6533b826fe1ef96bd12848cd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Stability of thin polymer films: influence of solvents.

Marcus MüllerYu-cheng LinKurt Binder

subject

Quantitative Biology::BiomoleculesEquation of stateField (physics)ChemistryVapor pressureMonte Carlo methodGeneral Physics and AstronomyThermodynamicsCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterContact angleSurface tensionComputational chemistryWettingPhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySolvent effects

description

The interface and surface properties and the wetting behavior of polymer-solvent mixtures are investigated using Monte Carlo simulations and self-consistent field calculations. We carry out Monte Carlo simulations in the framework of a coarse-grained bead-spring model using short chains (oligomers) of N(P)=5 beads and a monomeric solvent, N(S)=1. The self-consistent field calculations are based on a simple phenomenological equation of state for compressible binary mixtures and we employ Gaussian chain model. The bulk behavior of the polymer-solvent mixture belongs to type III in the classification of van Konynenburg and Scott [Phil. Trans. R. Soc. London, Ser. A 298, 495 (1980)]. It is characterized by a triple line on which the polymer-liquid coexists with solvent-vapor and a solvent-rich liquid. The solvent is not homogeneously distributed across the dense polymer film but tends to accumulate at the surface and the polymer-vapor interface. This solvent enrichment at the interface and surface becomes more pronounced upon increasing the vapor pressure and alters the surface and interface tensions. This effect gives rise to a nonmonotonic dependence of the contact angle on the vapor pressure and one might observe reentrant wetting. The results of the Monte Carlo simulations and the self-consistent field calculations qualitatively agree. The profiles of drops are investigated by Monte Carlo simulations and a pronounced solvent enrichment is observed at the wedge formed by the substrate and the liquid-vapor interface at the three-phase contact line.

10.1063/1.1776555https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15303950