6533b7d7fe1ef96bd126856e
RESEARCH PRODUCT
How does stiffness of polymer chains affect their adsorption transition?
Kurt BinderAndrey Milchevsubject
Persistence lengthchemistry.chemical_classificationMaterials science010304 chemical physicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyThermodynamicsPolymer010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBond order0104 chemical sciencesMolecular dynamicschemistry.chemical_compoundMonomerAdsorptionChain (algebraic topology)chemistry0103 physical sciencesExcluded volumePhysical and Theoretical Chemistrydescription
The adsorption transition and the structure of semiflexible adsorbed macromolecules are studied by a molecular dynamics simulation of a coarse-grained, bead-spring type model. Varying chain length N and stiffness κ (which is proportional to the persistence length lp in d = 3 dimensions) as well as the strength ϵwall of the adsorption potential, the adsorbed monomer fraction, orientational bond order parameter, and chain linear dimensions are studied. In the simulations, excluded volume interactions normally are included but can be “switched off,” and thus, the influence of excluded volume (leading to deviations from predictions of the wormlike chain model) can be identified. It is shown that the variation in the adsorption threshold ϵwallcr with lp is compatible with the predicted law ϵwallcr∝lp−1/3. In the vicinity of the adsorption threshold, the coils are still three-dimensional, and for large lp, the effect of the excluded volume is almost negligible, while for strongly adsorbed chains it is always felt. Near the transition, the decay length of orientational correlations along the chain contour increases gradually from lp to 2lp. While the latter value is expected for strictly two-dimensional chains from the Kratky–Porod model, this model is inaccurate for the description of lateral chain dimensions of long, strongly adsorbed, semiflexible polymers due to its neglect of excluded volume. The significance of these findings for the interpretation of pertinent experiments is briefly discussed.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-02-14 | The Journal of chemical physics |