Abstract

Dissipative Particle Dynamics (DPD) is employed to model the dynamics and rheology of polymer solutions, and suspensions of spherical particles with adsorbed polymers. Static and dynamic scaling relationships for the variation of radius of gyration and relaxation time with polymer chain length are reviewed, demonstrating that the DPD polymer solution model correctly represents the effects of hydrodynamic interaction and excluded volume. Rheological simulations for both polymer solutions and polymer-sphere suspensions predict Newtonian viscosities at low shear rate followed by shear-thinning behavior as a reduced shear rate of unity is approached. Both the Newtonian viscosity and the extent of shear-thinning are greatly enhanced in the case of good solvents, compared to the viscosity curves for polymers and polymer-spheres structures dissolved in theta solvents and poor solvents.

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