A peculiarity of thermal motion of very long linear macromolecules in entangled polymer melts or concentrated polymer solutions is reptation.
Two closely related concepts are reptons and entanglement. A repton is a mobile point residing in the cells of a lattice, connected by bonds. Entanglement means the topological restriction of molecular motion by other chains.
The Mass diffusivity of the chain through the tube may then be written as
From the preceding analysis, we see that molecular mass has a very strong effect on relaxation time in entangled polymer systems. Indeed, this is significantly different from the untangled case, where relaxation time is observed to be proportional to molecular mass. This strong effect can be understood by recognizing that, as chain length increases, the number of tangles present will dramatically increase. These tangles serve to reduce chain mobility. The corresponding increase in relaxation time can result in Viscoelasticity behavior, which is often observed in polymer melts. Note that
the polymer’s zero-shear viscosity gives an approximation of the actual observed dependency, ;
Entanglements with other polymer chains restrict polymer chain motion to a thin virtual tube passing through the restrictions. Without breaking polymer chains to allow the restricted chain to pass through it, the chain must be pulled or flow through the restrictions. The mechanism for movement of the chain through these restrictions is called reptation.
In the blob model, the polymer chain is made up of of individual length . The chain is assumed to form blobs between each entanglement, containing Kuhn length segments in each. The mathematics of random walks can show that the average end-to-end distance of a section of a polymer chain, made up of Kuhn lengths is . Therefore if there are total Kuhn lengths, and blobs on a particular chain:
The total end-to-end length of the restricted chain is then:
This is the average length a polymer molecule must diffuse to escape from its particular tube, and so the characteristic time for this to happen can be calculated using diffusive equations. A classical derivation gives the reptation time :
The linear macromolecules reptate if the length of macromolecule is bigger than the critical entanglement molecular weight . is 1.4 to 3.5 times .
Due to the reptation motion the coefficient of self-diffusion and conformational relaxation times of macromolecules depend on the length of macromolecule as and , correspondingly. The conditions of existence of reptation in the thermal motion of macromolecules of complex architecture (macromolecules in the form of branch, star, comb and others) have not been established yet.
The dynamics of shorter chains or of long chains at short times is usually described by the Rouse model.
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