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Journal ArticleDOI

A Theory of the Linear Viscoelastic Properties of Dilute Solutions of Coiling Polymers

Prince E. Rouse
- 01 Jul 1953 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 7, pp 1272-1280
TLDR
In this paper, the necessary coordination of the motions of different parts of a polymer molecule is made the basis of a theory of the linear viscoelastic properties of dilute solutions of coiling polymers.
Abstract
The necessary coordination of the motions of different parts of a polymer molecule is made the basis of a theory of the linear viscoelastic properties of dilute solutions of coiling polymers. This is accomplished by use of the concept of the submolecule, a portion of polymer chain long enough for the separation of its ends to approximate a Gaussian probability distribution. The configuration of a submolecule is specified in terms of the vector which corresponds to its end‐to‐end separation. The configuration of a molecule which contains N submolecules is described by the corresponding set of N vectors. The action of a velocity gradient disturbs the distribution of configurations of the polymer molecules away from its equilibrium form, storing free energy in the system. The coordinated thermal motions of the segments cause the configurations to drift toward their equilibrium distribution. The coordination is taken into account by the mathematical requirement that motions of the atom which joins two submolecules change the configurations of both submolecules. By means of an orthogonal transformation of coordinates, the coordination of all the motions of the parts of a molecule is resolved into a series of modes. Each mode has a characteristic relaxation time. The theory produces equations by means of which the relaxation times, the components of the complex viscosity, and the components of the complex rigidity can be calculated from the steady flowviscosities of the solution and the solvent, the molecular weight and concentration of the polymer, and the absolute temperature. Limitations of the theory may arise from the exclusion from consideration of (1) very rapid relaxation processes involving segments shorter than the submolecule and (2) the obstruction of the motion of a segment by other segments with which it happens to be in contact. Another possible cause of disagreement between the theory and experimental data is the polydispersity of any actual polymer; this factor is important because the calculated relaxation times increase rapidly with increasing molecular weight.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of helical wormlike chains. I. Dynamic model and diffusion equation

TL;DR: In this article, a model called the discrete helical worm-like chain was constructed for the study of the dynamics of polymer chains, both flexible and stiff, and the configurational diffusion equation was formulated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of cyclic and linear poly(dimethyl siloxanes): 12. Observation of diffusion behaviour by quasielastic neutron scattering

TL;DR: In this article, high-resolution neutron scattering experiments have been used to observe the diffusive motion of low molecular weight linear and cyclic poly(dimethyl siloxane) molecules in dilute solution in deuterated benzene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protracted Crossover to Reptation Dynamics: A Field Cycling 1H NMR Study Including Extremely Low Frequencies

TL;DR: In this paper, the segmental dynamics of 1,4 polybutadiene was investigated by means of electronic field cycling 1H NMR, and the frequency dependence (dispersion) of the spin-lattice relaxation time was probed over a broad range of temperature (223-408 K), molecular mass (355 ≤ M (g/mol) ≤ 441 000), and frequency (200 Hz-30 MHz).
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamical properties of randomly cross‐linked polymer melts: A Monte Carlo study. I. Diffusion dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the authors have studied the diffusion properties of randomly cross-linked polymer melts in the framework of the bond-fluctuation method, and their ideal diffusion behavior was calculated from the connectivity matrices of simulated network samples.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rouse Chains with Excluded Volume Interactions: Linear Viscoelasticity

TL;DR: The present model can describe the solution's rheological behavior even when the solvent quality is good, since excluded volume effects are explicitly taken into account through a narrow Gaussian repulsive potential between pairs of beads in a bead−spring chain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Piezoelectric Crystals and Their Applications to Ultrasonics

Warren P. Mason, +1 more
- 01 May 1951 - 
TL;DR: Piezoelectric crystals and their application to ultrasonics were discussed in this paper, where the authors proposed a method for the extraction of the ultrasonic properties of these crystals.