Publications Details

Publications / Journal Article

Brush-Like Polymers and Entanglements: From Linear Chains to Filaments

Liang, Heyi; Grest, Gary S.; Dobrynin, Andrey V.

Dynamics of melts and solutions of high molecular weight polymers and biopolymers is controlled by topological constraints (entanglements) imposing a sliding chain motion along an effective confining tube. For linear chains, the tube size is determined by universal packing number Pe, the number of polymer strands within a confining tube that is required for chains to entangle. Here we show that in melts of brush-like (graft) polymers, consisting of linear chain backbones with grafted side chains, Pe is not a universal number and depends on the molecular architecture. In particular, we use coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to demonstrate that the packing number is a nonmonotonic function of the ratio Rnsc /Rng of the size of the side chains Rnsc to that of the backbone spacer between neighboring grafting points Rng . This parameter characterizes the degree of mutual interpenetration between side chains of the same macromolecule. We show that Pe of brush-like polymers first decreases with increasing side chain grafting density in the dilute side chain regime (Rnsc < Rng ), then begins to increase in the regime of overlapping side chains (Rnsc > Rng ), approaching the value for linear chains in the limit of densely grafted side chains. This dependence of the packing number reflects a crossover from chain-like entanglements in systems with loosely grafted side chains (comb-like polymers) to entanglements between flexible filaments (bottlebrush-like polymers). Our simulation results are in agreement with the experimental data for the dependence of a plateau modulus on the molecular architecture of graft poly(n-butyl acrylates) and poly(norbornene)-graft-poly(lactide) melts.