Surface phase transitions in polymer systems

K. De'Bell and Turab Lookman
Rev. Mod. Phys. 65, 87 – Published 1 January 1993
PDFExport Citation

Abstract

Self-avoiding walks, lattice trees, and related geometrical models provide a link between the physics of polymers and the study of critical phenomena. In particular, these models in the presence of a surface provide insight into surface adsorption in dilute polymer systems in a good solvent. The theme of this review is the influence of polymer structure (topology) on the critical properties of these models. Emphasis is placed on recent results by rigorous methods, scaling theory, and conformal covariance theory. Numerical results that may be used to test the predictions of scaling of scaling and conformal covariance theories are also summarized. Related topics such as the adsorption of directed polymers, the semidilute regime, the theta point and theta solvents, and percolation (polymer gels) are briefly discussed in the final section.

    DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/RevModPhys.65.87

    ©1993 American Physical Society

    Authors & Affiliations

    K. De'Bell* and Turab Lookman

    • Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5B7

    • *Permanent address: Department of Physics, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada K9J 7B8.

    References (Subscription Required)

    Click to Expand
    Issue

    Vol. 65, Iss. 1 — January - March 1993

    Reuse & Permissions
    Access Options
    Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

    Authorization Required


    ×
    ×

    Images

    ×

    Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Reviews of Modern Physics

    Log In

    Cancel
    ×

    Search


    Article Lookup

    Paste a citation or DOI

    Enter a citation
    ×