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Theoretical and computational analysis of the electrophoretic polymer mobility inversion induced by charge correlations

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-03-27, 08:57 authored by Xiang Yang, Sahin Buyukdagli, Alberto Scacchi, Maria Sammalkorpi, Tapio Ala-NissilaTapio Ala-Nissila

Electrophoretic (EP) mobility reversal is commonly observed for strongly charged macromolecules in multivalent salt solutions. This curious effect takes place, e.g., when a charged polymer, such as DNA, adsorbs excess counterions so that the counterion-dressed surface charge reverses its sign, leading to the inversion of the polymer drift driven by an external electric field. In order to characterize this seemingly counterintuitive phenomenon that cannot be captured by electrostatic mean-field theories, we adapt here a previously developed strong-coupling-dressed Poisson-Boltzmann approach to the cylindrical geometry of the polyelectrolyte-salt system. Within the framework of this formalism, we derive an analytical polymer mobility formula dressed by charge correlations. In qualitative agreement with polymer transport experiments, this mobility formula predicts that the increment of the monovalent salt, the decrease of the multivalent counterion valency, and the increase of the dielectric permittivity of the background solvent suppress charge correlations and increase the multivalent bulk counterion concentration required for EP mobility reversal. These results are corroborated by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations showing how multivalent counterions induce mobility inversion at dilute concentrations and suppress the inversion effect at large concentrations. This re-entrant behavior, previously observed in the aggregation of like-charged polymer solutions, calls for verification by polymer transport experiments.

Funding

Academy of Finland through its Centres of Excellence Programme (2022-2029, LIBER) under Project No. 346111

Technology Industries of Finland Centennial Foundation TT2020 grant

FinnCERES Materials Bioeconomy Ecosystem

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Mathematical Sciences

Published in

Physical Review E

Volume

107

Issue

3

Publisher

American Physical Society

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© American Physical Society

Publisher statement

This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Physical Review E and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.107.034503

Acceptance date

2023-02-14

Publication date

2023-03-23

Copyright date

2023

ISSN

2470-0045

eISSN

2470-0053

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof Tapio Ala-Nissila. Deposit date: 26 March 2023

Article number

034503

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