Tuning the Collapse Transition of Weakly Charged Polymers by Ion-Specific Screening and Adsorption

10 August 2018, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The experimentally observed swelling and collapse response of weakly charged polymers to the addition of specific salts displays quite convoluted behavior that is not easy to categorize. Here we use a minimalistic implicit solvent / explicit salt simulation model with a focus on ion-specific interactions between ions and a single weakly charged polyelectrolyte to qualitatively explain the observed effects.
In particular, we demonstrate ion-specific screening and bridging effects cause collapse at low salt concentrations whereas the same strong ion-specific direct interactions drive re-entrant swelling at high concentrations. Consistently with experiments, a distinct salt concentration at which the salting-out power of anions inverts from the reverse to direct Hofmeister series is observed. At this, so called ‘isospheric point’, the ion-specific effects vanish. Furthermore, with additional simplifying assumptions, an ion-specific mean-field model is developed for the collapse transition which quantitatively agrees with the simulations. Our work demonstrates the sensitivity of the structural behavior of charged polymers to the addition of specific salt and shall be useful for further guidance of experiments.

Keywords

elastin-like polypeptide
ion-specific effects
Hofmeister series anions effect
Hofmeister series reversal
Langevin dynamics simulation
mean-field theory

Supplementary materials

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chudoba2018.toc
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chudoba2018.si
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chudoba2018.si-mathematica
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