Abstract
Polypropylene (PP) and polystyrene (PS) underwent a comprehensive investigation into their mechanical and chemical degradation through reactive molecular dynamics simulations. The simulations utilized the ReaxFF force field for CHO (carbon-hydrogen-oxygen) systems in the combustion branch. The study included equilibrium simulations to determine densities and melting temperatures, non-equilibrium simulations for stress-strain and Young moduli determination, mechanical cleaving to identify surface species resulting from material fragmentation, and shock compression simulations to elucidate chemical reactions activated by some external energy sources. The results indicate that material properties such as densities, phase transition temperatures, and Young moduli are accurately reproduced by the ReaxFF-CHO force field. The reactive dynamics analysis yielded crucial insights into the surface composition of fragmented polymers. Both polymers exhibited backbone breakage, leaving -CH2· and –CH·- radicals as terminals. PP demonstrated substantial fragmentation, while PS showed a tendency to develop crosslinks. A detailed analysis of chemical reactions resulting from increasing activation due to increasing value of compression pressure is presented and discussed.
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