Role of non-equilibrium conformations on driven polymer translocation
HH Katkar and M Muthukumar, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 148, 024903 (2018).
DOI: 10.1063/1.4994204
One of the major theoretical methods in understanding polymer
translocation through a nanopore is the Fokker-Planck formalism based on
the assumption of quasi-equilibrium of polymer conformations. The
criterion for applicability of the quasi-equilibrium approximation for
polymer translocation is that the average translocation time per Kuhn
segment, (tau)/N-K, is longer than the relaxation time tau(0) of the
polymer. Toward an understanding of conditions that would satisfy this
criterion, we have performed coarse-grained three dimensional Langevin
dynamics and multi-particle collision dynamics simulations. We have
studied the role of initial conformations of a polyelectrolyte chain
(which were artificially generated with a flow field) on the kinetics of
its translocation across a nanopore under the action of an externally
applied transmembrane voltage V (in the absence of the initial flow
field). Stretched (out-of-equilibrium) polyelectrolyte chain
conformations are deliberately and systematically generated and used as
initial conformations in translocation simulations. Independent
simulations are performed to study the relaxation behavior of these
stretched chains, and a comparison is made between the relaxation time
scale and the mean translocation time <
Return to Publications page