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Dive into the research topics where Bart Vorselaars is active.

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Featured researches published by Bart Vorselaars.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

Deforming glassy polystyrene : Influence of pressure, thermal history, and deformation mode on yielding and hardening

Bart Vorselaars; A Alexey Lyulin; Maj Thijs Michels

The toughness of a polymer glass is determined by the interplay of yielding, strain softening, and strain hardening. Molecular-dynamics simulations of a typical polymer glass, atactic polystyrene, under the influence of active deformation have been carried out to enlighten these processes. It is observed that the dominant interaction for the yield peak is of interchain nature and for the strain hardening of intrachain nature. A connection is made with the microscopic cage-to-cage motion. It is found that the deformation does not lead to complete erasure of the thermal history but that differences persist at large length scales. Also we find that the strain-hardening modulus increases with increasing external pressure. This new observation cannot be explained by current theories such as the one based on the entanglement picture and the inclusion of this effect will lead to an improvement in constitutive modeling.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2010

Efficient on the fly calculation of time correlation functions in computer simulations

Jorge Ramirez; Sathish K. Sukumaran; Bart Vorselaars; Alexei E. Likhtman

Time correlation functions yield profound information about the dynamics of a physical system and hence are frequently calculated in computer simulations. For systems whose dynamics span a wide range of time, currently used methods require significant computer time and memory. In this paper, we discuss the multiple-tau correlator method for the efficient calculation of accurate time correlation functions on the fly during computer simulations. The multiple-tau correlator is efficacious in terms of computational requirements and can be tuned to the desired level of accuracy. Further, we derive estimates for the error arising from the use of the multiple-tau correlator and extend it for use in the calculation of mean-square particle displacements and dynamic structure factors. The method described here, in hardware implementation, is routinely used in light scattering experiments but has not yet found widespread use in computer simulations.


Soft Matter | 2011

Self-consistent field theory for diblock copolymers grafted to a sphere

Bart Vorselaars; Jaeup U. Kim; Tanya L. Chantawansri; Glenn H. Fredrickson; Mark W. Matsen

An efficient numerical self-consistent field theory (SCFT) algorithm is developed for treating structured polymers on spherical surfaces. The method solves the diffusion equations of SCFT with a pseudo-spectral approach that combines a spherical-harmonics expansion for the angular coordinates with a modified real-space Crank–Nicolson method for the radial direction. The self-consistent field equations are solved with Anderson-mixing iterations using dynamical parameters and an alignment procedure to prevent angular drift of the solution. A demonstration of the algorithm is provided for thin films of diblock copolymer grafted to the surface of a spherical core, in which the sequence of equilibrium morphologies is predicted as a function of diblock composition. The study reveals an array of interesting behaviors as the block copolymer pattern is forced to adapt to the finite surface area of the sphere.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

Solid–liquid interfacial free energy of ice Ih, ice Ic, and ice 0 within a mono-atomic model of water via the capillary wave method

Michael Ambler; Bart Vorselaars; Michael P. Allen; David Quigley

We apply the capillary wave method, based on measurements of fluctuations in a ribbon-like interfacial geometry, to determine the solid-liquid interfacial free energy for both polytypes of ice I and the recently proposed ice 0 within a mono-atomic model of water. We discuss various choices for the molecular order parameter, which distinguishes solid from liquid, and demonstrate the influence of this choice on the interfacial stiffness. We quantify the influence of discretisation error when sampling the interfacial profile and the limits on accuracy imposed by the assumption of quasi one-dimensional geometry. The interfacial free energies of the two ice I polytypes are indistinguishable to within achievable statistical error and the small ambiguity which arises from the choice of order parameter. In the case of ice 0, we find that the large surface unit cell for low index interfaces constrains the width of the interfacial ribbon such that the accuracy of results is reduced. Nevertheless, we establish that the interfacial free energy of ice 0 at its melting temperature is similar to that of ice I under the same conditions. The rationality of a core-shell model for the nucleation of ice I within ice 0 is questioned within the context of our results.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

A unified approach to computation of solid and liquid free energy to revisit the solid-fluid equilibrium of Lennard-Jones chains

Bart Vorselaars

Liquid free energies are computed by integration along a path from a reference system of known free energy, using a strong localization potential. A particular choice of localization pathway is introduced, convenient for use in molecular dynamics codes, and which achieves accurate results without the need to include the identity-swap or relocation Monte Carlo moves used in previous studies. Moreover, an adaptive timestep is introduced to attain the reference system. Furthermore, a center-of-mass correction that is different from previous studies and phase-independent is incorporated. The resulting scheme allows computation of both solid and liquid free energies with only minor differences in simulation protocol. This is used to re-visit solid-liquid equilibrium in a system of short semi-flexible Lennard-Jones chain molecules. The computed melting curve is demonstrated to be consistent with direct co-existence simulations and computed hysteresis loops, provided that an entropic term arising from unsampled solid states is included.


EPL | 2005

Strain softening and hardening of amorphous polymers: Atomistic simulation of bulk mechanics and local dynamics

A Alexey Lyulin; Bart Vorselaars; Mikhail A. Mazo; N. K. Balabaev; Maj Thijs Michels


Macromolecules | 2009

Microscopic mechanisms of strain hardening in glassy polymers

Bart Vorselaars; A Alexey Lyulin; Maj Thijs Michels


Macromolecules | 2007

Development of heterogeneity near the glass transition: phenyl-ring-flip motions in polystyrene

Bart Vorselaars; A Alexey Lyulin; Maj Thijs Michels


Physical Review E | 2007

Non-Gaussian nature of glassy dynamics by cage to cage motion

Bart Vorselaars; A Alexey Lyulin; K. Karatasos; Maj Thijs Michels


Macromolecules | 2006

Monte Carlo Simulation of Uniaxial Tension of an Amorphous Polyethylene-like Polymer Glass

J Jianfeng Li; T Tim Mulder; Bart Vorselaars; A Alexey Lyulin; Maj Thijs Michels

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A Alexey Lyulin

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Maj Thijs Michels

Eindhoven University of Technology

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T Tim Mulder

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Jorge Ramirez

Technical University of Madrid

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