2022 Annual Meeting

(560g) Associations in Reversibly Bonded Networks

Authors

Michael Rubinstein, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Polymer networks present an unrealized, important, and interdisciplinary opportunity to exert molecular-level, chemical control on material macroscopic properties. Reversible network formation resulting from homobonding (A–A) associative interactions such as hydrophobic, dipolar, or other homotypic interactions includes both intra- and inter-molecular cross-linking. Intrachain association causes loop formation which serves as defects in the network, but also as stored length which may toughen the gel. Hybrid Monte Carlo/molecular dynamics simulations of a minimal coarse-grained model of polymers with associative groups distributed evenly along the chain contour and a unique “fractal cactus” model explain the looping at different scales. Meanwhile, two-component solutions with heterotypic (A–B) associations, such hydrogen bonding, metal–ligand, electrostatic, or other pairwise associative interactions, form alternately cross-linked networks with exclusively interchain associations. Homogeneous A–B networks are most easily stabilized near stoichiometric conditions between A and B associative groups, resulting in a re-entrant sol–gel–sol transition as the overall composition is altered. Further, the chemical incompatibility between the A and B polymers drives a competition between attractively and repulsively-driven phase separation, leading to microphase formation and eutectic behavior. Accordingly, both homo- and hetero-binding associative interactions slow molecular relaxations leading to a more general description of the sticky rouse and reptation models.