226 research outputs found
Geometry and topology of knotted ring polymers in an array of obstacles
We study knotted polymers in equilibrium with an array of obstacles which
models confinement in a gel or immersion in a melt. We find a crossover in both
the geometrical and the topological behavior of the polymer. When the polymers'
radius of gyration, , and that of the region containing the knot,
, are small compared to the distance b between the obstacles, the knot
is weakly localised and scales as in a good solvent with an amplitude
that depends on knot type. In an intermediate regime where ,
the geometry of the polymer becomes branched. When exceeds b, the
knot delocalises and becomes also branched. In this regime, is
independent of knot type. We discuss the implications of this behavior for gel
electrophoresis experiments on knotted DNA in weak fields.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Scaling of Hamiltonian walks on fractal lattices
We investigate asymptotical behavior of numbers of long Hamiltonian walks
(HWs), i.e. self-avoiding random walks that visit every site of a lattice, on
various fractal lattices. By applying an exact recursive technique we obtain
scaling forms for open HWs on 3-simplex lattice, Sierpinski gasket, and their
generalizations: Given-Mandelbrot (GM), modified Sierpinski gasket (MSG) and
n-simplex fractal families. For GM, MSG and n-simplex lattices with odd values
of n, number of open HWs , for the lattice with sites, varies as
. We explicitly calculate exponent for several
members of GM and MSG families, as well as for n-simplices with n=3,5, and 7.
For n-simplex fractals with even n we find different scaling form: , where is fractal dimension of the lattice,
which also differs from the formula expected for homogeneous lattices. We
discuss possible implications of our results on studies of real compact
polymers.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, RevTex4; extended Introduction, several
references added; one figure added in section II; corrected typos; version
accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.
Force induced triple point for interacting polymers
We show the existence of a force induced triple point in an interacting
polymer problem that allows two zero-force thermal phase transitions. The phase
diagrams for three different models of mutually attracting but self avoiding
polymers are presented. One of these models has an intermediate phase and it
shows a triple point but not the others. A general phase diagram with
multicritical points in an extended parameter space is also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, revtex
Universality of collapsing two-dimensional self-avoiding trails
Results of a numerically exact transfer matrix calculation for the model of
Interacting Self-Avoiding Trails are presented. The results lead to the
conclusion that, at the collapse transition, Self-Avoiding Trails are in the
same universality class as the O(n=0) model of Blote and Nienhuis (or
vertex-interacting self-avoiding walk), which has thermal exponent ,
contrary to previous conjectures.Comment: Final version, accepted for publication in Journal of Physics A; 9
pages; 3 figure
Effects of Eye-phase in DNA unzipping
The onset of an "eye-phase" and its role during the DNA unzipping is studied
when a force is applied to the interior of the chain. The directionality of the
hydrogen bond introduced here shows oscillations in force-extension curve
similar to a "saw-tooth" kind of oscillations seen in the protein unfolding
experiments. The effects of intermediates (hairpins) and stacking energies on
the melting profile have also been discussed.Comment: RevTeX v4, 9 pages with 7 eps figure
Force induced stretched state: Effects of temperature
A model of self avoiding walks with suitable constraint has been developed to
study the effect of temperature on a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) in the
constant force ensemble. Our exact calculations for small chains show that the
extension (reaction co-ordinate) may increase or decrease with the temperature
depending upon the applied force. The simple model developed here which
incorporates semi-microscopic details of base direction provide an explanation
of the force induced transitions in ssDNA as observed in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures, RevTex
Theory of Boundary Effects in Invasion Percolation
We study the boundary effects in invasion percolation with and without
trapping. We find that the presence of boundaries introduces a new set of
surface critical exponents, as in the case of standard percolation. Numerical
simulations show a fractal dimension, for the region of the percolating cluster
near the boundary, remarkably different from the bulk one. We find a
logarithmic cross-over from surface to bulk fractal properties, as one would
expect from the finite-size theory of critical systems. The distribution of the
quenched variables on the growing interface near the boundary self-organises
into an asymptotic shape characterized by a discontinuity at a value ,
which coincides with the bulk critical threshold. The exponent of
the boundary avalanche distribution for IP without trapping is
; this value is very near to the bulk one. Then we
conclude that only the geometrical properties (fractal dimension) of the model
are affected by the presence of a boundary, while other statistical and
dynamical properties are unchanged. Furthermore, we are able to present a
theoretical computation of the relevant critical exponents near the boundary.
This analysis combines two recently introduced theoretical tools, the Fixed
Scale Transformation (FST) and the Run Time Statistics (RTS), which are
particularly suited for the study of irreversible self-organised growth models
with quenched disorder. Our theoretical results are in rather good agreement
with numerical data.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, revte
Sequence randomness and polymer collapse transitions
Contrary to expectations based on Harris' criterion, chain disorder with
frustration can modify the universality class of scaling at the theta
transition of heteropolymers. This is shown for a model with random two-body
potentials in 2D on the basis of exact enumeration and accurate Monte Carlo
results. When frustration grows beyond a certain finite threshold, the
temperature below which disorder becomes relevant coincides with the theta one
and scaling exponents definitely start deviating from those valid for
homopolymers.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figure
Effects of Molecular Crowding on stretching of polymers in poor solvent
We consider a linear polymer chain in a disordered environment modeled by
percolation clusters on a square lattice. The disordered environment is meant
to roughly represent molecular crowding as seen in cells. The model may be
viewed as the simplest representation of biopolymers in a cell. We show the
existence of intermediate states during stretching arising as a consequence of
molecular crowding. In the constant distance ensemble the force-extension
curves exhibit oscillations. We observe the emergence of two or more peaks in
the probability distribution curves signaling the coexistence of different
states and indicating that the transition is discontinuous unlike what is
observed in the absence of molecular crowding.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
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