Recently, disordered blends of semiconducting and insulating polymers have been used to prepare light-emitting diodes with increased luminous efficiency. Because the thermodynamic stability of the disordered phase in blends is limited, equivalent diblock copolymers (BCPs) could be an alternative. However, the choice between disordered blends and BCPs requires understanding structural differences and their effect on charge carrier transport. Using a hybrid mesoscopic model, we simulate blends and equivalent BCPs of two representative semiconducting and insulating polymers: poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (PPV) and polyacrylate. The immiscibility is varied to mimic annealing at different temperatures. We find stable or metastable disordered morphologies until we reach the mean-field (MF) spinodal. Disordered morphologies are heterogeneous because of thermal fluctuations and local segregation. Near the MF spinodal, segregation is stronger in BCPs than in the blends, even though the immiscibility, normalized by the MF spinodal, is the same. We link the spatial distribution of PPV with electric conductance. We predict that the immiscibility (temperature at which the layer is annealed) affects electrical percolation much stronger in BCPs than in blends. Differences in the local structure and percolation between blends and BCPs are enhanced at a high insulator content.
Similar to macroscopic ropes and cables, long polymers create knots. We address the fundamental question whether and under which conditions it is possible to describe these intriguing objects with crude models that capture only mesoscale polymer properties. We focus on melts of long polymers which we describe by a model typical for mesoscopic simulations. A worm-like chain model defines the polymer architecture. To describe nonbonded interactions, we deliberately choose a generic “soft” repulsive potential that leads to strongly overlapping monomers and coarse local liquid structure. The soft model is parametrized to accurately reproduce mesoscopic structure and conformations of reference polymer melts described by a microscopic model. The microscopically resolved samples retain all generic features affecting polymer topology and provide, therefore, reliable reference data on knots. We compare characteristic knotting properties in mesoscopic and microscopically resolved melts for different cases of chain stiffness. We conclude that mesoscopic models can reliably describe knots in those melts, where the length scale characterizing polymer stiffness is substantially larger than the size of monomer–monomer excluded volume. In this case, simplified local liquid structure influences knotting properties only marginally. In contrast, mesoscopic models perform poorly in melts with flexible chains. We qualitatively explain our findings through a free energy model of simple knots available in the literature.
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