3,111 research outputs found
Kinetics and thermodynamics of first-order Markov chain copolymerization
We report a theoretical study of stochastic processes modeling the growth of
first-order Markov copolymers, as well as the reversed reaction of
depolymerization. These processes are ruled by kinetic equations describing
both the attachment and detachment of monomers. Exact solutions are obtained
for these kinetic equations in the steady regimes of multicomponent
copolymerization and depolymerization. Thermodynamic equilibrium is identified
as the state at which the growth velocity is vanishing on average and where
detailed balance is satisfied. Away from equilibrium, the analytical expression
of the thermodynamic entropy production is deduced in terms of the Shannon
disorder per monomer in the copolymer sequence. The Mayo-Lewis equation is
recovered in the fully irreversible growth regime. The theory also applies to
Bernoullian chains in the case where the attachment and detachment rates only
depend on the reacting monomer
Universal Formulae for Percolation Thresholds
A power law is postulated for both site and bond percolation thresholds. The
formula writes , where is the space
dimension and the coordination number. All thresholds up to are found to belong to only three universality classes. For first two
classes for site dilution while for bond dilution. The last one
associated to high dimensions is characterized by for both sites and
bonds. Classes are defined by a set of value for . Deviations
from available numerical estimates at are within and
for high dimensional hypercubic expansions at . The
formula is found to be also valid for Ising critical temperatures.Comment: 11 pages, latex, 3 figures not include
Force-induced misfolding in RNA
RNA folding is a kinetic process governed by the competition of a large
number of structures stabilized by the transient formation of base pairs that
may induce complex folding pathways and the formation of misfolded structures.
Despite of its importance in modern biophysics, the current understanding of
RNA folding kinetics is limited by the complex interplay between the weak
base-pair interactions that stabilize the native structure and the disordering
effect of thermal forces. The possibility of mechanically pulling individual
molecules offers a new perspective to understand the folding of nucleic acids.
Here we investigate the folding and misfolding mechanism in RNA secondary
structures pulled by mechanical forces. We introduce a model based on the
identification of the minimal set of structures that reproduce the patterns of
force-extension curves obtained in single molecule experiments. The model
requires only two fitting parameters: the attempt frequency at the level of
individual base pairs and a parameter associated to a free energy correction
that accounts for the configurational entropy of an exponentially large number
of neglected secondary structures. We apply the model to interpret results
recently obtained in pulling experiments in the three-helix junction S15 RNA
molecule (RNAS15). We show that RNAS15 undergoes force-induced misfolding where
force favors the formation of a stable non-native hairpin. The model reproduces
the pattern of unfolding and refolding force-extension curves, the distribution
of breakage forces and the misfolding probability obtained in the experiments.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure
Clusterization, frustration and collectivity in random networks
We consider the random Erd{\H o}s--R\'enyi network with enhanced
clusterization and Ising spins at the network nodes. Mutually linked
spins interact with energy . Magnetic properties of the system as dependent
on the clustering coefficient are investigated with the Monte Carlo heat
bath algorithm. For the Curie temperature increases from 3.9 to 5.5
when increases from almost zero to 0.18. These results deviate only
slightly from the mean field theory. For the spin-glass phase appears
below ; this temperature decreases with , on the contrary to the
mean field calculations. The results are interpreted in terms of social
systems.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; serious change of result
Dynamics and Thermodynamics of the Glass Transition
The principal theme of this paper is that anomalously slow, super-Arrhenius
relaxations in glassy materials may be activated processes involving chains of
molecular displacements. As pointed out in a preceding paper with A. Lemaitre,
the entropy of critically long excitation chains can enable them to grow
without bound, thus activating stable thermal fluctuations in the local density
or molecular coordination of the material. I argue here that the intrinsic
molecular-scale disorder in a glass plays an essential role in determining the
activation rate for such chains, and show that a simple disorder-related
correction to the earlier theory recovers the Vogel-Fulcher law in three
dimensions. A key feature of this theory is that the spatial extent of
critically long excitation chains diverges at the Vogel-Fulcher temperature. I
speculate that this diverging length scale implies that, as the temperature
decreases, increasingly large regions of the system become frozen and do not
contribute to the configurational entropy, and thus ergodicity is partially
broken in the super-Arrhenius region above the Kauzmann temperature . This
partially broken ergodicity seems to explain the vanishing entropy at and
other observed relations between dynamics and thermodynamics at the glass
transition.Comment: 20 pages, no figures, some further revision
A graph theoretical analysis of the energy landscape of model polymers
In systems characterized by a rough potential energy landscape, local
energetic minima and saddles define a network of metastable states whose
topology strongly influences the dynamics. Changes in temperature, causing the
merging and splitting of metastable states, have non trivial effects on such
networks and must be taken into account. We do this by means of a recently
proposed renormalization procedure. This method is applied to analyze the
topology of the network of metastable states for different polypeptidic
sequences in a minimalistic polymer model. A smaller spectral dimension emerges
as a hallmark of stability of the global energy minimum and highlights a
