Issue 45, 2014

How does low-molecular-weight polystyrene dissolve: osmotic swelling vs. surface dissolution

Abstract

By means of multiscale hierarchical modeling we study the real time evolution of low-molecular-weight polystyrene, below the glass transition temperature, in contact with its solvent, toluene. We observe two concurrent phenomena taking place: (1) the solvent diffuses into the polymer by a Case II mechanism, leading to osmotic driven swelling and progressive chain dilution (inside-out mechanism); (2) polymer chains are solvated, detach from the interface and move into the solvent before the film is completely swollen (outside-in mechanism). From our simulations we conclude that, below the entanglement length, a thin swollen layer, also observed in previous experiments, forms almost instantaneously, which allows for the outside-in mechanism to start a few tens of nanoseconds after the polymer–solvent initial contact. After this initial transient time the two mechanisms are concurrent. We furthermore observe that the presence of the solvent significantly enhances the mobility of the polymer chains of the surface layer, but only in the direction parallel to the interface.

Graphical abstract: How does low-molecular-weight polystyrene dissolve: osmotic swelling vs. surface dissolution

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
24 Jul 2014
Accepted
17 Sep 2014
First published
19 Sep 2014

Soft Matter, 2014,10, 9059-9064

Author version available

How does low-molecular-weight polystyrene dissolve: osmotic swelling vs. surface dissolution

V. Marcon and N. F. A. van der Vegt, Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 9059 DOI: 10.1039/C4SM01636J

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