Stimuli-responsive brushes with active minority components: Monte Carlo study and analytical theory
Shuanhu Qi, Leonid I. Klushin, Alexander M. Skvortsov, Alexey A., Polotsky, Friederike Schmid

TL;DR
This study combines analytical theory, Monte Carlo simulations, and self-consistent field calculations to analyze the equilibrium and switching behavior of stimuli-responsive polymer brushes with active minority components, revealing the impact of density fluctuations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of simulation and theoretical approaches to understand conformational switching in active polymer brushes, highlighting the role of density fluctuations.
Findings
Density fluctuations renormalize the excluded volume interaction parameter.
Fluctuations reduce the free energy barrier for switching.
Effective interaction parameters depend on monomer interaction range.
Abstract
Using a combination of analytical theory, Monte Carlo simulations, and three dimensional self-consistent field calculations, we study the equilibrium properties and the switching behavior of adsorption-active polymer chains included in a homopolymer brush. The switching transition is driven by a conformational change of a small fraction of minority chains, which are attracted by the substrate. Depending on the strength of the attractive interaction, the minority chains assume one of two states: An exposed state characterized by a stem-crown-like conformation, and an adsorbed state characterized by a flat two-dimensional structure. Comparing the Monte Carlo simulations, which use an Edwards-type Hamiltonian with density dependent interactions, with the predictions from self-consistent-field theory based on the same Hamiltonian, we find that thermal density fluctuations affect the system…
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