non-obvious link between dynamic and thermodynamic properties.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figure
Monte Carlo simulations of the solid-liquid transition in hard spheres and colloid-polymer mixtures
Monte Carlo simulations at constant pressure are performed to study
coexistence and interfacial properties of the liquid-solid transition in hard
spheres and in colloid-polymer mixtures. The latter system is described as a
one-component Asakura-Oosawa (AO) model where the polymer's degrees of freedom
are incorporated via an attractive part in the effective potential for the
colloid-colloid interactions. For the considered AO model, the polymer
reservoir packing fraction is eta_p^r=0.1 and the colloid-polymer size ratio is
q=sigma_p/\sigma=0.15 (with sigma_p and sigma the diameter of polymers and
colloids, respectively). Inhomogeneous solid-liquid systems are prepared by
placing the solid fcc phase in the middle of a rectangular simulation box
creating two interfaces with the adjoined bulk liquid. By analyzing the growth
of the crystalline region at various pressures and for different system sizes,
the coexistence pressure p_co is obtained, yielding p_co=11.576 k_BT/sigma^3
for the hard sphere system and p_co=8.0 k_BT/sigma^3 for the AO model (with k_B
the Boltzmann constant and T the temperature). Several order parameters are
introduced to distinguish between solid and liquid phases and to describe the
interfacial properties. From the capillary-wave broadening of the solid-liquid
interface, the interfacial stiffness is obtained for the (100) crystalline
plane, giving the values gamma=0.49 k_BT/sigma^2 for the hard-sphere system and
gamma=0.95 k_BT/sigma^2 for the AO model.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Grand canonical and canonical solution of self-avoiding walks with up to three monomers per site on the Bethe lattice
We solve a model of polymers represented by self-avoiding walks on a lattice
which may visit the same site up to three times in the grand-canonical
formalism on the Bethe lattice. This may be a model for the collapse transition
of polymers where only interactions between monomers at the same site are
considered. The phase diagram of the model is very rich, displaying coexistence
and critical surfaces, critical, critical endpoint and tricritical lines, as
well as a multicritical point. From the grand-canonical results, we present an
argument to obtain the properties of the model in the canonical ensemble, and
compare our results with simulations in the literature. We do actually find
extended and collapsed phases, but the transition between them, composed by a
line of critical endpoints and a line of tricritical points, separated by the
multicritical point, is always continuous. This result is at variance with the
simulations for the model, which suggest that part of the line should be a
discontinuous transition. Finally, we discuss the connection of the present
model with the standard model for the collapse of polymers (self-avoiding
self-attracting walks), where the transition between the extended and collapsed
phases is a tricritical point.Comment: 34 pages, including 10 figure
Local and chain dynamics in miscible polymer blends: A Monte Carlo simulation study
Local chain structure and local environment play an important role in the
dynamics of polymer chains in miscible blends. In general, the friction
coefficients that describe the segmental dynamics of the two components in a
blend differ from each other and from those of the pure melts. In this work, we
investigate polymer blend dynamics with Monte Carlo simulations of a
generalized bond-fluctuation model, where differences in the interaction
energies between non-bonded nearest neighbors distinguish the two components of
a blend. Simulations employing only local moves and respecting a non-bond
crossing condition were carried out for blends with a range of compositions,
densities, and chain lengths. The blends investigated here have long-chain
dynamics in the crossover region between Rouse and entangled behavior. In order
to investigate the scaling of the self-diffusion coefficients, characteristic
chain lengths are calculated from the packing length of the
chains. These are combined with a local mobility determined from the
acceptance rate and the effective bond length to yield characteristic
self-diffusion coefficients . We find that the
data for both melts and blends collapse onto a common line in a graph of
reduced diffusion coefficients as a function of reduced chain
length . The composition dependence of dynamic properties is
investigated in detail for melts and blends with chains of length twenty at
three different densities. For these blends, we calculate friction coefficients
from the local mobilities and consider their composition and pressure
dependence. The friction coefficients determined in this way show many of the
characteristics observed in experiments on miscible blends.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, editorial change
On the size and shape of excluded volume polymers confined between parallel plates
A number of recent experiments have provided detailed observations of the
configurations of long DNA strands under nano-to-micrometer sized confinement.
We therefore revisit the problem of an excluded volume polymer chain confined
between two parallel plates with varying plate separation. We show that the
non-monotonic behavior of the overall size of the chain as a function of
plate-separation, seen in computer simulations and reproduced by earlier
theories, can already be predicted on the basis of scaling arguments. However,
the behavior of the size in a plane parallel to the plates, a quantity observed
in recent experiments, is predicted to be monotonic, in contrast to the
experimental findings. We analyze this problem in depth with a mean-field
approach that maps the confined polymer onto an anisotropic Gaussian chain,
which allows the size of the polymer to be determined separately in the
confined and unconfined directions. The theory allows the analytical
construction of a smooth cross-over between the small plate-separation de
Gennes regime and the large plate-separation Flory regime. The results show
good agreement with Langevin dynamics simulations, and confirm the scaling
predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure
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