Transitions of tethered chain molecules under tension
Jutta Luettmer-Strathmann, Kurt Binder

TL;DR
This study uses Wang-Landau simulations to analyze how tension affects the conformations and phase transitions of tethered polymer chains across different solvent and surface conditions, aligning well with experimental data.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive phase diagram for tethered chains under tension, revealing new insights into transition behaviors and validating analytical models with simulation results.
Findings
Identification of globule to stretched conformation transition in poor solvents.
Discovery of direct crystalline to stretched conformation transitions.
Observation of force-induced desorption as a discontinuous transition.
Abstract
An applied tension force changes the equilibrium conformations of a polymer chain tethered to a planar substrate and thus affects the adsorption transition as well as the coil-globule and crystallization transitions. Conversely, solvent quality and surface attraction are reflected in equilibrium force-extension curves that can be measured in experiments. To investigate these effects theoretically, we study tethered chains under tension with Wang-Landau simulations of a bond-fluctuation lattice model. Applying our model to pulling experiments on biological molecules we obtain a good description of experimental data in the intermediate force range, where universal features dominate and finite size effects are small. For tethered chains in poor solvent, we observe the predicted two-phase coexistence at transitions from the globule to stretched conformations and also discover direct…
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