • Thomas C O'Connor

    • Carnegie Mellon University

Authors

  • Thomas C O'Connor

    • Carnegie Mellon University
  • Ting Ge

    • University of South Carolina
  • Gary S Grest

    • Sandia National Laboratories