The scaling behaviour of the zero shear rate viscosity of semidilute
unentangled DNA solutions, in the double crossover regime driven by temperature
and concentration, is mapped out by systematic experiments. The viscosity is
shown to have a power law dependence on the scaled concentration c/c∗, with
an effective exponent that depends on the solvent quality parameter z. The
determination of the form of this universal crossover scaling function requires
the estimation of the θ temperature of dilute DNA solutions in the
presence of excess salt, and the determination of the solvent quality parameter
at any given molecular weight and temperature. The θ temperature is
determined to be Tθ≈15∘ C using static light scattering,
and the solvent quality parameter has been determined by dynamic light
scattering.Comment: 39 pages, 26 figures, accepted in Journal of Rheology. Includes
supplemental material