Dragging a polymer chain into a nanotube and subsequent release
Leonid I. Klushin, Alexander M. Skvortsov, Hsiao-Ping Hsu, Kurt, Binder

TL;DR
This paper combines scaling theory and Monte Carlo simulations to analyze how a flexible polymer chain is dragged into and released from a nanotube, revealing a first-order phase transition at a critical chain position.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive Landau free energy framework to describe the confinement transition and provides new insights into the critical conditions and metastable states of polymers in nanotubes.
Findings
The transition is first-order with abrupt changes in chain properties.
Critical distance scales as x* ~ N D^{1-1/ν}.
Approximately 3/4 of the chain is dragged in at the transition.
Abstract
We present a scaling theory and Monte Carlo (MC) simulation results for a flexible polymer chain slowly dragged by one end into a nanotube. We also describe the situation when the completely confined chain is released and gradually leaves the tube. MC simulations were performed for a self-avoiding lattice model with a biased chain growth algorithm, the pruned-enriched Rosenbluth method. The nanotube is a long channel opened at one end and its diameter is much smaller than the size of the polymer coil in solution. We analyze the following characteristics as functions of the chain end position inside the tube: the free energy of confinement, the average end-to-end distance, the average number of imprisoned monomers, and the average stretching of the confined part of the chain for various values of and for the number of monomers in the chain, . We show that when the chain…
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