4.7 Article

Detailed scaling analysis of low-force polyelectrolyte elasticity

期刊

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
卷 80, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.80.041803

关键词

DNA; elasticity; polymer electrolytes; polymers

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [PHY-0748564]
  2. MRSEC Program [DMR05-20415]

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Single-molecule force-extension data are typically compared to ideal models of polymer behavior that ignore the effects of self-avoidance. Here, we demonstrate a link between single-molecule data and the scaling pictures of a real polymer. We measure a low-force elasticity regime where the extension L of chemically denatured single-stranded DNA grows as a power law with force f: L similar to f(gamma), with gamma approximate to 0.60-0.69. This compares favorably with the tensile-blob model of a self-avoiding polymer, which predicts gamma=2/3. We show that the transition out of the low-force regime is highly salt dependent, and use the tensile-blob model to relate this effect to the salt dependence of the polymer's Kuhn length and excluded-volume parameter. We find that, contrary to the well-known Odijk-Skolnick-Fixman theory, the Kuhn length of single-stranded DNA is linearly proportional to the Debye length of the solution. Finally, we show that the low-force elasticity becomes linear (gamma=1) at approximate to 3 M salt, and interpret this as a Theta point of the polymer. At this point, the force-extension data is best described by the wormlike chain model, from which we estimate the bare (nonelectrostatic) persistence length of the polymer to be approximate to 0.6 nm.

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