Roman
Staňo
*ab,
Christos N.
Likos
a and
Jan
Smrek
a
aFaculty of Physics, University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5, 1090 Vienna, Austria. E-mail: roman.stano@univie.ac.at
bVienna Doctoral School in Physics, University of Vienna, Boltzmanngasse 5, 1090 Vienna, Austria
First published on 8th December 2022
We use computer simulations to study a system of two unlinked ring polymers, whose length and bending stiffness are systematically varied. We derive the effective potentials between the rings, calculate the areas of minimal surfaces of the same, and characterize the threading between them. When the two rings are of the same kind, threading of a one ring through the surface of the other is immanent for small ring–ring separations. Flexible rings pierce the surface of the other ring several times but only shallowly, as compared to the stiff rings which pierce less frequently but deeply. Typically, the ring that is being threaded swells and flattens up into an oblate-like conformation, while the ring that is threading the other takes a shape of an elongated prolate. The roles of the threader and the threaded ring are being dynamically exchanged. If, on the other hand, the rings are of different kinds, the symmetry is broken and the rings tend to take up roles of the threader and the threaded ring with unequal probabilities. We propose a method how to predict these probabilities based on the parameters of the individual rings. Ultimately, our work captures the interactions between ring polymers in a coarse-grained fashion, opening the way to large-scale modelling of materials such as kinetoplasts, catenanes or topological brushes.
The threading occurs in diverse settings and concentration regimes. For example, in dilute regime, the threading can support topology-based supramolecular architectures, such as polycatenanes7–9 or polyrotaxanes, with their movable threaded ring constituents, promising the development of complex synthetic molecular-sized machines.10–12 In the biological realm, threading occurs across domains of life, typically at higher densities, from semidilute to melt conditions. The kinetoplast is the mitochondrial DNA of trypanosomes in the form of thousands of rings, concatenated, or not, depending on the species13–19 in semi-dilute conditions. Bacterial plasmids and chromosomes are (often) circular, subject to threading constraints under a strong confinement in case of multiple chromosomes or after genome replication where the subsequent chromosome segregation is assisted by the entropic repulsion20 enhanced by the circular topology.21 In eukaryotes the circular extrachromosomal DNA is abundant22 and the linear chromosomes contain many biologically functional domains in the form of loops that reduce the inter-domain interactions.23 The formation of the loops and their effective repulsion arising from the nonconcatenation and threading constraints, compacts the chromosomes, segregates and disentangles the sister chromatids24 in mitosis and meiosis. The average large scale conformation of long chromosomes is characterized by the same exponents and territorial arrangement as that of long nonconcatenated and unknotted rings in melt25,26 which in both systems arise from topological (uncrossability) constraints.
Besides their vast biological implications, threadings play a decisive role for determining mechanical properties of materials composed of polymers with ring topology, particularly above the overlap concentration. While the theories on the equilibrium static properties of the ring melt, neglecting ring threadings, are accurate, their generalizations on dynamics are falling short.27–32 It has been conjectured33–36 that the threadings become crucial for long ring lengths (correlate with slower dynamics already at shorter lengths37,38) and might allow for the formation of highly threaded conformations restricting relative ring motion to the extent of topological glass. Some models of the topological glass are based on an assumption that the dynamics of a ring is impacted differently by the nature of the threading: if a ring is actively threading another one, in comparison to the one that is passively threaded.39,40 As the topological glass has not yet been observed, the role of the nature of the threading has not yet been resolved in this case. However, for example mixtures of rings and linear chains41–45 exhibit viscosity exceeding that of the components, due to rings passively threaded by the linear chains. The passive ring threading by linear chains is even more evident in nonlinear rheology, in shear or extensional flows.43,46–48 In other systems, the relevance of (active or passive) threadings, or lack thereof, is manifested too. Tadpole-shaped polymers exhibit a strong slow-down as a function of the tail length due to head-tail threadings. Polymer rings diffuse faster when supercoiled due to reduction of threadings and reduction in entanglements.49 The significance of threadings is highlighted even more for systems out of equilibrium. Rings in extensional flow form supramolecular daisy-chains by threadings dramatically increasing the extensional viscosity.42,50,51 The threading is also enhanced in a system of rings with driven segments leading to the active topological glass.52,53
