6533b85dfe1ef96bd12bf097

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Simulations of phase transitions in macromolecular systems

Kurt Binder

subject

chemistry.chemical_classificationQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesPhase transitionMaterials scienceComputer simulationMonte Carlo methodGeneral Physics and AstronomyPolymerCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterchemistryChemical bondHardware and ArchitectureChemical physicsLattice (order)Polymer blendStatistical physicsScaling

description

Abstract The study of phase transitions in concentrated solutions and melts of flexible or stiff polymers is a computational challenge for computer simulations, since already a single polymer coil exhibits nontrivial structure from the scale of a chemical bond (1 A) to the coil radius (100 A), and for the simulation of collective phenomena huge simulation boxes containing many polymers are required. A strategy to deal with this problem is the use of highly coarse-grained models on a lattice, such as the bond fluctuation model. Several studies employing such models will be briefly reviewed, e.g.: temperature-driven isotropic-nematic phase transition in concentrated solutions of semiflexible polymers, unmixing of polymer blends in the bulk and in a geometry confined between walls which prefer one component. It is shown that the finite-size scaling techniques previously developed for Ising-type models are useful in this context, too. Simulation of unmixed polymer blends between competing walls allows a study of an interface localization–delocalization transition and the observations of anomalous interfacial broadening (depending on thin film thickness). These simulations have also elucidated experiments.

https://doi.org/10.1016/s0010-4655(02)00199-6