Christopher Balzer, Puck Springintveld, Glenn H. Fredrickson
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Phase Behavior of Reversibly Bonding Polymer Blends
Blending polymers is a versatile strategy for creating materials with tailored properties, but controlling the phase behavior of polymer blends remains a central challenge. Functionalization with sparse, associative chemical groups is a powerful way to shift phase behavior without changing individual component properties. We develop a field-theoretic model for heteroassociating polymer blends using the coherent states formalism, enabling an exact treatment of reversible bonding while avoiding explicit enumeration of polymer topologies. This framework captures the full distribution of supramolecular species, including higher-order branching and large clusters, and reveals how correlations between association sites of multifunctional polymers govern thermodynamic behavior across length scales. Using the random phase approximation, we identify conditions for macrophase separation and microphase ordering, and uncover a new motif for microphase separation in which bond density, rather than species density, exhibits spatial variations. These results unify and extend existing theories of reversibly bonding polymers, including phenomena such as gelation, and establish a foundation for designing compatibilizers through polymer architecture and sequence-level control of reversible interactions.
期刊介绍:
Macromolecules publishes original, fundamental, and impactful research on all aspects of polymer science. Topics of interest include synthesis (e.g., controlled polymerizations, polymerization catalysis, post polymerization modification, new monomer structures and polymer architectures, and polymerization mechanisms/kinetics analysis); phase behavior, thermodynamics, dynamic, and ordering/disordering phenomena (e.g., self-assembly, gelation, crystallization, solution/melt/solid-state characteristics); structure and properties (e.g., mechanical and rheological properties, surface/interfacial characteristics, electronic and transport properties); new state of the art characterization (e.g., spectroscopy, scattering, microscopy, rheology), simulation (e.g., Monte Carlo, molecular dynamics, multi-scale/coarse-grained modeling), and theoretical methods. Renewable/sustainable polymers, polymer networks, responsive polymers, electro-, magneto- and opto-active macromolecules, inorganic polymers, charge-transporting polymers (ion-containing, semiconducting, and conducting), nanostructured polymers, and polymer composites are also of interest. Typical papers published in Macromolecules showcase important and innovative concepts, experimental methods/observations, and theoretical/computational approaches that demonstrate a fundamental advance in the understanding of polymers.