While most of the above examples occur at semi-dilute to melt conditions, therefore involving many-body effects, already the simplest case of two threading rings in dilute conditions is not fully understood or described with an effective theory. Here we aim at making this step. Threadings are related to the collective conformational entropy, which is inherently tied to the effective interaction potential. Although the results from the dilute regime cannot be directly transferred to the interesting melt conditions, exactly because of the many-body effects causing strong distortion of the conformations, it has been proved that the effective potential description is accurate to about five times the overlap concentration.54,55 Therefore understanding the effective potentials and threadings in the simplest two-ring conditions fills at least the bottom part of the interesting concentration range. Moreover, the rings in the melt conditions are largely distorted only on the scales above the entanglement length, while below the ring segments form loops which mutually thread exactly on these scales.27,56 Therefore, our understanding of threading in dilute conditions is likely relevant also for the loopy ring segments in the melt below the entanglement scale.
Besides the specific interest in threadings, because of to the ubiquitous presence of interacting rings in nature and materials,57–59 ranging in complexity,60,61 a focused effort has already been put to elucidate the effective interactions in the simplest case of two unlinked flexible rings of equal20,54,62,63 and unequal lengths.64 The effective potential is repulsive not only due to excluded volume effects, but with a significant topological contribution65 due to the non-concatenation constraint. To accommodate these constraints at small separations, one of the two rings swells and the potential has a plateau or a slight attraction depending on the ring topology. If the rings are of equal length, their swelling roles exchanges over time, while for unequal lengths64 or topologies,63 dominantly the longer or simpler ring swells respectively. The swelling and the slight attraction are caused by the entropy gain of the encompassed ring on the expense of a relatively smaller swelling-related entropy loss of the larger ring. The swelling of the ring is clearly connected to its (passive) threading that, as mentioned above, can impact the dynamics. The threading was thoroughly investigated,64 fitting the picture that the longer ring was passively threaded by the shorter one, but only for a fully flexible polymer model.
The free energy balance, however, must depend not only on the relative sizes, but also on the stiffness of the two rings, in particular, for non-asymptotic ring lengths. The entropy loss of the swelling ring might be compensated, to some extent, by the decrease of the bending energy. In such a case, would it be possible to induce the exchange of the swelling roles, i.e. a shorter ring would swell to encompass a longer one? And related to that, is it possible to change an actively threading ring into a threaded one? The answer is not straightforward as with increasing stiffness, the rings adopt a more planar shape, leading to anisotropic potential and stiffness-induced mutual parallel orientation66–68 decreasing the threading. At higher densities the orientation can form cluster glasses69 due to columnar phases occurring both, in monodisperse and polydisperse solutions. In the latter, the smaller rings are found inside the columns of larger ones,68 but mixtures with different stiffnesses have not been investigated. Varying the stiffness also affects properties of rings in films,70,71 melts56 or catenanes.72 To understand such complex, many-body effects, we have to at first understand the simpler two-body problem.
As illustrated above, the swelling, threading, orientation and effective potential of rings are a nontrivial function of the relative ring length and stiffness. In realistic setting, be it biological or synthetic, the interacting and threading loops have frequently different (non-asymptotic) sizes and stiffnesses simultaneously, e.g. the chromatin loops vary in sizes, their stiffness depends on the sequence and the histone association extent, simple experimental systems are polydisperse etc. Therefore, it is very important to understand how does the combination of length and stiffness affect the conformations and threadings, and particularly, to generalize these findings for broad applicability in the various circumstances. Here we explore the effective interactions and concentrate on the threading properties of two unknotted rings when their length and stiffness is varied. We will focus on relatively short rings (≤100 beads) with stiffness ranging from flexible polymers like polyethyleneglycol (with characteristic ratio C∞ ∼ 6), through semi-flexible like polystyrene (C∞ ∼ 9) up to rather stiff like poly(dodecyl methacrylate) (C∞ ∼ 14).
