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Distributed Multiscale Simulations of Clay-Polymer Nanocomposites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 May 2012

James Suter
Affiliation:
Centre for Computational Science, University College London, 20 Gower Street, WC1H 0AJ London, United Kingdom
Derek Groen
Affiliation:
Centre for Computational Science, University College London, 20 Gower Street, WC1H 0AJ London, United Kingdom
Lara Kabalan
Affiliation:
Centre for Computational Science, University College London, 20 Gower Street, WC1H 0AJ London, United Kingdom
Peter V. Coveney
Affiliation:
Centre for Computational Science, University College London, 20 Gower Street, WC1H 0AJ London, United Kingdom
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Abstract

The mechanical enhancement of polymers when clay nanoparticles are dispersed within it depends on factors over various length scales; for example, the orientation of the clay platelets in the polymer matrix will affect the mechanical resistance of the composite, while at the shortest scale the molecular arrangement and the adhesion energy of the polymer molecules in the galleries and the vicinity of the clay-polymer interface will also affect the overall mechanical properties.

In this paper, we address the challenge of creating a hierarchal multiscale modelling scheme to traverse a sufficiently wide range of time and length scales to simulate clay-polymer nanocomposites effectively. This scheme varies from the electronic structure (to capture the polymer – clay interactions, especially those of the reactive clay edges) through classical atomistic molecular dynamics to coarse-grained models (to capture the long length scale structure).

Such a scenario is well suited to distributed computing with each level of the scheme allocated to a suitable computational resource. We describe how the e-infrastructure and tools developed by the MAPPER (Multiscale Applications on European e-Infrastructures) project facilitates our multiscale scheme. Using this new technology, we have simulated clay-polymer systems containing up to several million atoms/particles. This system size is firmly within the mesoscopic regime, containing several clay platelets with the edges of the platelets explicitly resolved. We show preliminary results of a “bottom-up” multiscale simulation of a clay platelet dispersion in poly(ethylene) glycol.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2012

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References

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