2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session H2: Polymer Physics Prize Symposium Honoring Steve Granick
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Room: Spirit of Pittsburgh Ballroom BC
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: MIchael Rubinstein, University of North Carolina
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.H2.4
Abstract: H2.00004 : The Challenge of Understanding the ``Complexity'' of Polymeric Fluids and Solutions
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Jack Douglas
(Polymers Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology)
It is well known that the complexity of polymer conformational
shapes makes this class of molecules prone to glass formation and
that high molecular mass polymers exhibit rubbery viscoelastic
flow properties associated with their topological and packing
interactions. Many natural and synthetic polymers also exhibit
complex associative interactions arising from the
variation of chemical species and the presence of charged and
polar groups within the molecule that can give rise to polymer
supermolecular organization into a wide range of fragile
structures at the nanoscale and larger. There are changes in both
the thermodynamics and dynamics of these fluids associated with
these general patterns of ``complex fluid'' behavior
that provide a fundamental challenge for theoretical
understanding so that this field remains at the frontier of
materials science.
The high level of regularity observed in the relatively high
frequency glassy dynamics of polymer fluids, and other glass
forming liquids more broadly, and in the viscoelastic properties
that define chain ``entanglement'' in high molecular mass
polymers, provides some hope for a general theoretical framework
describing the complex fluid dynamics of polymeric fluids.
Specifically, it is argued, and supported by evidence, that the
complex fluid behavior underlying glass formation, entanglement
and self-assembly in polymeric fluids all involve emergent
collective behavior taking the form of supermolecular polymer
structures that form and disintegrate in dynamic equilibrium.
This ``dynamic heterogeneity'' paradigm, which is not addressed
by conventional mean field theories such as the mode-coupling
model of glass formation and the reptation model, provides a
framework for understanding many aspects of the linear and
non-linear dynamics of polymer complex fluid behavior such as
stretched exponential stress relaxation, and shear thinning and
``aging'' following cessation of flow. It also provides a
framework for understanding the influence of nanoparticles, and
other additives to polymeric fluids, that modify the fluid
mesoscale structure, often with significant changes in material
properties.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.H2.4