Consistent coarse-graining strategy for polymer solutions in the thermal crossover from Good to Theta solvent
Giuseppe D'Adamo, Andrea Pelissetto, Carlo Pierleoni

TL;DR
This paper develops a coarse-graining strategy for polymer solutions in the thermal crossover from good to Theta solvent, enabling accurate predictions of solution properties across a range of densities and temperatures.
Contribution
The authors extend their coarse-graining method to thermal crossover regimes, introducing models with more blobs per chain to improve predictive accuracy.
Findings
Coarse-grained models with more blobs extend the density range of accurate predictions.
The n=10 blob model outperforms the n=4 model near the Theta point.
The approach avoids state-dependent potentials, ensuring consistency.
Abstract
We extend our previously developed coarse-graining strategy for linear polymers with a tunable number n of effective atoms (blobs) per chain [D'Adamo et al., J. Chem. Phys. 137, 4901 (2012)] to polymer systems in thermal crossover between the good-solvent and the Theta regimes. We consider the thermal crossover in the region in which tricritical effects can be neglected, i.e. not too close to the Theta point, for a wide range of chain volume fractions Phi=c/c* (c* is the overlap concentration), up to Phi=30. Scaling crossover functions for global properties of the solution are obtained by Monte-Carlo simulations of the Domb-Joyce model. They provide the input data to develop a minimal coarse-grained model with four blobs per chain. As in the good-solvent case, the coarse-grained model potentials are derived at zero density, thus avoiding the inconsistencies related to the use of…
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