Transport
properties of macromolecules in dense aggregate suspensions
and gels of proteins are important for usage of these biomaterials
in areas such as pharmaceutics, food, and cosmetics. The mobility
of polymers in protein gels has received some attention in the past,
but the mobility in dense aggregate suspensions has not yet been investigated.
In this study, self-diffusion of probe dextran chains was studied
in suspensions of aggregates with different size and morphology and
in gels using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching over a wide
range of concentrations. Brownian diffusion of the probes was observed
in aggregate suspensions as well as in weak gels formed just beyond
the critical gel concentration. Diffusion of polymers in dense suspensions
of protein aggregates depends not only on the concentration but also
on the size and morphology of the aggregates. It is not directly related
to the viscosity or the dynamic correlation length. Diffusion of polymers
in protein gels is anomalous and occurs on logarithmic time scales.
The recovery of the fluorescence for densely cross-linked gels was
logarithmic with time, suggesting an exponential distribution of diffusion
coefficients