The effect of crowded environment with static obstacles on the translocation of a three-dimensional self-avoiding polymer through a small pore is studied using dynamic Monte Carlo simulation. The translocation time τ is dependent on polymer-obstacle interaction and obstacle concentration. The influence of obstacles on the polymer translocation is explained qualitatively by the free energy landscape. There exists a special polymer-obstacle interaction at which the translocation time is roughly independent of the obstacle concentration at low obstacle concentration, and the strength of the special interaction is roughly independent of chain length N. Scaling relation τ ~ N(1.25) is observed for strong driving translocations. The diffusion property of polymer chain is also influenced by obstacles. Normal diffusion is only observed in dilute solution without obstacles or in a crowded environment with weak polymer-obstacle attraction. Otherwise, subdiffusion behavior of polymer is observed.
Free energy landscapes for polymer chain translocating through an interacting pore are calculated by using exact enumeration method. A potential barrier exists at weak attractive or repulsive polymer-pore interaction and it changes to a potential well with the increase in the attraction. The result reveals that there is a free translocation point where polymer is free of energy barrier. Using the free energy landscape, the translocation time tau for polymer worming through the pore and the migration time tau(m) for polymer migrating from cis side to trans side are calculated with the Fokker-Plank equation. It shows that a moderate attractive polymer-pore interaction accelerates the migration of polymer from cis side to trans side.
The peel of () is the primary byproducts during the process of fruit or juice in food industries, and it was always considered as biomass waste for further treatments. In this study, the authors reported a simple and eco-friendly method to synthesise gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) using peel extract as reducing and capping agents. The synthesised AuNPs were characterised by UV-visible spectrum, X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscope (TEM) and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The UV-visible spectrum of the AuNPs colloid showed a characteristic peak at 540 nm. The peaks of XRD analysis at (2) 38.30°, 44.28°, 64.62°, 77.57° and 81.75° were assigned to (111), (200), (220), (311) and (222) planes of the face-centered cubic (fcc) lattice of gold. The TEM images showed that AuNPs were nearly spherical in shape with the size of 8-25 nm. The FTIR spectrum revealed that some bioactive compounds capped the surface of synthesised AuNPs. The biosynthesised AuNPs performed strong catalytic activity in degradation of 4-nitrophenol to 4-aminophenol and good antibacterial activity against both gram negative () and gram positive () bacterium. The synthesis procedure was proved simple, cost effective and environment friendly.
The translocation of a bond fluctuation polymer through an interacting nanopore is studied using dynamic Monte Carlo simulation. A driving force F is applied only for monomers inside the pore. The influence of polymer-pore interaction on the scaling relation τ~N(α) is studied for both unbiased and biased translocations, with τ the translocation time and N the polymer length. Results show that the exponent α is dependent on the polymer-pore interaction. For a noninteracting pore, we find α=2.48 for unbiased translocation and α=1.35 for strong biased translocation; for strong attraction, we find α=2.35 for unbiased translocation and α=1.22 for strong biased translocation. The unbiased translocation corresponds to the low-NF regime whereas the strong biased translocation corresponds to the high-NF regime.
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