Polymer Translocation Induced by a Bad Solvent
Abstract
We employ 3D Langevin Dynamics simulations to study the dynamics of polymer chains translocating through a nanopore in presence of asymmetric solvent conditions. Initially a large fraction (> 50%) of the chain is placed at the cis side in a good solvent while the trans segments are placed in a bad solvent that causes the chain to collapse and promotes translocation from the cis to the trans side. In particular, we study the ratcheting effect of a globule formed at the trans side created by the translocated segment, and how this ratchet drives the system towards faster translocation. Unlike in the case of unbiased or externally forced translocation where the mean first passage time τ is often characterized by algebraic scaling as a function of the chain length N with a single scaling exponent α, and the histogram of the mean first passage time P(τ/τ ) exhibits scaling, we find that scaling is not well obeyed. For relatively long chains we find τ Nα where α ≈ 1 for /kBT > 1. In this limit, we also find that translocation proceeds with a nearly constant velocity of the individual beads(monomers), which is attributed to the coiling of the globule. We provide an approximate theory assuming rotat ional motion restricted on a 2D disc to demonstrate that there is a crossover from diffusive behavior of the center of mass for short chains to a single file translocation for long chains, where the average translocation time scales linearly with the chain length N.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.