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. 2006 Sep 28;125(12):124903.
doi: 10.1063/1.2356469.

The Soret effect in dilute polymer solutions: influence of chain length, chain stiffness, and solvent quality

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The Soret effect in dilute polymer solutions: influence of chain length, chain stiffness, and solvent quality

Meimei Zhang et al. J Chem Phys. .

Abstract

Thermal diffusion in dilute polymer solutions is studied by reverse nonequilibrium molecular dynamics. The polymers are represented by a generic bead-spring model. The influence of the solvent quality on the Soret coefficient is investigated. At constant temperature and monomer fraction, a better solvent quality causes a higher affinity for the polymer to the cold region. This may even go to thermal-diffusion-induced phase separation. The sign of the Soret coefficient changes in a symmetric nonideal binary Lennard-Jones solution when the solvent quality switches from good to poor. The known independence of the thermal diffusion coefficients of the molecular weight is reproduced for three groups of polymers with different chain stiffnesses. The thermal diffusion coefficients reach constant values at chain lengths of around two to three times the persistence length. Moreover, rigid polymers have higher Soret coefficients and thermal diffusion coefficients than more flexible polymers.

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