Nanoparticle Motion in Entangled Melts of Linear and Nonconcatenated Ring Polymers

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Date

2017

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American Chemical Society service@acs.org

Abstract

The motion of nanoparticles (NPs) in entangled melts of linear polymers and nonconcatenated ring polymers are compared by large-scale molecular dynamics simulations. The comparison provides a paradigm for the effects of polymer architecture on the dynamical coupling between NPs and polymers in nanocomposites. Strongly suppressed motion of NPs with diameter d larger than the entanglement spacing a is observed in a melt of linear polymers before the onset of Fickian NP diffusion. This strong suppression of NP motion occurs progressively as d exceeds a and is related to the hopping diffusion of NPs in the entanglement network. In contrast to the NP motion in linear polymers, the motion of NPs with d > a in ring polymers is not as strongly suppressed prior to Fickian diffusion. The diffusion coefficient D decreases with increasing d much slower in entangled rings than in entangled linear chains. NP motion in entangled nonconcatenated ring polymers is understood through a scaling analysis of the coupling between NP motion and the self-similar entangled dynamics of ring polymers. © 2017 American Chemical Society.

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Keywords

Diffusion, Molecular dynamics, Nanoparticles, Dynamical coupling, Entanglement networks, Entanglement spacing, Fickian diffusion, Large-scale molecular dynamics, Nanoparticle (NPs), Polymer architecture, Scaling analysis, Polymers

Citation

Macromolecules, 2017, 50, 4, pp. 1749-1754

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