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Flory theory of randomly branched polymers

Publication ,  Journal Article
Everaers, R; Grosberg, AY; Rubinstein, M; Rosa, A
Published in: Soft Matter
2017

Randomly branched polymer chains (or trees) are a classical subject of polymer physics with connections to the theory of magnetic systems, percolation and critical phenomena. More recently, the model has been reconsidered for RNA, supercoiled DNA and the crumpling of topologically-constrained polymers. While solvable in the ideal case, little is known exactly about randomly branched polymers with volume interactions. Flory theory provides a simple, unifying description for a wide range of branched systems, including isolated trees in good and θ-solvent, and tree melts. In particular, the approach provides a common framework for the description of randomly branched polymers with quenched connectivity and for randomly branching polymers with annealed connectivity. Here we review the Flory theory for interacting trees in the asymptotic limit of very large polymerization degree for good solvent, θ-solutions and melts, and report its predictions for annealed connectivity in θ-solvents. We compare the predictions of Flory theory for randomly branched polymers to a wide range of available analytical and numerical results and conclude that they are qualitatively excellent and quantitatively good in most cases.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Soft Matter

DOI

ISSN

1744-683X

Publication Date

2017

Related Subject Headings

  • Chemical Physics
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
  • 02 Physical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Everaers, R., Grosberg, A. Y., Rubinstein, M., & Rosa, A. (2017). Flory theory of randomly branched polymers. Soft Matter. https://doi.org/10.1039/C6SM02756C
Everaers, Ralf, Alexander Y. Grosberg, Michael Rubinstein, and Angelo Rosa. “Flory theory of randomly branched polymers.” Soft Matter, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1039/C6SM02756C.
Everaers R, Grosberg AY, Rubinstein M, Rosa A. Flory theory of randomly branched polymers. Soft Matter. 2017;
Everaers, Ralf, et al. “Flory theory of randomly branched polymers.” Soft Matter, 2017. Manual, doi:10.1039/C6SM02756C.
Everaers R, Grosberg AY, Rubinstein M, Rosa A. Flory theory of randomly branched polymers. Soft Matter. 2017;
Journal cover image

Published In

Soft Matter

DOI

ISSN

1744-683X

Publication Date

2017

Related Subject Headings

  • Chemical Physics
  • 09 Engineering
  • 03 Chemical Sciences
  • 02 Physical Sciences