Equilibrium dynamics and organization of two cavity-confined polymers

ORAL

Abstract

Experiments using nanofluidic devices have proven effective in characterizing the physical properties of polymers confined to small cavities. Two recent studies using such methods examined the organization and dynamics of two DNA molecules in box-like cavities with strong confinement in one direction and with square and elliptical cross sections in the lateral plane. Motivated by these experiments, we employ Monte Carlo and Brownian dynamics simulations to study the physical behavior of two polymers confined to small cavities with shapes comparable to those used in the experiments. We quantify the effects of varying the confinement dimensions and the properties of the polymers on their organization and dynamics. We find that the tendency for polymers to segregate is enhanced by increasing polymer width. For sufficiently small cavities, increasing cavity elongation promotes segregation and localization of identical polymers to opposite sides of the cavity along its long axis. A free-energy barrier controls the rate of polymers swapping positions, and the observed dynamics are roughly in accord with predictions of a simple theoretical model. Increasing the contour length difference between polymers significantly affects their organization in the cavity. In the case of a large linear polymer co-trapped with a small ring polymer in an elliptical cavity, the small polymer tends to lie near the lateral confining walls, and especially at the cavity poles for highly elongated ellipses.

* This work was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC).

Publication: D. A. Rehel and J. M. Polson, "Equilibrium behaviour of two cavity-confined polymers: effects of polymer width and system asymmetries", Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 1092.

Presenters

  • James M Polson

    Univ of Prince Edward Island

Authors

  • James M Polson

    Univ of Prince Edward Island

  • Desiree A Rehel

    McMaster University, Univ of Prince Edward Island