Abstract

AbstractThe polymer systems are discussed in the framework of the Landau‐Ginzburg model. The model is derived from the mesoscopic Edwards Hamiltonian via the conditional partition function. We discuss flexible, semiflexible and rigid polymers. The following systems are studied: polymer blends, flexible diblock and multi‐block copolymer melts, random copolymer melts, ring polymers, rigid‐flexible diblock copolymer melts, mixtures of copolymers and homopolymers and mixtures of liquid crystalline polymers. Three methods are used to study the systems: mean‐field model, self consistent one‐loop approximation and self consistent field theory. The following problems are studied and discussed: the phase diagrams, scattering intensities and correlation functions, single chain statistics and behavior of single chains close to critical points, fluctuations induced shift of phase boundaries. In particular we shall discuss shrinking of the polymer chains close to the critical point in polymer blends, size of the Ginzburg region in polymer blends and shift of the critical temperature. In the rigid‐flexible diblock copolymers we shall discuss the density nematic order parameter correlation function. The correlation functions in this system are found to oscillate with the characteristic period equal to the length of the rigid part of the diblock copolymer. The density and nematic order parameter measured along the given direction are anticorrelated. In the flexible diblock copolymer system we shall discuss various phases including the double diamond and gyroid structures. The single chain statistics in the disordered phase of a flexible diblock copolymer system is shown to deviate from the Gaussian statistics due to fluctuations. In the one loop approximation one shows that the diblock copolymer chain is stretched in the point where two incompatible blocks meet but also that each block shrinks close to the microphase separation transition. The stretching outweights shrinking and the net result is the increase of the radius of gyration above the Gaussian value. Certain properties of homopolymer/copolymer systems are discussed. Diblock copolymers solubilize two incompatible homopolymers by forming a monolayer interface between them. The interface has a positive saddle splay modulus which means that the interfaces in the disordered phase should be characterized by a negative Gaussian curvature. We also show that in such a mixture the Lifshitz tricritical point is encountered. The properties of this unusual point are presented. The Lifshitz, equimaxima and disorder lines are shown to provide a useful tool for studying local ordering in polymer mixtures. In the liquid crystalline mixtures the isotropic nematic phase transition is discussed. We concentrate on static, equilibrium properties of the polymer systems.

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