Numéro |
J. Phys. II France
Volume 7, Numéro 6, June 1997
|
|
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Page(s) | 887 - 902 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp2:1997160 |
J. Phys. II France 7 (1997) 887-902
Persistence Length of Intrinsically Stiff Polyampholyte Chains
B.-Y. Ha and D. ThirumalaiInstitute for Physical Science and Technology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
(Received 16 October 1996, revised 3 February 1997, accepted 28 February 1997)
Abstract
We calculate the contribution,
, to the persistence length arising from charge fluctuations of an intrinsically stiff polyampholyte (PA) chain. The interaction
between charges along the PA backbone is taken to be given by the Debye-Hückel potential. When the charges along the chain
are uncorrelated the contribution to
comes from two sources. One of them is due to the overall charge on the PA chain for which the contribution to
where
is the Debye screening length. Surprisingly the contribution to
from charge fluctuations
, namely due to the polyampholyte effect, is proportional to
so that there is a reduction in the total persistence length when PA chain is overall neutral. We also show that the shape
of a PA chain is cylindrical with length
with
being the bare persistence length. The diameter of an overall neutral chain can become of the order of a monomer size which
is considerably smaller than that of the corresponding polyelectrolyte. As a consequence, we argue that the interaction between
two neutral stiff polyampholyte chains is attractive. The implication of the effective attractive interaction is that a dilute
dispersion of neutral polyampholyte PA chains would phase separate into dense (with possible nematic order) and a rare phase.
When correlations between the charges are included one gets a polyelectrolyte like behavior with
even when the chain is neutral. If the range of correlation,
, is large compared to the screening length (usually difficult to obtain in experiments) there is a large negative contribution
to
which scales as
where
is the Bjerrum length.
© Les Editions de Physique 1997