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1.
Phys Rev E ; 100(2-1): 022121, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31574768

ABSTRACT

We investigate the surface adsorption transition of interacting self-avoiding square lattice trails onto a straight boundary line. The character of this adsorption transition depends on the strength of the bulk interaction, which induces a collapse transition of the trails from a swollen to a collapsed phase, separated by a critical state. If the trail is in the critical state, the universality class of the adsorption transition changes; this is known as the special adsorption point. Using flatPERM, a stochastic growth Monte Carlo algorithm, we simulate the adsorption of self-avoiding interacting trails on the square lattice using three different boundary scenarios which differ with respect to the orientation of the boundary and the type of surface interaction. We confirm the expected phase diagram, showing swollen, collapsed, and adsorbed phases in all three scenarios, and confirm universality of the normal adsorption transition at low values of the bulk interaction strength. Intriguingly, we cannot confirm universality of the special adsorption transition. We find different values for the exponents; the most likely explanation is that this is due to the presence of strong corrections to scaling at this point.

2.
Phys Rev E ; 99(6-1): 062113, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31330636

ABSTRACT

We consider the phase diagram of self-avoiding walks (SAWs) on the simple cubic lattice subject to surface and bulk interactions, modeling an adsorbing surface and variable solvent quality for a polymer in dilute solution, respectively. We simulate SAWs at specific interaction strengths to focus on locating certain transitions and their critical behavior. By collating these new results with previous results we sketch the complete phase diagram and show how the adsorption transition is affected by changing the bulk interaction strength. This expands on recent work considering how adsorption is affected by solvent quality. We demonstrate that changes in the adsorption crossover exponent coincide with phase boundaries.

3.
Phys Rev E ; 97(2-1): 022503, 2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29548077

ABSTRACT

Recently, it has been proposed that the adsorption transition for a single polymer in dilute solution, modeled by lattice walks in three dimensions, is not universal with respect to intermonomer interactions. Moreover, it has been conjectured that key critical exponents ϕ, measuring the growth of the contacts with the surface at the adsorption point, and 1/δ, which measures the finite-size shift of the critical temperature, are not the same. However, applying standard scaling arguments the two key critical exponents should rather be identical, hence pointing to a potential breakdown of these standard scaling arguments. Both of these conjectures are in contrast to the well-studied situation in two dimensions, where there are exact results from conformal field theory: these exponents are both accepted to be 1/2 and universal. We use the flatPERM algorithm to simulate self-avoiding walks and trails on the hexagonal, square, and simple cubic lattices up to length 1024 to investigate these claims. Walks can be seen as a repulsive limit of intermonomer interaction for trails, allowing us to probe the universality of adsorption. For each lattice model we analyze several thermodynamic properties to produce different methods of estimating the critical temperature and the key exponents. We test our methodology on the two-dimensional cases, and the resulting spread in values for ϕ and 1/δ indicates that there is a systematic error which can far exceed the statistical error usually reported. We further suggest a methodology for consistent estimation of the key adsorption exponents which gives ϕ=1/δ=0.484(4) in three dimensions. Hence, we conclude that in three dimensions these critical exponents indeed differ from the mean-field value of 1/2, as had previously been calculated, but cannot find evidence that they differ from each other. Importantly, we also find no substantive evidence of any nonuniversality in the polymer adsorption transition.

4.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 79(3 Pt 1): 031912, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19391976

ABSTRACT

We investigate a two-dimensional problem of an isolated self-interacting end-grafted polymer, pulled by one end. In the thermodynamic limit, we find that the model has only two different phases, namely a collapsed phase and a stretched phase. We show that the phase diagram obtained by Kumar [Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 128101 (2007)] for small systems, where differences between various statistical ensembles play an important role, differs from the phase diagram obtained here in the thermodynamic limit.


Subject(s)
Polymers/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Monte Carlo Method , Phase Transition , Temperature , Thermodynamics
5.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 76(5 Pt 1): 051904, 2007 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18233684

ABSTRACT

We present results for a lattice model of polymers where the type of beta sheet formation can be controlled by different types of hydrogen bonds depending on the relative orientation of close segments of the polymer. Tuning these different interaction strengths leads to low-temperature structures with different types of orientational order. We perform simulations of this model and so present the phase diagram, ascertaining the nature of the phases and the order of the transitions between these phases.


Subject(s)
Hydrogen/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Proteins/chemistry , Proteins/ultrastructure , Computer Simulation , Hydrogen Bonding , Phase Transition , Protein Conformation
6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 96(24): 240603, 2006 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16907227

ABSTRACT

We introduce a new class of models for polymer collapse, given by random walks on regular lattices which are weighted according to multiple site visits. A Boltzmann weight omegal is assigned to each (l+1)-fold visited lattice site, and self-avoidance is incorporated by restricting to a maximal number K of visits to any site via setting omegal=0 for l>or=K. In this Letter we study this model on the square and simple cubic lattices for the case K=3. Moreover, we consider a variant of this model, in which we forbid immediate self-reversal of the random walk. We perform simulations for random walks up to n=1024 steps using FlatPERM, a flat histogram stochastic growth algorithm. We find evidence that the existence of a collapse transition depends sensitively on the details of the model and has an unexpected dependence on dimension.

7.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 67(3 Pt 1): 032801, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12689115

ABSTRACT

Recently questions have been raised as to the conclusions that can be drawn from currently proposed scaling theory for a single polymer in various types of solution in two and three dimensions. Here we summarize the crossover theory predicted for low dimensions and clarify the scaling arguments that relate thermal exponents for quantities on approaching the theta point from low temperatures to those associated with the asymptotics in polymer length at the theta point itself.

8.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 1(1): 96-105, Mar. 2002.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-417647

ABSTRACT

Human alpha(1)-acid glycoprotein (AGP) or orosomucoid (ORM) is a major acute phase protein that is thought to play a crucial role in maintaining homeostasis. Human AGP is the product of a cluster of at least two adjacent genes located on HSA chromosome 9. Using a range of restriction endonucleases we have investigated DNA variation at the locus encoding the AGP genes in a group of healthy Caucasians. Polymorphisms were identified using BamHI, EcoRI, BglII, PvuII, HindIII, TaqI and MspI. Nonrandom associations were found between the BamHI, EcoRI and BglII RFLPs. The RFLPs detected with PvuII, TaqI and MspI were all located in exon 6 of both AGP genes. The duplication of an AGP gene was observed in 11 of the individuals studied and was in linkage disequilibrium with the TaqI RFLP. The identification and characterization of these polymorphisms should prove useful for other population and forensic studies


Subject(s)
Humans , DNA , White People , Orosomucoid/genetics , Alleles , Blotting, Southern , DNA , Linkage Disequilibrium/genetics , Gene Frequency , Genetic Linkage , Genes, Duplicate/genetics , Pedigree
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