After presenting the Model and the methods in the next section, we split the Results into subsections focusing on the specific aspects of the ring–ring interaction: (3.1) the effective potentials; (3.2) the minimal surfaces and ring shapes; (3.3) probability and the role of threading and lastly, (3.4) where we present the generalization of our results in our model of the threading roles.
(1) |
(2) |
Ubend(ϕ) = Kbend(1 − cos(ϕ))2, | (3) |
βK bend | C ∞ | l per/b |
---|---|---|
0.0 | 1.0 | 0.0 |
10.0 | 9.4 | 4.8 |
20.0 | 12.9 | 6.6 |
30.0 | 15.4 | 7.9 |
Our two rings are placed in a cubic simulation cell of size L = 150σ ≳ 10Rg, where Rg is the radius of gyration of the larger of the two rings, hence assuring that a ring does not interact with itself through the periodic boundary condition. These conditions correspond to extremely dilute solution, where the (good) solvent is treated only as uniform continuum.
Ultimately, our problem is akin to exploration of a 4-dimensional space, where we independently vary the length, NA,NB and stiffness, C∞(A),C∞(B) of both rings. We will focus on three specific slices through the parameter space:
(1) fully symmetric case: rings of equal lengths NA = NB ∈ {25, 50, 100} and equal flexibilities C∞(A) = C∞(B) ∈ {1.0, 9.4, 12.9, 15.4}
(2) asymmetric case: rings of equal lengths NA = NB = 100, one flexible C∞(A) = 1.0 and other rigid C∞(B) ∈ {9.4, 12.9, 15.4}
(3) fully asymmetric case: long flexible ring NA = 100, C∞(A) = 1.0 and a shorter ring NB ∈ {25, 50} of arbitrary flexibility C∞(B) ∈ {1.0, 9.4, 12.9, 15.4}
Finally, in Fig. 1 we show a representative snapshots of the system.
(4) |
To describe the shape of the rings, we will use instantaneous prolateness (and its ensemble average, = 〈〉) defined as:
(5) |
We say that ring A is threading ring B, if any of the bond vectors of ring A is intersecting the internal area of any of the triangles of the minimal surface mesh of ring B. In such a threading event, we would coin the ring A, the threader, as the active partner, whereas the ring B would be denoted as the passive partner. To detect the intersections we use Plücker coordinates and the side operators as elaborated in ref. 80 and Section IC in the ESI.† It has been observed that the minimal surface with a disk topology can be also threading itself, however in the current study we focus on the inter-ring threading rather than intra-ring ones.
Finally, to quantify the threading effects, we define the threading depths, {Lt}, and the separation length, Lsep, both being the characteristics of the active partner – the threader. We find the former by localizing all the intersections of the threader and the pierced surface, and then counting the number of monomers between the intersectional points ordered along the polymer contour yielding the set {Lt(1),Lt(2),…,Lt(2k−1),Lt(2k)}. The latter is defined as , and it corresponds to the total amount of the material of the threader on either side of the minimal surface of the passive partner. Both quantities are schematically depicted in Fig. 2b.
