Random, blocky and alternating ordering in supramolecular polymers of chemically bidisperse monomers
Sara Jabbari-Farouji, Paul van der Schoot

TL;DR
This paper introduces a coarse-grained model to study how chemical bidispersity influences the self-assembly of supramolecular polymers, revealing various ordering patterns and phase separation phenomena.
Contribution
It presents a theoretical framework describing the impact of bidispersity on polymer morphology and composition, including phase separation and deviations from typical growth laws.
Findings
Different assembly morphologies depending on binding energies
Distribution of monomers varies with assembly length and binding affinity
Conditions for phase separation and deviations from growth laws identified
Abstract
As a first step to understanding the role of molecular or chemical polydispersity in self-assembly, we put forward a coarse-grained model that describes the spontaneous formation of quasi-linear polymers in solutions containing two self-assembling species. Our theoretical framework is based on a two-component self-assembled Ising model in which the bidispersity is parameterized in terms of the strengths of the binding free energies that depend on the monomer species involved in the pairing interaction. Depending upon the relative values of the binding free energies involved, different morphologies of assemblies that include both components are formed, exhibiting paramagnetic-, ferromagnetic- or anti ferromagnetic-like order, i.e., random, blocky or alternating ordering of the two components in the assemblies. Analyzing the model for the case of ferromagnetic ordering, which is of most…
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