Abstract

We investigate the structure and thermodynamics of interfaces in dense polymer blends using Monte Carlo (MC) simulations and self-consistent field (SCF) calculations. For structurally symmetric blends we find quantitative agreement between the MC simulations and the SCF calculations for excess quantities of the interface (e.g., interfacial tension or enrichment of copolymers at the interface). However, a quantitative comparison between profiles across the interface in the MC simulations and the SCF calculations has to take due account of capillary waves. While the profiles in the SCF calculations correspond to intrinsic profiles of a perfectly flat interface the local interfacial position fluctuates in the MC simulations. We test this concept by extensive Monte Carlo simulations and study the cross-over between “intrinsic” fluctuations which build up the local profile and capillary waves on long (lateral) length scales. Properties of structurally asymmetric blends are exemplified by investigating polymers of different stiffness. At high incompatibilities the interfacial width is not much larger than the persistence length of the stiffer component. In this limit we find deviations from the predictions of the Gaussian chain model: while the Gaussian chain model yields an increase of the interfacial width upon increasing the persistence length, no such increase is found in the MC simulations. Using a partial enumeration technique, however, we can account for the details of the chain architecture on all length scales in the SCF calculations and achieve good agreement with the MC simulations. In blends containing diblock copolymers we investigate the enrichment of copolymers at the interface and the concomitant reduction of the interfacial tension. At weak segregation the addition of copolymers leads to compatibilization. At high incompatibilities, the homopolymer-rich phase can accommodate only a small fraction of copolymer before the copolymer forms a lamellar phase. The analysis of interfacial fluctuations yields an estimate for the bending rigidity of the interface. The latter quantity is important for the formation of a polymeric microemulsion at intermediate segregation and the consequences for the phase diagram are discussed.

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