Abstract Interface characteristics of polystyrene (PS) melts in free-standing thin films and on a graphite surface were investigated by molecular dynamics simulations employing an explicit all-atom force field. The calculated… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Interface characteristics of polystyrene (PS) melts in free-standing thin films and on a graphite surface were investigated by molecular dynamics simulations employing an explicit all-atom force field. The calculated surface tension is in good agreement with experiment, which provides good support for the force field parameters employed. In the polymer/vacuum free-surface region, the density profile exhibits an enrichment of phenyl groups relative to the backbone alkyl groups at the outermost low-density free surface, but this free surface is followed by a layer of relatively depleted phenyls and enriched alkyls of ca. 7 A thickness. In the free surface, the phenyl-ring normal vectors and backbone chain vectors are both preferentially oriented along the film surface, in agreement with available experiments. At the polymer/graphite interface, the backbone chain vectors are strongly oriented along the graphite surface whereas the orientation distribution of phenyl-ring normal vectors exhibits two maxima along the nearly parallel (20°) and the perpendicular direction to the graphite-surface normal. A densely packed structure is formed at the PS-graphite interface, which strongly decreases the segmental chain mobility, in contrast to the enhanced segmental mobility in the free-surface region.
               
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