Structural properties of crystallizable polymer melts: Intrachain and interchain correlation functions

Thomas Vettorel, Hendrik Meyer, Jörg Baschnagel, and Matthias Fuchs
Phys. Rev. E 75, 041801 – Published 10 April 2007

Abstract

We present results from constant pressure molecular-dynamics simulations for a bead-spring model of a crystallizable polymer melt. Our model has two main features, a chemically realistic intrachain rigidity and a purely repulsive interaction between nonbonded monomers. By means of intrachain and interchain structure factors we explore polymer conformation and melt structure above and below the temperature Tcryshom of homogeneous crystallization. Here, we do not only determine average spatial correlations, but also site-specific correlations which depend on the position of the monomers along the polymer backbone. In the liquid phase above Tcryshom we find that this site dependence can be well-accounted for by known theoretical approximations, the Koyama distribution for the intrachain structure and the polymer reference interaction site model (PRISM) for the interchain structure. This is no longer true in the semicrystalline phase. Below Tcryshom short chains fully extend upon crystallization, whereas sufficiently long chains form chain-folded lamellae which coexist with amorphous regions. The structural features of these polymer crystals lead to violations of premises of the Koyama approximation or PRISM theory so that both theoretical approaches cannot be applied simultaneously. Furthermore, we find a violation of the Hansen-Verlet freezing criterion; our polymer melt crystallizes more easily than a simple liquid. This hints at the importance of the coupling between conformation (backbone rigidity) and density (packing constraints) for polymer crystallization.

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  • Received 5 October 2006

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.75.041801

©2007 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Thomas Vettorel*, Hendrik Meyer, and Jörg Baschnagel

  • Institut Charles Sadron, CNRS-UPR22, 6 Rue Boussingault, 67083 Strasbourg, France

Matthias Fuchs

  • Fachbereich Physik, Universität Konstanz, 78457 Konstanz, Germany

  • *Present address: Max-Planck Institut für Polymerforschung, Ackermannweg 10, 55128 Mainz, Germany.
  • Corresponding author. Email address: hmeyer@ics.u-strasbg.fr

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Issue

Vol. 75, Iss. 4 — April 2007

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