posted on 2020-06-08, 22:43authored bySachin Shanbhag, Zuowei Wang
The dependence of tracer diffusivity
(D∞ ∼ N–x∞), where
probe chains move in an environment of infinitely
long matrix chains, and self-diffusion coefficient (Ds ∼ N–xs), where probe and matrix
chains are identical, on the molecular weight of the probe chain N is investigated by using three different molecular simulation
methods, viz. molecular dynamics, the bond-fluctuation model (BFM),
and the slip-spring (SS) model. Experiments indicate xs ≈ 2.4 ± 0.2 over a wide
intermediate molecular weight range and x∞ ≈ 2.0 ± 0.1, although the lower molecular weight limit
for observing pure reptation in short probes is unclear. These results
are partly inconsistent with some tube theories and older, somewhat
underpowered, molecular simulations. Estimating x∞ by using brute-force BFM simulations is difficult
because it involves large simulation boxes and long trajectories.
To overcome this obstacle, an efficient method to estimate D∞ in which ends of matrix chains are
immobilized is presented and validated. BFM simulations performed
on systems with different probe and matrix chain lengths reveal that xs = 2.43 ± 0.07 and x∞ = 2.24 ± 0.03. Over a wider range
of molecular weights, probe diffusivities obtained from the more coarse-grained
SS model, calibrated with bead–spring molecular dynamics, reveal xs > x∞ and x∞ > 2 for
weakly and intermediately entangled chains. Tracer diffusivities obtained
by artificially switching off constraint release in the SS simulations
essentially overlap with probe diffusivities, strongly suggesting
that constraint release is primarily responsible for the difference
between xs and x∞. Nevertheless, both BFM and SS simulations
indicate that below a certain chain length threshold contributions
of contour length fluctuations to Ds and D∞ are important and
result in deviations from pure reptation scaling.