A Science Friction Story: Molecular Interactions in Semiflexible Polymer Networks

Author:

Mollenkopf Paul1ORCID,Prascevic Dusan2,Glaser Martin23,Smith David M.23ORCID,Schnauß Jörg234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 19104 USA

2. Peter‐Debye Institute for Soft Matter Physics Leipzig University 04103 Leipzig Germany

3. Fraunhofer Institute for Cell Therapy and Immunology, DNA Nanodevices 04103 Leipzig Germany

4. Unconventional Computing Lab, Department of Computer Science and Creative Technologies University of the West of England Bristol BS16 1QY UK

Abstract

AbstractEstablished model theories, developed to capture the mechanical behavior of soft, complex materials composed of semiflexible polymers, assume that entropic interactions between filaments are primarily responsible for determining the mechanical response. In recent studies, the generally accepted tube model has been challenged in terms of this basic assumption about filament–filament interactions, but also because of its predictions regarding the frequency dependence of the elastic modulus in the intermediate frequency regime. A central question is how molecular interactions and friction between network constituents influence the rheological response of isotropic entangled networks of semiflexible polymers. It has been previously shown that friction forces between aligned pairs of actin filaments are not negligible. Here, the influence of friction forces and attractive interactions on network rheology is systematically investigated by means of targeted surface modification. It is shown that these forces have a qualitative and quantitative influence on the viscoelastic properties of semiflexible polymer networks and contribute to their response to nonlinear deformations. By comparing two polymer model systems with respect to their surface compositions, a possible explanation is given about the origin of acting forces on a molecular level.

Funder

Europäischer Sozialfonds

H2020 European Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

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