Rheology of entangled solutions of ring-linear DNA blends

ORAL

Abstract

The rheological response of ring polymers remains poorly understood, and even small amounts of linear chains can have large effects on their behavior. In this work, we use monodisperse ring DNA polymers (45 kbp, 2.9 x 107 g/mol) to investigate the importance of linear chains in the rheology of ring-linear blends. Linear viscoelastic measurements have been made on ring-linear DNA solutions at various concentrations with different linear chain ratios and the responses compared to those of linear λ DNA (48.5 kbp) solutions. Because of the linear threading effects, the blends have a significantly higher zero-shear rate viscosity and a much broader rubbery regime than that of the linear polymer. Furthermore, a linear ratio of 0.5 is a threshold at which the magnitude of the plateau modulus GN0 tends towards that of the linear counterpart. However, independent of the linear content, the power law dependences of GN0 on total concentration for the blends are the same as that of the linear solutions. We also find that the Cox-Merz rule holds for the linear-ring topology.

*The authors thank the National Science Foundation under grant CBET 1603943 and the J.R. Bradford endowment at Texas Tech University, each for partial support of this project.

Presenters

  • Dejie Kong

    • Texas Tech Univ

Authors

  • Dejie Kong

    • Texas Tech Univ
  • Sourya Banik

    • Texas Tech Univ
  • Michael San Francisco

    • Texas Tech Univ
  • Rae M Robertson-Anderson

    • University of San Diego
    • Department of Physics and Biophysics, University of San Diego
    • Biophysics, University of San Diego
    • Physics and Biophysics, University of SanDiego
  • Charles M Schroeder

    • Department of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign
    • 2Department of Materials Science & Engineering, 3Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology, 7Center for Biophysics and Quantitative Biology, University of Illinoi
    • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Gregory B McKenna

    • Texas Tech Univ
    • Chemical Engineering, Texas Tech
    • Department of Chemical Engineering, Texas Tech University