Anupriya Agrawal
Washington University in St. Louis
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Anupriya Agrawal.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2017
Brandon L. Peters; K. Michael Salerno; Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
The distinctive viscoelastic behavior of polymers results from a coupled interplay of motion on multiple length and time scales. Capturing the broad time and length scales of polymer motion remains a challenge. Using polyethylene (PE) as a model macromolecule, we construct coarse-grained (CG) models of PE with three to six methyl groups per CG bead and probe two critical aspects of the technique: pressure corrections required after iterative Boltzmann inversion (IBI) to generate CG potentials that match the pressure of reference fully atomistic melt simulations and the transferability of CG potentials across temperatures. While IBI produces nonbonded pair potentials that give excellent agreement between the atomistic and CG pair correlation functions, the resulting pressure for the CG models is large compared with the pressure of the atomistic system. We find that correcting the potential to match the reference pressure leads to nonbonded interactions with much deeper minima and slightly smaller effective bead diameter. However, simulations with potentials generated by IBI and pressure-corrected IBI result in similar mean-square displacements (MSDs) and stress autocorrelation functions G(t) for PE melts. While the time rescaling factor required to match CG and atomistic models is the same for pressure- and non-pressure-corrected CG models, it strongly depends on temperature. Transferability was investigated by comparing the MSDs and stress autocorrelation functions for potentials developed at different temperatures.
Langmuir | 2017
Dipak Aryal; Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
Controlling the structure and dynamics of thin films of ionizable polymers at water interfaces is critical to their many applications. As the chemical diversity within one polymer is increased, controlling the structure and dynamics of the polymer, which is a key to their use, becomes a challenge. Here molecular dynamics simulations (MD) are used to obtain molecular insight into the structure and dynamics of thin films of one such macromolecule at the interface with water. The polymer consists of an ABCBA topology with randomly sulfonated polystyrene (C), tethered symmetrically to flexible poly(ethylene-r-propylene) blocks (B), and end-capped by a poly(t-butylstyrene) block (A). The compositions of the interfacial and bulk regions of thin films of the ABCBA polymers are followed as a function of exposure time to water. We find that interfacial rearrangements take place where buried ionic segments migrate toward the water interface. The hydrophobic blocks collapse and rearrange to minimize their exposure to water. The water that initially drives interfacial reengagements breaks the ionic clusters within the film, forming a dynamic hydrophilic internal network within the hydrophobic segments.
Physical Review E | 2015
Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
European Physical Journal-special Topics | 2016
K. Michael Salerno; Anupriya Agrawal; Brandon L. Peters; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
Macromolecules | 2014
Anupriya Agrawal; Dipak Aryal; Dvora Perahia; Ting Ge; Gary S. Grest
Macromolecules | 2017
Dipak Aryal; Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Brandon L. Peters; Gary S. Grest; K. Michael Salerno; Anupriya Agrawal; Dvora Perahia
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Anupriya Agrawal; Ting Ge; Pieter J. in 't Veld; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Anupriya Agrawal