In an effort to look for correlations between viscosity index trends of polymers in oils and size changes of polymers in solution with temperature, the determination of the size of thermo-responsive polymers of various architectures (linear, comb, star, and hyperbranched) using two experimental techniques – dynamic light scattering and small angle neutron scattering, and predictive molecular dynamics simulations is described herein. The aim of this work was to predict their behavior as viscosity index improvers (VIIs) using these tools which require minimal amounts of material, as opposed to measuring kinematic viscosities, which require multi-gram quantities. Conflicting trends were obtained using the different aforementioned techniques due to the inherent physics of the measurements. While we provide potential explanations for the trends observed, the focus of this work remains the assessment of any of these techniques as a predictive tool for polymer behavior in an oil matrix. It was concluded that none of the aforementioned techniques can entirely predict the polymer behavior as VIIs, at least in the temperature range studied (40 °C to 100 °C).
Published: March 17, 2021
Citation
Bhattacharya P., U. Ramasamy, S. Krueger, J.W. Robinson, B.J. Tarasevich, A. Martini, and L. Cosimbescu. 2016.Trends in Thermoresponsive Behavior of Lipophilic Polymers.Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research 55, no. 51:12983–12990.PNNL-SA-120319.doi:10.1021/acs.iecr.6b03812