posted on 2025-02-20, 16:04authored byJoanna
M. White, Taehyoung Kim, Frank S. Bates, Timothy P. Lodge
The relationship between macroscopic stress relaxation
and molecular-level
chain exchange in triblock copolymer micelles has been explored using
rheology and time-resolved small-angle neutron scattering (TR-SANS),
marking the first measurements of chain exchange in concentrated triblock
networks. It has long been assumed in models of transient or thermoreversible
networks that the time scales for these two processes are equal. Experimentally,
we find that stress relaxation occurs many orders-of-magnitude faster
than chain exchange. This difference is quantitatively explained by
modest dispersity in the core block that results in a slight asymmetry
within any given nominally symmetric triblock. For stress relaxation
to occur, only the shorter chain must pull out, while chain exchange
is slowed due to the requirement of the eventual pullout of the longer
block. The pullout time is extremely sensitive to the length of the
core block. This mechanism is supported by measurements with an intentionally
asymmetric triblock copolymer, which displays an even larger difference
between the stress relaxation and chain exchange rates. These results
establish a quantitative molecular-level picture of the chain dynamics
associated with stress relaxation in triblock copolymer networks.