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A cornerstone of modern polymer physics is the `Flory ideality hypothesis which states that a chain in a polymer melt adopts `ideal random-walk-like conformations. Here we revisit theoretically and numerically this pivotal assumption and demonstrate that there are noticeable deviations from ideality. The deviations come from the interplay of chain connectivity and the incompressibility of the melt, leading to an effective repulsion between chain segments of all sizes $s$. The amplitude of this repulsion increases with decreasing $s$ where chain segments become more and more swollen. We illustrate this swelling by an analysis of the form factor $F(q)$, i.e. the scattered intensity at wavevector $q$ resulting from intramolecular interferences of a chain. A `Kratky plot of $q^2F(q)$ {em vs.} $q$ does not exhibit the plateau for intermediate wavevectors characteristic of ideal chains. One rather finds a conspicuous depression of the plateau, $delta(F^{-1}(q)) = |q|^3/32rho$, which increases with $q$ and only depends on the monomer density $rho$.
A small fraction of intermediate-mass main sequence (A and B type) stars have strong, organised magnetic fields. The large majority of such stars, however, show no evidence for magnetic fields, even when observed with very high precision. In this pap
Continuous time random walks (CTRW) on finite arbitrarily inhomogeneous chains are studied. By introducing a technique of counting all possible trajectories, we derive closed-form solutions in Laplace space for the Greens function and for the first p
It is commonly accepted that in concentrated solutions or melts high-molecular weight polymers display random-walk conformational properties without long-range correlations between subsequent bonds. This absence of memory means, for instance, that th
In this paper we study a system of entangled chains that bear reversible cross-links in a melt state. The cross-links are tethered uniformly on the backbone of each chain. A slip-link type model for the system is presented and solved for the relaxati
Conformation-dependent design of polymer sequences can be considered as a tool to control macromolecular self-assembly. We consider the monomer unit sequences created via the modification of polymers in a homogeneous melt in accordance with the spati