Abstract

Discontinuous molecular dynamics simulations are performed on homopolymer/solvent and surfactant/solvent systems. The homopolymer and surfactant molecules are modeled as freely jointed square-well chains. Solvent molecules are modeled as both hard spheres and square-well spheres. We explore how the various interaction parameters affect the types of phase behavior and micellization observed in the homopolymer/solvent and surfactant/solvent systems. Increasing the packing fraction of homopolymers in both hard-sphere solvents and square-well solvents increases the solvent's ability to dissolve homopolymers only when the segment-solvent interaction strength exceeds a critical value. Although only upper critical solution temperature (UCST) behavior is observed for homopolymers in hard-sphere solvents, both UCST and lower critical solution temperature (LCST) behavior are observed for homopolymers in square-well solvents, depending upon the interaction strengths and chain length. This indicates that it is necessary to account for the solvent-solvent attraction to model LCST behavior in supercritical CO2. Our simulation results on surfactants in hard-sphere solvents show that it is necessary to account for the interactions experienced by both the head and tail blocks in order to capture the essential features of surfactant/supercritical CO2 systems.

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