Abstract

Even though dilute (unentangled) polymer solutions cannot act as gel-like sieving media, it has been shown that they can be used to separate DNA molecules in capillary electrophoresis. The separation then comes from sporadic, independent DNA-polymer collisions. We study polymer-polymer collisions in nanochannels (i.e., channels that are smaller than the normal size of the polymers), a situation where a polyelectrolyte is forced to migrate "through" isolated uncharged molecules during electrophoresis. We use Langevin dynamics simulations to explore the nature of these collisions and their effect on the net motion of the two polymer chains. We identify several types of collisions, including some that are unique to nanochannels. When the uncharged polymer is much larger than the polyelectrolyte, the system is reminiscent of gel electrophoresis, and we propose a modified empirical reptation model to explain the data, with an orientation factor that depends on the tube diameter. We also observe that the duration of a collision is a non-monotonic function of the polymer size ratio when the two chains are of comparable size, a surprising resonance-like phenomenon, which, combined with the asymmetric nature of molecular conformations during collision, suggests possible ratchet-like mechanisms that could be used to sort polyelectrolytes in nanodevices.

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