Dynamic scaling in entangled mean-field gelation polymers
Chinmay Das, Daniel J. Read, Mark A. Kelmanson, Tom C. B. McLeish

TL;DR
This paper develops a reaction kinetics model for branched polymers in gelation, comparing structural and rheological properties with experiments, and explores the behavior near the gelation transition using tube theory.
Contribution
It introduces a numerical approach combining reaction kinetics and tube model theory to analyze gelation polymers, providing insights into their structure and rheology near the gel point.
Findings
Structural quantities match experimental data across molecular weights.
Estimated linear segment length is smaller than previous estimates.
Rheological properties agree with experiments except at highest molecular weights.
Abstract
We present a simple reaction kinetics model to describe the polymer synthesis used by Lusignan et al. (PRE, 60, 5657, 1999) to produce randomly branched polymers in the vulcanization class. Numerical solution of the rate equations gives probabilities for different connections in the final product, which we use to generate a numerical ensemble of representative molecules. All structural quantities probed by Lusignan et al. are in quantitative agreement with our results for the entire range of molecular weights considered. However, with detailed topological information available in our calculations, our estimate of the `rheologically relevant' linear segment length is smaller than that estimated by them. We use a numerical method based on tube model of polymer melts to calculate the rheological properties of such molecules. Results are in good agreement with experiment, except that in the…
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