Abstract

AbstractA model for the coupling between internal modes, or molecular rotation, and anisotropic translational diffusion in congested solutions is proposed to account for the anomalously slow component that has appeared ubiquitously in reported autocorrelation functions of Rayleigh scattered light from solutions of DNA's with molecular weights greater than about 107. The predicted existence of an anomalously slow mode in addition to a faster “normal” mode, as well as the predicted relative amplitudes of both fast and slow components, are qualitatively in agreement with the observations. For sufficiently long‐wavelength fluctuations all of the amplitude appears in the slower mode, which then exhibits an appropriately averaged translational diffusion coefficient.In support of the model it is shown in the Appendix that nonideal central interactions between macromolecules are by themselves insufficient to generate isolated internal mode relaxation terms in the autocorrelation function, unless translational ordering of the macromolecules extends over the illuminated observation region.

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