We study the effect
of entanglements on the glass transition of
high molecular weight polymers, by the comparison of single-chain
nanoparticles (SCNPs) and equilibrated melts of high-molecular weight
polystyrene of identical molecular weight. SCNPs were prepared by
electrospraying technique and characterized using scanning electron
microscopy and atomic force microscopy techniques. Differential scanning
calorimetry, Brillouin light spectroscopy, and rheological experiments
around the glass transition were compared. In parallel, entangled
and disentangled polymer melts were also compared under cooling from
molecular dynamics simulations based on a bead-spring polymer model.
While experiments suggest a small decrease in the glass transition
temperature of films of nanoparticles in comparison to entangled melts,
simulations do not observe any significant difference, despite rather
different chain conformations.