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This content will become publicly available on January 15, 2026

Title: Dynamics of polymers in coarse-grained nematic solvents
Polymers are a primary building block in many biomaterials, often interacting with anisotropic backgrounds. While previous studies have considered polymer dynamics within nematic solvents, rarely are the effects of anisotropic viscosity and polymer elongation differentiated. Here, we study polymers embedded in nematic liquid crystals with isotropic viscosity via numerical simulations to explicitly investigate the effect of nematicity on macromolecular conformation and how conformation alone can produce anisotropic dynamics. We employ a hybrid multi-particle collision dynamics and molecular dynamics technique that captures nematic orientation, thermal fluctuations and hydrodynamic interactions. The coupling of the polymer segments to the director field of the surrounding nematic elongates the polymer, producing anisotropic diffusion even in nematic solvents with isotropic viscosity. For intermediate coupling, the competition between background anisotropy and macromolecular entropy leads to hairpins – sudden kinks along the backbone of the polymer. Experiments of DNA embedded in a solution of rod-like fd viruses qualitatively support the role of hairpins in establishing characteristic conformational features that govern polymer dynamics. Hairpin diffusion along the backbone exponentially slows as coupling increases. Better understanding two-way coupling between polymers and their surroundings could allow the creation of more biomimetic composite materials.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2105113
PAR ID:
10629778
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
Royal Society of Chemistry
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Soft Matter
Volume:
21
Issue:
3
ISSN:
1744-683X
Page Range / eLocation ID:
361 to 375
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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