84 research outputs found
Polyelectrolytes Adsorption: Chemical and Electrostatic Interactions
Mean-field theory is used to model polyelectrolyte adsorption and the
possibility of overcompensation of charged surfaces. For charged surfaces that
are also chemically attractive, the overcharging is large in high salt
conditions, amounting to 20-40% of the bare surface charge. However, full
charge inversion is not obtained in thermodynamical equilibrium for physical
values of the parameters. The overcharging increases with addition of salt, but
does not have a simple scaling form with the bare surface charge. Our results
indicate that more evolved explanation is needed in order to understand
polyelectrolyte multilayer built-up. For strong polymer-repulsive surfaces, we
derive simple scaling laws for the polyelectrolyte adsorption and overcharging.
We show that the overcharging scales linearly with the bare surface charge, but
its magnitude is very small in comparison to the surface charge. In contrast
with the attractive surface, here the overcharging is found to decrease
substantially with addition of salt. In the intermediate range of weak
repulsive surfaces, the behavior with addition of salt crosses over from
increasing overcharging (at low ionic strength) to decreasing one (at high
ionic strength). Our results for all types of surfaces are supported by full
numerical solutions of the mean-field equations.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, final version. to be published in PR
Fluctuation-dissipation relation and stationary distribution for an exactly solvable many-particle model far from equilibrium
An exactly solvable, Hamiltonian-based model of many massive particles that are coupled by harmonic potentials and driven by stochastic non-equilibrium forces is introduced. The stationary distribution as well as the fluctuation-dissipation relation are derived in closed form for the general non-equilibrium case. Deviations from equilibrium are on one hand characterized by the difference of the obtained stationary distribution from the Boltzmann distribution, which is possible because the model derives from a particle Hamiltonian. The difference between the obtained non-equilibrium fluctuation-dissipation relation and the standard equilibrium fluctuation-dissipation theorem allows to quantify non-equilibrium in an alternative fashion. Both indicators of non-equilibrium behavior, i.e. deviations from the Boltzmann distribution and deviations from the equilibrium fluctuation-dissipation
theorem, can be expressed in terms of a single non-equilibrium parameter \alpha that involves the ratio of friction coefficients and random force strengths. The concept of a non-equilibrium effective temperature, which can be defined by the relation between fluctuations and the dissipation, is by comparison with the exactly derived stationary distribution shown not to hold, even if the effective temperature is made frequency dependent. The analysis is not confined to close-to-equilibrium situations but rather is exact and thus holds for arbitrarily large deviations from equilibrium. Also, the suggested harmonic model can be obtained from non-linear mechanical network systems by an expansion in terms of suitably chosen deviatory coordinates, the obtained results should thus be quite general. This is demonstrated by comparison of the derived non-equilibrium fluctuation dissipation relation with experimental data on actin networks that are driven out of equilibrium by energyconsuming protein motors. The comparison is excellent and allows to extract the non-equilibrium parameter \alpha from experimental spectral response and fluctuation data
Surface states in nearly modulated systems
A Landau model is used to study the phase behavior of the surface layer for
magnetic and cholesteric liquid crystal systems that are at or near a Lifshitz
point marking the boundary between modulated and homogeneous bulk phases. The
model incorporates surface and bulk fields and includes a term in the free
energy proportional to the square of the second derivative of the order
parameter in addition to the usual term involving the square of the first
derivative. In the limit of vanishing bulk field, three distinct types of
surface ordering are possible: a wetting layer, a non-wet layer having a small
deviation from bulk order, and a different non-wet layer with a large deviation
from bulk order which decays non-monotonically as distance from the wall
increases. In particular the large deviation non-wet layer is a feature of
systems at the Lifshitz point and also those having only homogeneous bulk
phases.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Multiple surface wave solutions on linear viscoelastic media
