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      Fingerprinting Molecular Relaxation in Deformed Polymers

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          Abstract

          Flow of macromolecules, a ubiquitous phenomenon in both nature and industry, needs to be understood at both macroscopic and microscopic scales. Here we present the formulation of a general mathematical framework, which could be used to extract, from scattering experiments, the molecular relaxation of deformed polymers. By combining and modestly extending several key conceptual ingredients in the literature, we show how the anisotropic single-chain structure factor can be decomposed by spherical harmonics and experimentally reconstructed from its cross sections on the scattering planes. The resulting wavenumber-dependent expansion coefficients constitute a characteristic fingerprint of the macromolecular deformation, permitting detailed examinations of polymer dynamics at the microscopic level. We apply this approach to survey a long-standing problem in polymer physics regarding the molecular relaxation in entangled polymers after a large step deformation. The classical tube theory of Doi and Edwards predicts a fast chain retraction process immediately after the deformation, followed by a slow orientation relaxation through the reptation mechanism. This chain retraction hypothesis, which is the keystone of the tube theory for macromolecular flows, was critically examined by analyzing the fine features of the two-dimensional anisotropic spectra from small-angle neutron scattering by entangled polystyrenes. It is shown that the unique scattering patterns associated with the chain retraction mechanism were not experimentally observed. This result calls for a fundamental revision of the current theoretical picture for nonlinear flow behavior of entangled polymeric liquids.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2017-03-09
          Article
          1703.03525
          c0187920-283c-4045-a8b8-bc6ca2f92119

          http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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          Custom metadata
          36 pages, 6 figures
          cond-mat.soft

          Condensed matter
          Condensed matter

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