Energy Landscape-Guided Virtual Screening of Side-Chain Engineering in Polymer Dynamics Design
H Liu and S Meng and LT Li, POLYMERS, 17, 2298 (2025).
DOI: 10.3390/polym17172298
Side-chain engineering is versatile for tuning the chain mobility of graft polymers and governs their thermal stability. However, it remains elusive to predict the graft effect on chain mobility, especially for competitive side-chain types. Here, relying on molecular dynamics simulation and energy landscape theory, we introduce a three-stage virtual pipeline to sequentially refine the screening of graft chain mobility while minimizing computation cost, by taking the example of grafting similar side-chain types (hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA), methyl methacrylate (MMA), and vinyl acetate (VAC)) onto amorphous polypropylene (PP). Ascribed to their structural similarity, these graft systems exhibit a non-evident chain mobility distinction, with the atom displacement-governing the local "roughness" in potential energy landscape (PEL)-exhibiting only weak-to-modest correlation with their initial atomic energy, volume, and stress. This necessitates the subsequent-stage screening for broader PEL navigation, which confirms a stability and roughness rank of VAC >= MMA > HEMA > PP, with their chain activation energy revealing that these side chains enhance the PEL roughness through a counterbalance between possibly lowering the overall energy barrier but extensively wrinkling the landscape. Overall, the three-stage screening establishes a state-of-the-art efficient strategy to evaluate thermal stability of graft polymers in stepwise higher precision from local to ergodic roughness inspection.
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