Issue 2, 2020

Viscoelasticity in associating oligomers and polymers: experimental test of the bond lifetime renormalization model

Abstract

Recent findings that the association bond lifetimes τα* in associating polymers diverge from their supramolecular network relaxation times τc challenge past theories. The bond lifetime renormalization proposed by Rubinstein and coworkers [Stukalin et al., Macromolecules, 2013, 46, 7525] provides a promising explanation. To examine systematically its applicability, we employ shear rheology and dielectric spectroscopy to study telechelic associating polymers with different main chain (polypropylene glycol and polydimethylsiloxane), molecular weight (below entanglement molecular weight) and end groups (amide, and carboxylic acid) which form dimeric associations by hydrogen bonding. The separation between τc (probed by rheology) and τα* (probed by dielectric spectroscopy) strongly increases with chain length as qualitatively predicted by the model. However, to describe the increase quantitatively, a transition from Rouse to reptation dynamics must be assumed. This suggests that dynamics of super-chains must be considered to properly describe the transient network.

Graphical abstract: Viscoelasticity in associating oligomers and polymers: experimental test of the bond lifetime renormalization model

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Sep 2019
Accepted
02 Dec 2019
First published
16 Dec 2019

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 390-401

Author version available

Viscoelasticity in associating oligomers and polymers: experimental test of the bond lifetime renormalization model

S. Ge, M. Tress, K. Xing, P. Cao, T. Saito and A. P. Sokolov, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 390 DOI: 10.1039/C9SM01930H

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