English

Polymer Escape from a Metastable Kramers potential: Path Integral Hyperdynamics Study

Soft Condensed Matter 2013-12-05 v1

Abstract

We study the dynamics of flexible, semiflexible, and self-avoiding polymer chains moving under a Kramers metastable potential. Due to thermal noise, the polymers, initially placed in the metastable well, can cross the potential barrier, but these events are extremely rare if the barrier is much larger than thermal energy. To speed up the slow rate processes in computer simulations, we extend the recently proposed path integral hyperdynamics method to the cases of polymers. We consider the cases where the polymers' radii of gyration are comparable to the distance between the well bottom and the barrier top. We find that, for a flexible polymer, the crossing rate (R\mathcal{R}) monotonically decreases with chain contour length (LL), but with the magnitude much larger than the Kramers rate in the globular limit. For a semiflexible polymer, the crossing rate decreases with LL but becomes nearly constant for large LL. For a fixed LL, the crossing rate becomes maximum at an intermediate bending stiffness. For a self-avoiding chain, the rate is a nonmonotonic function of LL, first decreasing with LL, and then, above certain length, increasing with LL. These findings can be instrumental for efficient separation of biopolymers.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1312.1215,
  title  = {Polymer Escape from a Metastable Kramers potential: Path Integral Hyperdynamics Study},
  author = {Jaeoh Shin and Timo Ikonen and Mahendra D. Khandkar and Tapio Ala-Nissila and Wokyung Sung},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1312.1215},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

8 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T02:20:45.927Z