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Nonlinear Elasticity and Swelling of Comb and Bottlebrush Networks

POSTER

Abstract

We use a combination of analytical calculations, coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations and experiments to elucidate the effect of branched architecture on swelling of comb-like and bottlebrush networks. The equilibrium swelling ratio of such networks is shown to be larger than that of conventional linear chain networks as a result of two effects: architectural disentanglement of network strands and amplification of polymer-solvent interactions by side chains. For networks of brush-like strands with poly(dimethyl siloxane) side chains in toluene, we achieve a swelling ratio of Q = 30, which is larger than that of linear chain networks with the same strand length. All of the studied systems, including linear chain, comb, and bottlebrush networks, follow a universal scaling relation, G(Q) ∝ Q, between the shear modulus G(Q) and swelling ratio Q with scaling exponents δ = 2.6±0.08 (simulations) and δ = 2.6±0.12 (experiments). These values agree with the theoretically predicted exponent δ = 8/3, confirming dominant contribution of three body interactions to the osmotic pressure which drives network swelling.

Presenters

  • Michael Jacobs

    Polymer Science, University of Akron

Authors

  • Michael Jacobs

    Polymer Science, University of Akron

  • Heyi Liang

    Univ of Akron, University of Akron, Polymer Science, University of Akron, Polymer Science, The University of Akron

  • Erfan Dashtimoghadam

    Chemistry, University of North Carolina

  • Benjamin Morgan

    Chemistry, University of North Carolina

  • Sergei Sheiko

    Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chemistry, University of North Carolina

  • Andrey Dobrynin

    Univ of Akron, University of Akron, Polymer Science, University of Akron, Polymer Science, The University of Akron