Options
Polymer-solid contacts described by soft, coarse-grained models
ISSN
1463-9076
Date Issued
2011
Author(s)
Steinmueller, Birger
Ramirez-Hernandez, Abelardo
de Pablo, Juan J.
DOI
10.1039/c0cp02868a
Abstract
The ability of soft, coarse-grained models to describe the narrow interface of a nearly incompressible polymer melt in contact with a solid is explored by numerical self-consistent field calculations and Monte-Carlo simulations. We investigate the effect of the discreteness of the bead-spring architecture by quantitatively comparing the results of a bead-spring model with different number of beads, N, but identical end-to-end distance, R(e), and a continuous Gaussian-thread model. If the width, xi, of the narrow polymer-solid contact is smaller or comparable to the length of a statistical segment, b = R(e)/root N-1, strong differences in the interface tension and the density profiles between the two models are observed, and strategies for compensating the discrete nature of the bead-spring model are investigated. Compensating the discretization of the chain contour in the bead-spring model by applying an external segment-solid potential, we simultaneously adjust the interface tension and the density profile to the predictions of the Gaussian-thread model. We suggest that the geometry of the polymer-solid contact and the interface tension are relevant characteristics that a coarse-grained model of polymer-solid contacts must reproduce in order to establish a quantitative relationship to an experimental system.
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
c0cp02868a.pdf
Size
2.59 MB
Checksum (MD5)
0430a63efa7a819212577dd7d479c7fd