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Strain-dependent localization, microscopic deformations, and macroscopic normal tensions in model polymer networks

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 Added by Carsten Svaneborg
 Publication date 2004
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We use molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the microscopic and macroscopic response of model polymer networks to uniaxial elongations. By studying networks with strands lengths ranging from $N_s=20$ to 200 we cover the full crossover from cross-link to entanglement dominated behavior. Our results support a recent version of the tube model which accounts for the different strain dependence of chain localization due to chemical cross-links and entanglements.

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We have developed a new technique to measure viscoelasticity in soft materials such as polymer solutions, by monitoring thermal fluctuations of embedded probe particles using laser interferometry in a microscope. Interferometry allows us to obtain power spectra of fluctuating beads from 0.1 Hz to 20 kHz, and with sub-nanometer spatial resolution. Using linear response theory, we determined the frequency-dependent loss and storage shear moduli up to frequencies on the order of a kHz. Our technique measures local values of the viscoelastic response, without actively straining the system, and is especially suited to soft biopolymer networks. We studied semiflexible F-actin solutions and, as a control, flexible polyacrylamide (PAAm) gels, the latter close to their gelation threshold. With small particles, we could probe the transition from macroscopic viscoelasticity to more complex microscopic dynamics. In the macroscopic limit we find shear moduli at 0.1 Hz of G=0.11 +/- 0.03 Pa and 0.17 +/- 0.07 Pa for 1 and 2 mg/ml actin solutions, close to the onset of the elastic plateau, and scaling behavior consistent with G(omega) as omega^(3/4) at higher frequencies. For polyacrylamide we measured plateau moduli of 2.0, 24, 100 and 280 Pa for crosslinked gels of 2, 2.5, 3 and 5% concentration (weight/volume) respectively, in agreement to within a factor of two with values obtained from conventional rheology. We also found evidence for scaling of G(omega) as omega^(1/2), consistent with the predictions of the Rouse model for flexible polymers.
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A novel method to investigate the compaction behaviour of cohesive powders is presented. As a sample, a highly porous agglomerate formed by random ballistic deposition (RBD) of micron sized spherical particles is used. A nanomanipulator deforms this small structure under scanning electron microscope observation, allowing for the tracking of individual particle motion. Defined forces are applied and the resulting deformations are measured. The hereby obtained results are compared to results from threedimensional discrete element simulations as well as macroscopic compaction experiments. Relevant simulation parameters are determined by colloidal probe measurements.
The cytoskeleton of eukaryotic cells provides mechanical support and governs intracellular transport. These functions rely on the complex mechanical properties of networks of semiflexible protein filaments. Recent theoretical interest has focused on mesoscopic properties of such networks and especially on the effect of local, non-affine bending deformations on mechanics. Here, we study the impact of local network deformations on the scale-dependent mobility of probe particles in entangled networks of semiflexible actin filaments by high-bandwidth microrheology. We find that micron-sized particles in these networks experience two opposing non-continuum elastic effects: entropic depletion reduces the effective network rigidity, while local non-affine deformations of the network substantially enhance the rigidity at low frequencies. We show that a simple model of lateral bending of filaments embedded in a viscoelastic background leads to a scaling regime for the apparent elastic modulus G(omega) sim omega^{9/16}, closely matching the experiments. These results provide quantitative evidence for how different a semiflexible polymer network can feel for small objects, and they demonstrate how non-affine bending deformations can be dominant for the mobility of vesicles and organelles in the cell.
175 - B. Marcone , E. Orlandini , 2007
We study by Monte Carlo simulations a model of knotted polymer ring adsorbing onto an impenetrable, attractive wall. The polymer is described by a self-avoiding polygon (SAP) on the cubic lattice. We find that the adsorption transition temperature, the crossover exponent $phi$ and the metric exponent $ u$, are the same as in the model where the topology of the ring is unrestricted. By measuring the average length of the knotted portion of the ring we are able to show that adsorbed knots are localized. This knot localization transition is triggered by the adsorption transition but is accompanied by a less sharp variation of the exponent related to the degree of localization. Indeed, for a whole interval below the adsorption transition, one can not exclude a contiuous variation with temperature of this exponent. Deep into the adsorbed phase we are able to verify that knot localization is strong and well described in terms of the flat knot model.
We have performed magnetoresistance measurements on polyfluorene sandwich devices in weak magnetic fields as a function of applied voltage, device temperature (10K to 300K), film thickness and electrode materials. We observed either negative or positive magnetoresistance, dependent mostly on the applied voltage, with a typical magnitude of several percent. The shape of the magnetoresistance curve is characteristic of weak localization and antilocalization. Using weak localization theory, we find that the phase-breaking length is relatively large even at room temperature, and spin-orbit interaction is a function of the applied electric field.
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