Abstract

The phase behavior of semi-flexible polymers is integral to various contexts, from materials science to biophysics, many of which utilize or require specific confinement geometries as well as the orientational behavior of the polymers. Inspired by collagen assembly, we study the orientational ordering of semi-flexible polymers, modeled as Maier-Saupe worm-like chains, using self-consistent field theory. We first examine the bulk behavior of these polymers, locating the isotropic-nematic transition and delineating the limit of stability of the isotropic and nematic phases. This effort explains how nematic ordering emerges from the isotropic phase and offers insight into how different (e.g., mono-domain vs multi-domain) nematic phases form. We then clarify the influence of planar confinement on the nematic ordering of the polymers. We find that while the presence of a single confining wall does not shift the location of nematic transition, it aligns the polymers in parallel to the wall; above the onset of nematic transition, this preference tends to propagate into the bulk phase. Introducing a second, perpendicular, wall leads to a nematic phase that is parallel to both walls, allowing the ordering direction to be uniquely set by the geometry of the experimental setup. The advantage of wall-confinement is that it can be used to propagate mono-domain nematic phases into the bulk phase.

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