Stretching Semiflexible Polymer Chains: Evidence for the Importance of Excluded Volume Effects from Monte Carlo Simulation
Hsiao-Ping Hsu, Kurt Binder

TL;DR
This study uses Monte Carlo simulations to investigate semiflexible polymers, revealing the significant role of excluded volume effects in their stretching behavior and crossover regimes, challenging some traditional models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how excluded volume effects influence the force-extension behavior of semiflexible polymers, especially under stretching forces, across different dimensions.
Findings
Excluded volume effects dominate force-extension relations in 2D.
In 3D, Kratky-Porod model applies only to stiff chains in intermediate regimes.
Crossover behaviors differ between 2D and 3D due to excluded volume.
Abstract
Semiflexible macromolecules in dilute solution under very good solvent conditions are modeled by self-avoiding walks on the simple cubic lattice ( dimensions) and square lattice ( dimensions), varying chain stiffness by an energy penalty for chain bending. In the absence of excluded volume interactions, the persistence length of the polymers would then simply be with , the bond length being the lattice spacing, and is the thermal energy. Using Monte Carlo simulations applying the pruned-enriched Rosenbluth method (PERM), both and the chain length are varied over a wide range ), and also a stretching force is applied to one chain end (fixing the other end at the origin). In the absence of this force, in a single…
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