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On the bridge hypothesis in the glass transition...
Journal article

On the bridge hypothesis in the glass transition of freestanding polymer films

Abstract

Freestanding thin polymer films with high molecular weights exhibit an anomalous decrease in the glass-transition temperature with film thickness. Specifically, in such materials, the measured glass-transition temperature evolves in an affine way with the film thickness, with a slope that weakly depends on the molecular weight. De Gennes proposed a sliding mechanism as the hypothetical dominant relaxation process in these systems, where stress kinks could propagate in a reptation-like fashion through so-called bridges, i.e. from one free interface to the other along the backbones of polymer macromolecules. Here, by considering the exact statistics of finite-sized random walks within a confined box, we investigate in details the bridge hypothesis. We show that the sliding mechanism cannot reproduce the basic features appearing in the experiments, and we exhibit the fundamental reasons behind such a fact.

Authors

Bonneau H; Arutkin M; Chen R; Forrest JA; Raphaël E; Salez T

Journal

The European Physical Journal E, Vol. 46, No. 3,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2023

DOI

10.1140/epje/s10189-023-00272-z

ISSN

1292-8941

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