Orthorhombic Phase of Crystalline Polyethylene: A Constant Pressure Path Integral 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 applies Path Integral Monte Carlo simulations to explore quantum effects on the structural and elastic properties of crystalline polyethylene's orthorhombic phase across a range of temperatures, comparing results with classical models and experiments.
Contribution
It is the first quantum simulation of crystalline polyethylene using PIMC, assessing quantum effects on structural and elastic properties and comparing with classical and experimental data.
Findings
Quantum effects influence lattice parameters and internal fluctuations.
Results show temperature-dependent variations in structural and elastic properties.
Deuterated polyethylene exhibits isotope effects at low temperatures.
Abstract
In this paper we present a Path Integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) simulation of the orthorhombic phase of crystalline polyethylene, using an explicit atom force field with unconstrained bond lengths and angles. This work represents a quantum extension of our recent classical simulation (J. Chem. Phys. 106, 8918 (1997)). It is aimed both at exploring the applicability of the PIMC method on such polymer crystal systems, as well as on a detailed assessment of the importance of quantum effects on different quantities. We used the ensemble and simulated the system at zero pressure in the temperature range 25 - 300 K, using Trotter numbers between 12 and 144. In order to investigate finite-size effects, we used chains of two different lengths, C_12 and C_24, corresponding to the total number of atoms in the super-cell being 432 and 864, respectively. We show here the results for structural…
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