posted on 2020-10-21, 15:29authored byJiarul Midya, Michael Rubinstein, Sanat K. Kumar, Arash Nikoubashman
The
structure of neat melts of polymer-grafted nanoparticles (GNPs)
is studied via coarse-grained molecular dynamics
simulations. We systematically vary the degree of polymerization and
grafting density at fixed nanoparticle (NP) radius and study in detail
the shape and size of the GNP coronas. For sufficiently high grafting
density, chain sections close to the NP core are extended and form
a dry layer. Further away from the NP, there is an interpenetration
layer, where the polymer coronas of neighboring GNPs overlap and the
chain sections have almost unperturbed conformations. To better understand
this partitioning, we develop a two-layer model, representing the
grafted polymer around an NP by spherical dry and interpenetration
layers. This model quantitatively predicts that the thicknesses of
the two layers depend on one universal parameter, x, the degree of overcrowding of grafted chains relative to chains
in the melt. Both simulations and theory show that the chain extension
free energy is nonmonotonic with increasing chain length at a fixed
grafting density, with a well-defined maximum. This maximum is indicative
of the crossover from the dry layer-dominated to interpenetration
layer-dominated regime, and it could have profound consequences on
our understanding of a variety of anomalous transport properties of
these GNPs. Our theoretical approach therefore provides a facile means
for understanding and designing solvent-free GNP-based materials.