Directed-polymer systems explored via their quantum analogs: Topological constraints and their consequences
D. Zeb Rocklin, Shina Tan, Paul M. Goldbart

TL;DR
This paper investigates the behavior of classical directed polymers in two dimensions by leveraging their quantum analogs, revealing how topological constraints induce strong, nonlinear forces and density variations in polymer fluids.
Contribution
It applies quantum many-particle techniques to analyze topological constraints in directed polymer systems, uncovering nonlinear force responses and density effects at high polymer densities.
Findings
Point-like pins cause divergent polymer density pile-up and finite-area gaps.
Displacement of pins results in sub-Hookean forces and gap growth.
Interactions between multiple pins are super-Hookean.
Abstract
The equilibrium statistical mechanics of classical directed polymers in 2 dimensions is well known to be equivalent to the imaginary-time quantum dynamics of a 1+1-dimensional many-particle system, with polymer configurations corresponding to particle world-lines. This equivalence motivates the application of techniques originally designed for one-dimensional many-particle quantum systems to the exploration of many-polymer systems, as first recognized and exploited by P.-G. de Gennes [J.\ Chem.\ Phys.\ {\bf 48}, 2257 (1968)]. In this low-dimensional setting interactions give rise to an emergent polymer fluid, and we examine how topological constraints on this polymer fluid (e.g., due to uncrossable pins or barriers) and their geometry give rise to strong, entropy-driven forces. In the limit of large polymer densities, in which a type of mean-field theory is accurate, we find that a…
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