A Force-Level Theory of the Rheology of Entangled Rod and Chain Polymer Liquids. II. Perturbed Reptation, Stress Overshoot, Emergent Convective Constraint Release and Steady State Flow
Kenenth S. Schweizer, Daniel M. Sussman

TL;DR
This paper develops a force-level theoretical framework to analyze the rheology of entangled rigid rod and chain polymer liquids, predicting stress overshoot, emergent convective constraint release, and steady-state flow behaviors through coupled microscopic and macroscopic dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent force-level theory that captures nonlinear rheological phenomena like stress overshoot and constraint release in entangled polymer fluids.
Findings
Predicts stress overshoot due to entanglement weakening.
Identifies emergent convective constraint release at high shear rates.
Quantitatively matches steady-state tube dilation with simulations.
Abstract
We numerically and analytically analyze the startup continuous shear rheology of heavily entangled rigid rod polymer fluids based on our self-consistent, force-level theory of anharmonic tube confinement. The approach is simplified by neglecting stress-assisted transverse barrier hopping, and irreversible relaxation proceeds solely via deformation-perturbed reptation. This process is self-consistently coupled to tube dilation and macroscopic rheological response. We predict that with increasing strain the tube strongly dilates, entanglements are lost, and reptation speeds up. As a consequence, a stress overshoot emerges not due to affine over-orientation, but rather to strong weakening of the entanglement network. Just beyond the stress overshoot the longest relaxation time is predicted to scale as the inverse shear rate, corresponding to the emergence of a generic form of convective…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies
