Colorado State University NSF-REU Summer Program in Materials Chemistry Research:

Synthesis, Characterization, and Device Fabrication

Grzegorz Szamel

For more information, visit our group webpage…

The broad goal of research in the Szamel group is to be able to predict the macroscopic equilibrium and dynamic properties of complex materials such as colloidal and polymeric fluids, and supercooled simple liquids and glasses. We are currently working on the dynamics of ring and star polymers and on self-diffusion and vibrational relaxation in simple liquids. The present understanding of dynamics of linear polymer chains is based on an assumption that in the melt, a given chain moves like a snake. Ring polymers, having no ends, cannot move over large distances via snake-like motions. It was argued that this leads to a very slow dynamics of ring polymers in the melt. Using computer simulations we have found that rings in the melt diffuse faster than linear chains with the same degree of polymerization!

In the area of polymer dynamics possible research projects may involve analysis of molecular motions in melts of ring polymers or investigation of dynamics of other polymer architectures. In addition, we are interested in computer simulations of simple models of glassy systems. A new area of research concerns properties of materials in stationary non-equilibrium states (e.g. flowing colloidal suspensions).

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