research

Free energy of a folded polymer under cylindrical confinement

Abstract

Monte Carlo computer simulations are used to study the conformational free energy of a folded polymer confined to a long cylindrical tube. The polymer is modeled as a hard-sphere chain. Its conformational free energy FF is measured as a function of λ\lambda, the end-to-end distance of the polymer. In the case of a flexible linear polymer, F(λ)F(\lambda) is a linear function in the folded regime with a gradient that scales as fdF/dλN0D1.20±0.01f\equiv |dF/d\lambda| \sim N^0 D^{-1.20\pm 0.01} for a tube of diameter DD and a polymer of length NN. This is close to the prediction fN0D1f \sim N^0 D^{-1} obtained from simple scaling arguments. The discrepancy is due in part to finite-size effects associated with the de-Gennes blob model. A similar discrepancy was observed for the folding of a single arm of a three-arm star polymer. We also examine backfolding of a semiflexible polymer of persistence length PP in the classic Odijk regime. In the overlap regime, the derivative scales fN0D1.72±0.02P0.35±0.01f \sim N^0 D^{-1.72\pm 0.02} P^{-0.35\pm 0.01}, which is close to the prediction fN0D5/3P1/3f \sim N^0 D^{-5/3} P^{-1/3} obtained from a scaling argument that treats interactions between deflection segments at the second virial level. In addition, the measured free energy cost of forming a hairpin turn is quantitatively consistent with a recent theoretical calculation. Finally, we examine the scaling of F(λ)F(\lambda) for a confined semiflexible chain in the presence of an S-loop composed of two hairpins. While the predicted scaling of the free energy gradient is the same as that for a single hairpin, we observe a scaling of fD1.91±0.03P0.36±0.01f \sim D^{-1.91\pm 0.03} P^{-0.36\pm 0.01}. Thus, the quantitative discrepancy between this measurement and the predicted scaling is somewhat greater for S-loops than for single hairpins.Comment: 17 papes, 12 figure

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions