posted on 2021-03-24, 15:30authored byMarius R. Bittermann, Marion Grzelka, Sander Woutersen, Albert M. Brouwer, Daniel Bonn
The macroscopic viscosity
of polymer solutions in general differs
strongly from the viscosity at the nanometer scale, and the relation
between the two can be complicated. To investigate this relation,
we use a fluorescent molecular rotor that probes the local viscosity
of its molecular environment. For a range of chain lengths and concentrations,
the dependence of the fluorescence on the macroscopic viscosity is
well described by the classical Förster–Hoffmann (FH)
equation, but the value of the FH exponent depends on the polymer
chain length. We show that all data can be collapsed onto a master
curve by plotting the fluorescence versus polymer concentration, which
we explain in terms of the characteristic mesh size of the polymer
solution. Using known scaling laws for polymers then allows us to
quantitatively explain the relation between the FH exponent and the
polymer chain length, allowing us to link the nano- to the macroviscosity.