6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bc992

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Semiflexible polymers confined in a slit pore with attractive walls: two-dimensional liquid crystalline order versus capillary nematization

Sergei A. EgorovSergei A. EgorovAndrey MilchevKurt Binder

subject

Persistence lengthCanonical ensembleQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesCondensed matter physicsCapillary actionChemistry02 engineering and technologyGeneral ChemistryPolymer adsorption021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterMolecular dynamicsLiquid crystalChemical physicsPhase (matter)0103 physical sciencesDensity functional theory010306 general physics0210 nano-technology

description

Semiflexible polymers under good solvent conditions interacting with attractive planar surfaces are investigated by Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations and classical Density Functional Theory (DFT). A bead-spring type potential complemented by a bending potential is used, allowing variation of chain stiffness from completely flexible coils to rod-like polymers whose persistence length by far exceeds their contour length. Solvent is only implicitly included, monomer-monomer interactions being purely repulsive, while two types of attractive wall-monomer interactions are considered: (i) a strongly attractive Mie-type potential, appropriate for a strictly structureless wall, and (ii) a corrugated wall formed by Lennard-Jones particles arranged on a square lattice. It is found that in dilute solutions the former case leads to the formation of a strongly adsorbed surface layer, and the profile of density and orientational order in the z-direction perpendicular to the wall is predicted by DFT in nice agreement with MD. While for very low bulk densities a Kosterlitz-Thouless type transition from the isotropic phase to a phase with power-law decay of nematic correlations is suggested to occur in the strongly adsorbed layer, for larger densities a smectic-C phase in the surface layer is detected. No "capillary nematization" effect at higher bulk densities is found in this system, unlike systems with repulsive walls. This finding is attributed to the reduction of the bulk density (in the center of the slit pore) due to polymer adsorption on the attractive wall, for a system studied in the canonical ensemble. Consequently in a system with two attractive walls nematic order in the slit pore can occur only at a higher density than for a bulk system.

https://doi.org/10.1039/c7sm00105c