Abstract

The role of the torsional potential in bulk polymer chain dynamics is investigated via molecular dynamics simulation using polyethylene as a model system. A number of three-fold barrier values, both greater and less than the standard one, were invoked. The one-fold potential that determines the gauche vs trans energy difference was also varied. For each of the selected torsional potentials, the MD volumetric glass transition temperature, Tg, was located. It was found that Tg is quite sensitive to the three-fold barrier magnitude, moving from below 100 K to nearly 400 K as the barrier goes from zero to twice the standard value. However Tg was found to be quite insensitive to the gauche trans energy difference. Details of the conformational dynamics were studied for the case of a zero torsional potential. This included the rate and location of conformational transitions, the decay of the torsional angle autocorrelation function (ACF) and the cooperativity of conformational transitions, all as a function of temperature. The temperature dependence of the conformational transition rate remains Arrhenius at all temperatures. The relaxation time characterizing the torsional angle ACF decay exhibits WLF temperature behavior. The conformational transitions are randomly distributed over the bonds at high temperature, but near Tg they become spatially heterogeneous and localized. The transitions show next-neighbor correlation as well as self-correlated forward-backward transitions. All of these features are similar to those found in previous simulations under the standard torsional potential.

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