Primitive Path Analysis and Stress Distribution in Highly Strained Macromolecules
Author(s) -
HsiaoPing Hsu,
Kurt Kremer
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs macro letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.966
H-Index - 92
ISSN - 2161-1653
DOI - 10.1021/acsmacrolett.7b00808
Subject(s) - viscoelasticity , quantum entanglement , polymer , relaxation (psychology) , stress relaxation , materials science , stress (linguistics) , dumbbell , chemical physics , physics , composite material , medicine , psychology , social psychology , linguistics , creep , philosophy , quantum mechanics , quantum , physical therapy
Polymer material properties are strongly affected by entanglement effects. For long polymer chains and composite materials, they are expected to be at the origin of many technically important phenomena, such as shear thinning or the Mullins effect, which microscopically can be related to topological constraints between chains. Starting from fully equilibrated highly entangled polymer melts, we investigate the effect of isochoric elongation on the entanglement structure and force distribution of such systems. Theoretically, the related viscoelastic response usually is discussed in terms of the tube model. We relate stress relaxation in the linear and nonlinear viscoelastic regimes to a primitive path analysis (PPA) and show that tension forces both along the original paths and along primitive paths, that is, the backbone of the tube, in the stretching direction correspond to each other. Unlike homogeneous relaxation along the chain contour, the PPA reveals a so far not observed long-lived clustering of topological constraints along the chains in the deformed state.
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