EFFECTIVE DIMENSIONS OF OLIGOMERS IN SIZE-EXCLUSION CHROMATOGRAPHY - A MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATION STUDY

Citation
Rh. Boyd et al., EFFECTIVE DIMENSIONS OF OLIGOMERS IN SIZE-EXCLUSION CHROMATOGRAPHY - A MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS SIMULATION STUDY, Macromolecules, 29(4), 1996, pp. 1182-1190
Citations number
17
Categorie Soggetti
Polymer Sciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
00249297
Volume
29
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
1182 - 1190
Database
ISI
SICI code
0024-9297(1996)29:4<1182:EDOOIS>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) is a widely used method for determ ining the molecular weights of polymer molecules. SEC calibration is o ften achieved using the ''universal calibration'' technique, which ass umes hydrodynamic volume is the sole determinate of retention time. Re cent work has demonstrated the failure of this approach when molecular weights are small (< 5000) and particularly in the oligomer range. In order to explore the theoretical reasons for this failure, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been used to compute the partition coef ficients as a function of pore size for oligomeric series of three pol ymers: polyethylene(PE), polyisobutylene (PIE), and polystyrene(PS). T he molecular weight ranges studied were from dimers up to 500 g/mol fo r PE and up to 1000 g/mol for PIE and PS. MD simulation was used to ge nerate a large number of configurations of the various oligomers. Thes e configurations were then used to compute the partition coefficients of the species in cylindrical pores of varying diameters. The MD model of the oligomers included all atoms explicitly and all internal degre es of freedom. Solvent was not included specifically but the configura tions were generated under phantom chain conditions for longer range i nteractions that are appropriate to the theta solvent conditions that prevail for short molecules. The variation of partition coefficient wi th pore size for a given oligomer could be described well by assigning an effective hard-sphere radius, called here the retention radius, to the molecule. The retention radii for an oligomer series were found t o correlate well with the radii of gyration. There were however signif icant differences in the retention radii vs radii of gyration correlat ions among the three series studied. At the same radius of gyration, t he retention radii order is found to be PS > PIB > PE. This order agre es with experimental SEC data for retention times for these oligomer s eries. The differences are attributed to asphericity of individual con figurations enhancing the effects of substituent size. The approach of the mean-square radius of gyration and mean-square end-to-end distanc e dependence on chain length to limiting long-chain behavior is discus sed. It is found that the limiting proportionality to chain length has not been reached in the molecular weight ranges studied. A comparison of the use of the intrinsic viscosity-molecular weight product ([eta] M) as a measure of radius of gyration, the radius of gyration determin ed independently, and the retention radius from simulation as criteria for equal retention times is made. The errors in molecular weight det ermination resulting from the use of each of the three criteria are di scussed. The retention radius from simulation is found to be a signifi cantly better criterion for retention time than the [eta]M product or directly determined radius of gyration.