Literature DB >> 20831332

General approach to polymer chains confined by interacting boundaries.

Karl F Freed1, Jacek Dudowicz, Evgeny B Stukalin, Jack F Douglas.   

Abstract

Polymer chains, confined to cavities or polymer layers with dimensions less than the chain radius of gyration, appear in many phenomena, such as gel chromatography, rubber elasticity, viscolelasticity of high molar mass polymer melts, the translocation of polymers through nanopores and nanotubes, polymer adsorption, etc. Thus, the description of how the constraints alter polymer thermodynamic properties is a recurrent theoretical problem. A realistic treatment requires the incorporation of impenetrable interacting (attractive or repulsive) boundaries, a process that introduces significant mathematical complications. The standard approach involves developing the generalized diffusion equation description of the interaction of flexible polymers with impenetrable confining surfaces into a discrete eigenfunction expansion, where the solutions are normally truncated at the first mode (the "ground state dominance" approximation). This approximation is mathematically well justified under conditions of strong confinement, i.e., a confinement length scale much smaller than the chain radius of gyration, but becomes unreliable when the polymers are confined to dimensions comparable to their typically nanoscale size. We extend a general approach to describe polymers under conditions of weak to moderate confinement and apply this semianalytic method specifically to determine the thermodynamics and static structure factor for a flexible polymer confined between impenetrable interacting parallel plate boundaries. The method is first illustrated by analyzing chain partitioning between a pore and a large external reservoir, a model system with application to chromatography. Improved agreement is found for the partition coefficients of a polymer chain in the pore geometry. An expression is derived for the structure factor S(k) in a slit geometry to assist in more accurately estimating chain dimensions from scattering measurements for thin polymer films.

Entities:  

Year:  2010        PMID: 20831332     DOI: 10.1063/1.3475520

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Chem Phys        ISSN: 0021-9606            Impact factor:   3.488


  3 in total

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Authors:  Zhu Liu; Jiannan Liu; Mengying Xiao; Rong Wang; Yeng-Long Chen
Journal:  Biomicrofluidics       Date:  2014-09-10       Impact factor: 2.800

2.  Helix formation in the polymer brush.

Authors:  Mark Kastantin; Matthew Tirrell
Journal:  Macromolecules       Date:  2011-06-28       Impact factor: 5.985

3.  Polymer translocation through a hairy channel mimicking the inner plug of a nuclear pore complex.

Authors:  Chibin Zhang; Zhiwei Cheng; Xiaohui Lin; Wenquan Chu
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2019-03-29       Impact factor: 1.733

  3 in total

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