The Electrostatic Persistence Length Calculated from Monte Carlo, Variational and Perturbation Methods
Preprint
- 27 December 1996
Abstract
Monte Carlo simulations and variational calculations using a Gaussian ansatz are applied to a model consisting of a flexible linear polyelectrolyte chain as well as to an intrinsically stiff chain with up to 1000 charged monomers. Addition of salt is treated implicitly through a screened Coulomb potential for the electrostatic interactions. For the flexible model the electrostatic persistence length shows roughly three regimes in its dependence on the Debye-H\"{u}ckel screening length, $\kappa^{-1}$.As long as the salt content is low and $\kappa^{-1}$ is longer than the end-to-end distance, the electrostatic persistence length varies only slowly with $\kappa^{-1}$. Decreasing the screening length, a controversial region is entered. We find that the electrostatic persistence length scales as $sqrt{\xi_p}/\kappa$, in agreement with experiment on flexible polyelectrolytes, where $\xi_p$ is a strength parameter measuring the electrostatic interactions within the polyelectrolyte. For screening lengths much shorter than the bond length, the $\kappa^{-1}$ dependence becomes quadratic in the variational calculation. The simulations suffer from numerical problems in this regime, but seem to give a relationship half-way between linear and quadratic. A low temperature expansion only reproduces the first regime and a high temperature expansion, which treats the electrostatic interactions as a perturbation to a Gaussian chain, gives a quadratic dependence on the Debye length. For a sufficiently stiff chain, the persistence length varies quadratically with $\kappa^{-1}$ in agreement with earlier theories.
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All Related Versions
- Version 1, 1996-12-27, ArXiv
- Published version: The Journal of Chemical Physics, 107 (4), 1279.
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