Probing the nonequilibrium dynamics of stress, orientation and entanglements in polymer melts with orthogonal interrupted shear simulations
Marco Aurelio Galvani Cunha, Peter D. Olmsted, Mark O. Robbins

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how orthogonal interrupted shear flows affect stress, orientation, and entanglements in polymer melts, revealing complex behaviors not captured by existing models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that orthogonal shear interruptions lead to larger stress overshoots and complex entanglement dynamics, suggesting improvements for constitutive models.
Findings
Orthogonal shear increases stress overshoot compared to parallel shear.
Entanglement and orientation relaxation show non-monotonic behavior.
Complex entanglement dynamics influence stress responses.
Abstract
Both entangled and unentangled polymer melts exhibit stress overshoots when subject to shearing flow. The size of the overshoot depends on the applied shear rate and is related to relaxation mechanisms such as reptation, chain stretch and convective constraint release. Previous experimental work shows that melts subjected to interrupted shear flows exhibit a smaller overshoot when sheared after partial relaxation. This has been shown to be consistent with predictions by constitutive models. Here, we report molecular dynamics simulations of interrupted shear of polymer melts where the shear flow after the relaxation stage is orthogonal to the original applied flow. We observe that, for a given relaxation time, the size of the stress overshoot under orthogonal interrupted shear is larger than observed during parallel interrupted shear, which is not captured by constitutive models.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
