In this work, the combined iterative Boltzmann inversion/conditional reversible work scheme is extended with a little modifications to derive the systematically coarse‐grained (CG) potentials for simulating two typical atactic polymer blends composed of poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) and poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) or polystyrene (PS). Molecular dynamics simulations are extensively performed on the two blends with a wide formulation range. It is revealed by these simulations that, throughout the entire composition range, the PMMA/PVC blend is homogeneous whereas the PMMA/PS blend undergoes phase separation, which agrees well with the experimental observation that the former exhibits strong interactions that are absent in the latter. Depending upon the formulation, the immiscible PMMA/PS blend presents one single‐ or double‐continuous phase. It is further confirmed that intermolecular interactions play the key roles in forming the phase morphologies, which in turn can be inferred from only the three nonbonded CG potentials of one unlike pair and two like pairs.
The mechanism of the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) in thermoresponsive polymer solutions has been studied by means of a coarse‐grained single polymer chain simulation and a theoretical approach. The simulation model includes solvent explicitly and thus accounts for solvent interactions and entropy directly. The theoretical model consists of a single chain polymer in an implicit solvent where the effect of solvent is included through the intrapolymer solvophobic potential proposed by Kolomeisky and Widom. The results of this study indicate that the LCST behavior is determined by the competition between the mean energy difference between the bulk and bound solvent, and the entropy loss due to the bound solvent. At low temperatures, solvent molecules are bound to the polymer and the solvophobicity of the polymer is screened, resulting in a coiled state. At high temperatures the entropy loss due to bound solvent offsets the energy gain due to binding which causes the solvent molecules to unbind, leading to the collapse of the polymer chain to a globular state. Furthermore, the coarse‐grained nature of these models indicates that mean interaction energies are sufficient to explain LCST in comparison to specific solvent structural arrangements.