We study the generic dispersion relation of surface waves on a semi-infinite viscoelastic medium bounded by a 2D viscoelastic interface, including the effects of gravitation, surface tension and bending rigidity. The classical Rayleigh, capillary-gravity and Lucassen wave solutions result as limiting cases. We identify an additional solution that differs from all previously described waves in that gravitation, surface tension and bulk shear viscosity must simultaneously be nonzero, and which exists on a pure air-water interface. For a surfactant monolayer on water, the number of coexisting wave solutions switches between one and three, depending on interfacial compressibility and frequency
Histogram Monte Carlo study of next-nearest-neighbor Ising antiferromagnet on a stacked triangular lattice
Critical properties of the Ising model on a stacked triangular lattice, with
antiferromagnetic first and second-neighbor in-plane interactions, are studied
by extensive histogram Monte Carlo simulations. The results, in conjunction
with the recently determined phase diagram, strongly suggest that the
transition from the period-3 ordered state to the paramagnetic phase remains in
the xy universality class. This conclusion is in contrast with a previous
suggestion of mean-field tricritical behavior.Comment: 13 pages (RevTex 3.0), 10 figures available upon request, CRPS-93-0
Cyclization dynamics of finite-length collapsed self-avoiding polymers
We study the end-point cyclization of ideal and interacting polymers as a function of chain length N. For the cyclization time �cyc of ideal chains we recover the known scaling �cyc � N2 for different backbone models, for a self-avoiding slightly collapsed chain we obtain from Langevin simulations and scaling theory a modified scaling �cyc � N5=3. By extracting the memory kernel
that governs the non-Markovian end-point kinetics, we demonstrate that the dynamics of a finite-length collapsed chain is dominated by the crossover between swollen and collapsed behavior
Unfolding and Folding Internal Friction of β‑Hairpins Is Smaller than That of α‑Helices
By the forced unfolding of polyglutamine and polyalanine
homopeptides in competing α-helix and β-hairpin secondary structures, we disentangle equilibrium free energetics from nonequilibrium dissipative effects. We find that α-helices are characterized by larger friction or dissipation upon
unfolding, regardless of whether they are free energetically preferred over β-hairpins or not. Our analysis, based on MD simulations for atomistic peptide
models with explicit water, suggests that this difference is related to the internal friction and mostly caused by the different number of intrapeptide hydrogen bonds in the α-helix and β-hairpin states
The Persistence Length of a Strongly Charged, Rod-like, Polyelectrolyte in the Presence of Salt
The persistence length of a single, intrinsically rigid polyelectrolyte
chain, above the Manning condensation threshold is investigated theoretically
in presence of added salt. Using a loop expansion method, the partition
function is consistently calculated, taking into account corrections to
mean-field theory. Within a mean-field approximation, the well-known results of
Odijk, Skolnick and Fixman are reproduced. Beyond mean-field, it is found that
density correlations between counterions and thermal fluctuations reduce the
stiffness of the chain, indicating an effective attraction between monomers for
highly charged chains and multivalent counterions. This attraction results in a
possible mechanical instability (collapse), alluding to the phenomenon of DNA
condensation. In addition, we find that more counterions condense on slightly
bent conformations of the chain than predicted by the Manning model for the
case of an infinite cylinder. Finally, our results are compared with previous
models and experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 2 ps figure
Nonlinear fractional waves at elastic interfaces
We derive the nonlinear fractional surface wave equation that governs compression waves at an elastic interface that is coupled to a viscous bulk medium. The fractional character of the differential equation comes from the fact that the effective thickness of the bulk layer that is coupled to the interface is frequency dependent. The nonlinearity arises from the nonlinear dependence of the interface compressibility on the local compression, which is obtained from experimental measurements and reflects a phase transition at the interface. Numerical solutions of our nonlinear fractional theory reproduce several experimental key features of surface waves in phospholipid monolayers at the air-water interface without freely adjustable fitting parameters. In particular, the propagation distance of the surface wave abruptly increases at a threshold excitation amplitude. The wave velocity is found to be of the order of 40 cm/s in both experiments and theory and slightly increases as a function of the excitation amplitude. Nonlinear acoustic switching effects in membranes are thus shown to arise purely based on intrinsic membrane properties, namely, the presence of compressibility nonlinearities that accompany phase transitions at the interface
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