Orthorhombic Phase of Crystalline Polyethylene: A Monte Carlo Study
R. Martonak(1, 2), W. Paul(1), K. Binder(1) ((1) Johannes, Gutenberg-Universitaet, Mainz, Germany, (2) Max-Planck-Institut fuer, Polymerforschung, Mainz, Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses Monte Carlo simulations to analyze the orthorhombic phase of crystalline polyethylene, examining structural and thermodynamic properties across temperatures and system sizes, and comparing results with experimental data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Monte Carlo algorithm with global moves for simulating crystalline polyethylene, providing detailed insights into its structural and thermodynamic behavior.
Findings
Structural parameters match experimental data
Thermal expansion coefficients are accurately predicted
Finite-size effects are characterized and discussed
Abstract
In this paper we present a classical Monte Carlo simulation of the orthorhombic phase of crystalline polyethylene, using an explicit atom force field with unconstrained bond lengths and angles and periodic boundary conditions. We used a recently developed algorithm which apart from standard Metropolis local moves employs also global moves consisting of displacements of the center of mass of the whole chains in all three spatial directions as well as rotations of the chains around an axis parallel to the crystallographic c-direction. Our simulations are performed in the NpT ensemble, at zero pressure, and extend over the whole range of temperatures in which the orthorhombic phase is experimentally known to be stable (10 - 450 K). In order to investigate the finite-size effects in this extremely anisotropic crystal, we used different system sizes and different chain lengths, ranging from…
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