Structure and dynamics of confined flexible and unentangled polymer
melts in highly adsorbing cylindrical pores
JMY Carrillo and BG Sumpter, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 141, 074904
(2014).
DOI: 10.1063/1.4893055
Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations are used to probe the
dynamic phenomena of polymer melts confined in nanopores. The simulation
results show excellent agreement in the values obtained for the
normalized coherent single chain dynamic structure factor, S(Q, Delta
t)/S(Q, 0). In the bulk configuration, both simulations and experiments
confirm that the polymer chains follow Rouse dynamics. However, under
confinement, the Rouse modes are suppressed. The mean-square radius of
gyration < R-g(2)> and the average relative shape anisotropy
of the conformation of the polymer chains indicate a pancake-like
conformation near the surface and a bulk-like conformation near the
center of the confining cylinder. This was confirmed by direct
visualization of the polymer chains. Despite the presence of these
different conformations, the average form factor of the confined chains
still follows the Debye function which describes linear ideal chains,
which is in agreement with small angle neutron scattering experiments
(SANS). The experimentally inaccessible mean-square displacement (MSD)
of the confined monomers, calculated as a function of radial distance
from the pore surface, was obtained in the simulations. The simulations
show a gradual increase of the MSD from the adsorbed, but mobile layer,
to that similar to the bulk far away from the surface. (C) 2014 AIP
Publishing LLC.
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