Crystallinity of bottlebrush polymers due to side chain crystallization has been considered to be related to the length of the side chains only under the assumption of complete participation of crystallization by all side chains.Recent experimental results revealed that in poly(n-alkyl methacrylate)s a fraction of side chains could not crystallize due to constraints imposed by the trapped main chain entanglements and required expansion of main chain-main chain distance.This result renders the original simplified consideration of the origin of crystallinity in bottlebrush polymers questionable.In this work,we introduce a new parameter fc,the fraction of crystallizable side chains,to better describe the crystallinity of bottlebrush polymers.A linear relationship between the melting enthalpy and the number of alkyl groups in side chains for bottlebrush polymers reported repeatedly indicates that fc remains essentially unchanged when bottlebrush polymers had the same main chain structure and grafting degree but different side chain lengths.The slope of the above-mentioned linear relationship is thus AHCH2×fc,where AHCH2 stands for the melting enthalpy of one mole alkyl group packed into the crystal.With a known value of fc,it is possible to estimate the value of AHCH2.In case of poly(n-alkyl methacrylate)s,we estimated AHCH2 of hexagonal crystal being at most 5.74 kJ/mol with the knowledge of possibly smallest fc of 0.67 obtained from small angle X-ray scattering data.Therefore,the crystallinity of bottlebrush polymer would be calculated based on the equation Xc = fc×Nc/N with N and Nc being the number of alkyl groups in a side chain and those packed in the crystalline structure,respectively.Both chemical structure and grafting degree of bottlebrush polymers affect fc.