We study the effective interactions between nanoparticles immersed in an athermal polymer solution using Molecular dynamics. The directly measured polymer-induced depletion forces are well described with a scaling model in which the attraction between particles is caused by the depletion of concentration blobs and thus independent of the length of the polymer chains. We find strong evidence for a repulsive barrier which arises when the distance between the particles is of the order of the correlation length of the solution and which can be interpreted as a packing effect of concentration blobs. Interestingly, the scaling picture can be extended into the regime in which higher virial coefficients of the polymer solution become relevant. We derive a universal relation between the attraction force at the particle contact, f(0), and the osmotic pressure Π as f(0)∼Π(2/3), demonstrating its validity over a wide range of concentrations of the polymer solution.
The properties of polymer-nanoparticle (NP) mixtures significantly depend on the dispersion of the NPs. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that, in the presence of polymer-NP attraction, the dispersion of NPs in semidilute and concentrated polymers can be stabilized by increasing the polymer concentration. A lower polymer concentration facilitates the aggregation of NPs bridged by polymer chains, as well as a further increase of the polymer-NP attraction. Evaluating the binding of NPs through shared polymer segments in an adsorption blob, we derive a linear relationship between the polymer concentration and the polymer-NP attraction at the phase boundary between dispersed and aggregated NPs. Our theoretical findings are directly relevant for understanding and controlling many self-assembly processes that use either dispersion or aggregation of NPs to yield the desired materials.
Controlling the nanoparticle (NP) diffusion in polymers is a prerequisite to obtain polymer nanocomposites (PNCs) with desired dynamical and rheological properties and to achieve targeted delivery of nanomedicine in biological systems. Here we determine the suppression mechanism of direct NP-polymer attraction to hamper the NP mobility in adsorbing polymers and then quantify the dependence of the effective viscosity η felt by the NP on the adsorption duration τ of polymers on the NP using scaling theory analysis and molecular dynamics simulations. We propose and confirm that participation of adsorbed chains in the NP motion break up at time intervals beyond τ due to the rearrangement of polymer segments at the NP surface, which accounts for the onset of Fickian NP diffusion on a time scale of t ≈ τ. We develop a power law, η ∼ (τ), where ν is the scaling exponent of the dependence of polymer coil size on the chain length, which leads to a theoretical basis for the design of PNCs and nanomedicine with desired applications through tuning the polymer adsorption duration.
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we study the properties of liquid state polymer-nanoparticle composites confined between two parallel substrates, with an attractive polymer-substrate interaction. Polymers are in the semidilute regime at concentrations far above the overlap point, and nanoparticles are in good solvent and without enthalpic attraction to the substrates. An increase of temperature then triggers the crystallization of nanoparticles on one of the two substrate surfaces-a surprising phenomenon, which is explained in terms of scaling theory, such as through competing effects of adsorption-and correlation blobs. Moreover, we show that the first, closely packed layer of nanoparticles on the substrate increases the depletion attraction of additional nanoparticles from the bulk, thereby enhancing and stabilizing the formation of a crystalline phase on the substrate. Within the time frame accessible to our numerical simulations, the crystallization of nanoparticles was irreversible; that is, their crystalline phase, once created, remained undamaged after a decrease of the temperature. Our study leads to a class of thermoreactive nanomaterials, in which the transition between a homogeneous state with dissolved nanoparticles and a surface-crystallized state is triggered by a temperature jump.
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