Shear Thinning from Bond Orientation in Model Unentangled Bottlebrush Polymer Melts
Abstract
The rheology of molecular brushes remains challenging to control due to the multiple length scales and relaxation processes involved and the lack of direct observation of molecular conformation during flow. We use molecular dynamics simulations to determine the shear thinning of unentangled bottlebrush polymers with varying architecture, from linear chains to combs, to densely grafted bottlebrushes, to star-like and star polymers. We find shear thinning exponents in line with theoretical and experimental results and characterize the shape and orientation of bottlebrushes in steady-state flow. Many shape parameters derived from the gyration tensor show molecular alignment with the flow for all systems. Yet, the orientation of individual bonds is what most strongly correlates with the architecture-dependent shear-thinning exponents. In densely grafted bottlebrushes, the packing of side chains prevents alignment with the flow, causing a reduction in shear thinning. The molecular insight from our simulations is useful to tune the architecture of bottlebrushes to control their rheology.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.