20 research outputs found
Deformation of a tethered polymer in uniform flow
Static properties
of a single polymer fixed at one end
and subjected to a uniform flow field
are investigated for several polymer models:
the Gaussian chain,
the freely jointed chain, and
the FENE (Finitely Extensible Nonlinear Elastic) chain.
By taking into account
first the excluded-volume interaction
and subsequently also the hydrodynamic interaction,
the polymer models are gradually completed
and the relevance of each effect for the polymer deformation can be identified.
Results from computer simulations of these bead spring chains
are compared with analytical calculations using
either the conformational distribution function
or blob models.
To this end, in contrast to
the blob model with non-draining blobs
introduced for a tethered polymer by Brochard-Wyart,
we here develop also a model with free-draining blobs.
It turns out that a limited extensibility of the polymer
-described by nonlinear spring forces in the model -
leads to a flow velocity dependence of
the end-to-end distance, segment density, etc.
which agrees with the power law predictions of the blob model
only for very long chains and in a narrow range of flow velocities.
This result is important for comparison with recent experiments on DNA molecules
which turn out to be still rather short in this respect.
The relative importance of finite extensibility,
the excluded-volume effect, and hydrodynamic interactions
for polymers in flow is not fully understood at present.
The simulation of reasonably long chains becomes possible
even when fluctuating hydrodynamic interactions are taken into account
without employing averaging procedures
by introducing efficient numerical approximation schemes.
At medium velocity of the uniform flow
the polymer is partially uncoiled
and simulations show that
the effects of excluded-volume and hydrodynamic interactions
are position-dependent.
Both are stronger near the free end than near the tethered end of the polymer.
A crossover
from a nearly non-draining polymer at small flow velocities
to a free-draining almost uncoiled chain at large velocities
is found in the simulations.
Accordingly, models assuming the polymer to be composed of
either free- or non-draining subunits,
like the two blob models,
cannot correctly describe
the extension and shape of a tethered polymer in flow,
and simple power laws for the polymer extension, etc. cannot be expected