ISSN:
1089-7690
Source:
AIP Digital Archive
Topics:
Physics
,
Chemistry and Pharmacology
Notes:
We study theoretically the process of "end-evaporation'' in living polymer systems, such as wormlike surfactant micelles. End-evaporation occurs when single monomers either break away from, or join onto, a chain end, the rates being described by the (mean-field) rate constants k and k', respectively. Thus the chains can exchange material with one-another via a bath of free monomers. The relaxation of a system of living polymers after a small temperature jump (T-jump) is studied theoretically. The effect of a T-jump is to prepare the system with the wrong mean chain length, which relaxes to its equilibrium value L¯ by end-evaporation. It is found that the number of free monomers in the system relaxes almost completely in a time of order 1/kL¯, while the weight-average chain length, which is the quantity measured in light scattering experiments, relaxes on a time scale τD=4L¯2/k, which is three powers of L¯ longer. We also predict that the stress relaxation after a step strain is dominated by end-evaporation whenever τD(approximately-less-than)τrep, where τrep is the reptation (disengagement) time for a chain of length L¯. In this case the stress relaxation is found to be "stretched exponential'' for times smaller than τD and single exponential for longer times.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.465419
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