Abstract

The thermodynamics of the nonspecific binding of salt to a polyelectrolyte molecule is studied using a density functional approach. The polyelectrolyte molecule is modeled as an infinite, inflexible, and impenetrable charged cylinder and the counterions and co-ions are modeled as charged hard spheres of equal diameter. The density functional theory is based on a hybrid approach where the hard-sphere contribution to the one-particle correlation function is evaluated nonperturbatively and the ionic contribution to the one-particle correlation function is evaluated perturbatively. The advantage of the approach is that analytical expressions are available for all the correlation functions. The calculated single ion preferential interaction coefficients, excess free energy, and activity coefficients show a nonmonotonic variation as a function of polyion charge in the presence of divalent ions. These properties display considerable departure from the predictions of the nonlinear Poisson-Boltzmann (NLPB) equation, with qualitative differences in some cases, which may be attributed to correlation effects neglected in the NLPB theory.

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