Physical Review Research (Mar 2020)

Wet and dry internal friction can be measured with the Jarzynski equality

  • R. Kailasham,
  • Rajarshi Chakrabarti,
  • J. Ravi Prakash

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.013331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 013331

Abstract

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The existence of two types of internal friction—wet and dry—is revisited, and a simple protocol is proposed for distinguishing between the two types and extracting the appropriate internal friction coefficient. The scheme requires repeatedly stretching a polymer molecule and measuring the average work dissipated in the process by applying the Jarzynski equality. The internal friction coefficient is then estimated from the average dissipated work in the extrapolated limit of zero solvent viscosity. The validity of the protocol is established through analytical calculations on a one-dimensional free-draining Hookean spring-dashpot model for a polymer, and Brownian dynamics simulations of (a) a single-mode nonlinear spring-dashpot model for a polymer and (b) a finitely extensible bead-spring chain with cohesive intrachain interactions, both of which incorporate fluctuating hydrodynamic interactions. Well-established single-molecule manipulation techniques, such as optical tweezer-based pulling, can be used to implement the suggested protocol experimentally.