Competition of the connectivity with the local and the global order in polymer melts and crystals
S. Bernini, F. Puosi, M. Barucco, D. Leporini

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how connectivity influences local and global order in polymer melts and crystals, revealing detailed structural relationships and defect formations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the interplay between connectivity and order in flexible polymer chains, highlighting the impact of shell bonds and local arrangements on crystallization.
Findings
Increasing shell bonds decreases FCS order.
Global order enhances certain radial bond angles.
Kink defects are present in crystalline states.
Abstract
The competition between the connectivity and the local or global order in model fully-flexible chain molecules is investigated by molecular-dynamics simulations. States with both missing (melts) and high (crystal) global order are considered. Local order is characterized within the first coordination shell (FCS) of a tagged monomer and found to be lower than in atomic systems in both melt and crystal. The role played by the bonds linking the tagged monomer to FCS monomers (radial bonds), and the bonds linking two FCS monomers (shell bonds) is investigated. The detailed analysis in terms of Steinhardt's orientation order parameters Q_l (l = 2 - 10) reveals that increasing the number of shell bonds decreases the FCS order in both melt and crystal. Differently, the FCS arrangements organize the radial bonds. Even if the molecular chains are fully flexible, the distribution of the angle…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolymer crystallization and properties · Material Dynamics and Properties · Protein Structure and Dynamics
