Measuring and modeling deformations of topology-defined polymers using in situ scattering in a capillary rheometer
ORAL
Abstract
Applications of high molecular weight dilute polymers typically involve extreme shear rates that cause nonlinear deformations and chain scission. Although various microscopy methods have successfully resolved single-molecule deformations for specific biopolymer systems, these techniques are inaccessible to conventional, synthetic polymers undergoing deformation in high shear flows. We present new in situ small-angle neutron scattering measurements using a high-shear capillary rheometer to simultaneously characterize the microstructure and rheology of topologically complex polymers. The resulting scattering is interpreted using a new modeling framework, Gram-Charlier analysis of polymer scattering (G-CAPS), that fingerprints nonlinear deformations of polymers through non-Gaussian moments of the segment density distribution. The method is validated using synthetic data from Brownian dynamics simulations, and applied to capillary rheo-SANS measurements on a series of topology-controlled polymers in high shear rate flows to test the influence of chain topology and extensibility on non-Gaussian polymer deformations. We anticipate that capillary rheo-SANS in combination with G-CAPS will provide powerful new tools to understand and engineer the molecular rheology of polymer fluids.
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Publication: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/acs.macromol.4c01169
Presenters
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Anukta Datta
University of California, Santa Barbara
Authors
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Anukta Datta
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Siobhan Powers
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Xiaoyan Wang
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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Kathleen M Weigandt
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Ryan P Murphy
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Patrick T Underhill
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
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Matthew E Helgeson
University of California, Santa Barbara