Abstract
AbstractAs a coarse‐grained model for dense amorphous polymer systems interacting with solid walls (i.e., the fiber surface in a composite), the bond fluctuation model of flexible polymer chains confined between two repulsive surfaces is studied by extensive Monte Carlo simulations. Choosing a potential for the length of an effective bond that favors rather long bonds, the full temperature region from ordinary polymer melts down to the glass transition is accessible. It is shown that in the supercooled state near the glass transition an “interphase” forms near the walls, where the structure of the melt is influenced by the surface. This “interphase” already shows up in static properties, but also has an effect on monomer mobilities and the corresponding relaxation behavior of the polymer matrix. The thickness of the interphase is extracted from monomer density oscillations near the walls and is found to be strongly temperature dependent. It is ultimately larger than the gyration radius of the polymer chains. Effects of shear deformation on this model are simulated by choosing asymmetric jump rates near the moving wall (large jump rate in the direction of motion, and a small rate against it). It is studied how this dynamic perturbation propagates into the bulk of the polymer matrix.
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