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Applications of commodity polymers are often hindered by their low thermal conductivity. In these systems, going from the standard polymers dictated by weak van der Waals interactions to biocompatible hydrogen bonded smart polymers, the thermal transport coefficient k varies between 0.1 - 0.4 W/Km. Combining all-atom molecular dynamics simulations with some experiments, we study thermal transport and its link to the elastic response of commodity plastics. We find that there exists a maximum attainable stiffness (or sound wave velocity), thus providing an upper bound of k for these solid polymers. The specific chemical structure and the glass transition temperature play no role in controlling k, especially when the microscopic interactions are hydrogen bonding based. Our results are consistent with the minimum thermal conductivity model and existing experiments. The effect of polymer stretching on k is also discussed.
We study the phenomenon of migration of the small molecular weight component of a binary polymer mixture to the free surface using mean field and self-consistent field theories. By proposing a free energy functional that incorporates polymer-matrix e
Descriptors that characterize the geometry and topology of the pore space of porous media are intimately linked to their transport properties. We quantify such descriptors, including pore-size functions and the critical pore radius $delta_c$, for fou
Disordered biopolymer gels have striking mechanical properties including strong nonlinearities. In the case of athermal gels (such as collagen-I) the nonlinearity has long been associated with a crossover from a bending dominated to a stretching domi
Thermal and other transport coefficients were recently shown to be largely independent of the microscopic representation of the energy (current) densities or, more generally, of the relevant conserved densities/currents. In this paper we show how thi
The holographic principle has proven successful in linking seemingly unrelated problems in physics; a famous example is the gauge-gravity duality. Recently, intriguing correspondences between the physics of soft matter and gravity are emerging, inclu