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Dive into the research topics where Brandon L. Peters is active.

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Featured researches published by Brandon L. Peters.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

A multichain polymer slip-spring model with fluctuating number of entanglements for linear and nonlinear rheology

Abelardo Ramírez-Hernández; Brandon L. Peters; Marat Andreev; Jay D. Schieber; Juan J. de Pablo

A theoretically informed entangled polymer simulation approach is presented for description of the linear and non-linear rheology of entangled polymer melts. The approach relies on a many-chain representation and introduces the topological effects that arise from the non-crossability of molecules through effective fluctuating interactions, mediated by slip-springs, between neighboring pairs of macromolecules. The total number of slip-springs is not preserved but, instead, it is controlled through a chemical potential that determines the average molecular weight between entanglements. The behavior of the model is discussed in the context of a recent theory for description of homogeneous materials, and its relevance is established by comparing its predictions to experimental linear and non-linear rheology data for a series of well-characterized linear polyisoprene melts. The results are shown to be in quantitative agreement with experiment and suggest that the proposed formalism may also be used to describe the dynamics of inhomogeneous systems, such as composites and copolymers. Importantly, the fundamental connection made here between our many-chain model and the well-established, thermodynamically consistent single-chain mean-field models provides a path to systematic coarse-graining for prediction of polymer rheology in structurally homogeneous and heterogeneous materials.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2017

Coarse-Grained Modeling of Polyethylene Melts: Effect on Dynamics

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.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

A multi-chain polymer slip-spring model with fluctuating number of entanglements: Density fluctuations, confinement, and phase separation

Abelardo Ramírez-Hernández; Brandon L. Peters; Ludwig Schneider; Marat Andreev; Jay D. Schieber; Marcus Müller; Juan J. de Pablo

Coarse grained simulation approaches provide powerful tools for the prediction of the equilibrium properties of polymeric systems. Recent efforts have sought to develop coarse-graining strategies capable of predicting the non-equilibrium behavior of entangled polymeric materials. Slip-link and slip-spring models, in particular, have been shown to be capable of reproducing several key aspects of the linear response and rheology of polymer melts. In this work, we extend a previously proposed multi-chain slip-spring model in a way that correctly incorporates the effects of the fluctuating environment in which polymer segments are immersed. The model is used to obtain the equation of state associated with the slip-springs, and the results are compared to those of related numerical approaches and an approximate analytical expression. The model is also used to examine a polymer melt confined into a thin film, where an inhomogeneous distribution of polymer segments is observed, and the corresponding inhomogeneities associated with density fluctuations are reflected on the spatial slip-spring distribution.


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Chain Length Dispersity Effects on Mobility of Entangled Polymers.

Brandon L. Peters; K. Michael Salerno; Ting Ge; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest

While nearly all theoretical and computational studies of entangled polymer melts have focused on uniform samples, polymer synthesis routes always result in some dispersity, albeit narrow, of distribution of molecular weights (Đ_{M}=M_{w}/M_{n}∼1.02-1.04). Here, the effects of dispersity on chain mobility are studied for entangled, disperse melts using a coarse-grained model for polyethylene. Polymer melts with chain lengths set to follow a Schulz-Zimm distribution for the same average M_{w}=36  kg/mol with Đ_{M}=1.0 to 1.16, were studied for times of 600-800  μs using molecular dynamics simulations. This time frame is longer than the time required to reach the diffusive regime. We find that dispersity in this range does not affect the entanglement time or tube diameter. However, while there is negligible difference in the average mobility of chains for the uniform distribution Đ_{M}=1.0 and Đ_{M}=1.02, the shortest chains move significantly faster than the longest ones offering a constraint release pathway for the melts for larger Đ_{M}.


Archive | 2012

Integration of Block-Copolymer with Nano-Imprint Lithography: Pushing the Boundaries of Emerging Nano-Patterning Technology.

Geoffrey L. Brennecka; David Bruce Burckel; Chu-Yeu Peter Yang; Matthew C George; J. L. Skinner; Charles A. Steinhaus; Steven R. J. Brueck; Ruichao Zhu; Alex K. Raub; Paul F. Nealey; Juan J. de Pablo; Chi-Chun Liu; Darin Q. Pike; Lance Williamson; Brandon L. Peters

The extreme nanoscale features prescribed by the International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS, e.g., 11nm half-pitch for dense patterns and 4.5nm critical dimensions by 2022) require infrastructure-heavy extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and/or


Macromolecules | 2013

Dynamical Simulations of Coarse Grain Polymeric Systems: Rouse and Entangled Dynamics

Abelardo Ramírez-Hernández; Francois Detcheverry; Brandon L. Peters; V.C. Chappa; Kenneth S. Schweizer; Marcus Müller; Juan J. de Pablo


Macromolecules | 2012

Nonequilibrium Simulations of Lamellae Forming Block Copolymers under Steady Shear: A Comparison of Dissipative Particle Dynamics and Brownian Dynamics

Brandon L. Peters; Abelardo Ramírez-Hernández; Darin Q. Pike; Marcus Müller; Juan J. de Pablo


Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 2015

Graphoepitaxial assembly of cylinder forming block copolymers in cylindrical holes

Brandon L. Peters; Ben Rathsack; Mark Somervell; T. Nakano; Gerard M. Schmid; Juan J. de Pablo


Physical Review Letters | 2018

Effect of Chain Length Dispersity on the Mobility of Entangled Polymers

Brandon L. Peters; K. Michael Salerno; Ting Ge; Dvora Perahia; Gary S. Grest


Archive | 2018

Resolving Properties of Entangled Polymers Melts Through Atomistic Derived Coarse-Grained Models

Gary S. Grest; K. Michael Salerno; Brandon L. Peters; Ting Ge; Dvora Perahia

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Gary S. Grest

Sandia National Laboratories

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K. Michael Salerno

Sandia National Laboratories

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Marcus Müller

University of Göttingen

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Ting Ge

Johns Hopkins University

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Jay D. Schieber

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Anupriya Agrawal

Washington University in St. Louis

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