Abstract

Computer simulation studies on the miscibility behavior and single chain properties in binary polymer blends are reviewed. We consider blends of various architectures in order to identify important architectural parameters on a coarse grained level and study their qualitative consequences for the miscibility behavior. The phase diagram, the relation between the exchange chemical potential and the composition, and the intermolecular pair correlation functions for symmetric blends of linear chains, blends of cyclic polymers, blends with an asymmetry in cohesive energies, blends with different chain lengths, blends with distinct monomer shapes, and blends with a stiffness disparity between the components are discussed. For strictly symmetric blends the Flory-Huggins theory becomes quantitatively correct in the long chain length limit, when the χ parameter is identified via the intermolecular pair correlation function. For small chain lengths composition fluctuations are important. They manifest themselves in 3D Ising behavior at the critical point and an upward parabolic curvature of the χ parameter from small-angle neutron scattering close to the critical point. The ratio between the mean field estimate and the true critical temperature decreases like √χ/(ρb3) for long chain lengths. The chain conformations in the minority phase of a symmetric blend shrink as to reduce the number of energeticaly unfavorable interactions. Scaling arguments, detailed self-consistent field calculations and Monte Carlo simulations of chains with up to 512 effective segments agree that the conformational changes decrease around the critical point like 1/√N. Other mechanisms for a composition dependence of the single chain conformations in asymmetric blends are discussed. If the constituents of the blends have non-additive monomer shapes, one has a large positive chain-length-independent entropic contribution to the χ parameter. In this case the blend phase separates upon heating at a lower critical solution temperature. Upon increasing the chain length the critical temperature approaches a finite value from above. For blends with a stiffness disparity an entropic contribution of the χ parameter of the order 10–3 is measured with high accuracy. Also the enthalpic contribution increases, because a back folding of the stiffer component is suppressed and the stiffer chains possess more intermolecular contacts. Two aspects of the single chain dynamics in blends are discussed: (a) The dynamics of short non-entangled chains in a binary blend are studied via dynamic Monte Carlo simulations. There is hardly any coupling between the chain dynamics and the thermodynamic state of the mixture. Above the critical temperatures both the translational diffusion and the relaxation of the chain conformations are independent of the temperature. (b) Irreversible reactions of a small fraction of reactive polymers at a strongly segregated interface in a symmetric binary polymer blend are investigated. End-functionalized homopolymers of different species react at the interface instantaneously and irreversibly to form diblock copolymers. The initial reaction rate for small reactant concentrations is time dependent and larger than expected from theory. At later times there is a depletion of the reactive chains at the interface and the reaction is determined by the flux of the chains to the interface. Pertinent off-lattice simulations and analytical theories are briefly discussed.

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