Web Release Date: December 17,
Attractions between Hard Colloidal Spheres in Semiflexible Polymer Solutions
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, 209 S. 33rd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6396
Received March 10, 1999
Revised Manuscript Received October 15, 1999
Abstract:
We explore the depletion attractions that arise between hard colloidal spheres immersed
in a nonadsorbing polymer solution of DNA. We spatially confine two 1.25
m silica spheres in a scanning
optical tweezer and quantitatively examine their interaction potential in double-stranded DNA solutions
of different concentrations. The potentials obtained display variations in depth and range that are
consistent with scaling behavior expected for semiflexible polymers near the
-point. In particular, we
clearly observe the crossover from a dilute solution of Gaussian coils to the weakly fluctuating semidilute
regime dominated by two-point collisions (Schaefer, D. W.; Joanny, J. F.; Pincus, P. Macromolecules 1980,
13, 1280-1289). We also quantitatively test the Asakura-Oosawa model for these systems and show
that it may be used in both the semidilute as well as the dilute regime. At fixed DNA concentration, we
find that the range and depth of the interparticle potentials do not change significantly for ionic
concentrations between 1 and 50 mM.
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