mẍi(t) = Fi−γmẋi(t) +Yi(t), | (6) |
(7) |
Veff(r) = −kBTln(g(r)), | (8) |
Fig. 3 The effective isotropic potential between the centers of mass of the two ring polymers. For the fully symmetric case, the distance is normalized by the radius of gyration of a single ring at infinite dilution. For the asymmetric cases, a similar normalization is applied, but using the average of the infinite-dilution radii of the rings from eqn (9). The analogous plots for different ring sizes, NA,NB are provided in Fig. S2 in the ESI.† |
For the asymmetric cases, C∞(A) = 1.0,C∞(B) ≠ C∞(A), let us first define the average radius of gyration
RAB = 0.5(Rg,0(A) +Rg,0(B)), | (9) |
Finally, for the fully asymmetric case, with one flexible ring of NA = 100 and NB = 25 in Fig. 3c, the trend of the previous cases is reversed – the amplitude of the effective potentials increases with the stiffness of ring B. As Fig. 1c shows, the threading roles at r ≈ 0 are now flipped and it is the large flexible ring A (blue), that is the passive partner, while the ring B (red) is the active threader. In such an arrangement, stiffer ring B poses a larger obstacle which has to be accommodated by ring A, resulting in a free energy penalty paid at the expense of conformations of ring A. Nevertheless, stiffer ring B is simultaneously more confined by ring A also contributing to the higher effective potential. An important foreshadowing from the above cases is that increasing the asymmetry between the microscopic parameters of the rings, can lead to the emergence of the distinct threading roles with one ring being almost exclusively the passive partner accommodating the active partner – the threader as will be discussed in Section 3.4.
Fig. 4 The mean area of the minimal surface of the rings as a function of ring–ring separation. For the fully symmetric case, we show the area averaged over both rings and the distance is normalized by the radius of gyration of a single ring at infinite dilution. For the asymmetric cases, we show areas of both rings respectively and a similar normalization of distance is applied, but using the average of the infinite-dilution radii of the rings from eqn (9). The area is normalized by the mean bond length squared. The color identifies the system, whereas line style (solid and dashed) in the asymmetric cases differentiates the rings A and B. The analogous plots for different ring sizes, NA,NB are provided in Fig. S4 in the ESI.† |
The inflation upon ring nearing is even more visible in the upper panel of Fig. 5, where we correlate the instantaneous values of radius of gyration of the two rings for ∼1000 configurations. The purple point cloud corresponds to rings at separations r ≈ 2Rg,0, where they affect each other only weakly, hence the marginal distributions of g(A) and g(B) respectively are almost identical to the distribution of g at the infinite dilution. Compared to the reference distribution for r ≈ 2Rg,0, the green point cloud for r ≈ 0 is shifted to the higher values of radius of gyration, testifying to the swelling. We notice that the cloud at r ≈ 2Rg,0 has roughly isotropic shape, whereas the cloud for r ≈ 0 is clearly elongated in one direction (perpendicular to the dashed line). This is because in a typical configuration, the passive partner inflates more than the active partner, when compared to their conformations at large separations, as can be seen on the inset snapshots in Fig. 5. Nevertheless, we can appreciate that the whole cloud stays symmetric along the main diagonal (dashed line) because in the fully symmetric case, the rings are of the same kind, hence the average properties of the system are invariant with respect to the inversion of the rings.
Fig. 5 Instantaneous values of radius of gyration (above) and prolateness from eqn (5) (below) of ring A plotted against the corresponding values for ring B from the same configuration, shown for the fully symmetric case NA = NB = 100 and C∞(A) = C∞(B) = 1.0. The data are presented for two different mean ring–ring separations, r ≈ 0 (green) and r ≈ 2Rg,0 (purple) for ∼ 1000 configurations each. The special points marked by symbols ⊗ and ⊙ feature the instantaneous values for the selected representative snapshots in the insets – sample configurations at r ≈ 2Rg,0 and r ≈ 0 respectively. The analogous plots for the asymmetric and fully asymmetric case are in the ESI,† Sections IV and V. |
An analogous analysis can be conveyed for the instantaneous values of prolateness in the lower panel of Fig. 5. Rings at r ≈ 2Rg,0 exhibit prolateness mainly in the interval 0 ⪅ ⪅ 0.25, meaning that their conformations are almost spherical, with a slight elongation towards a cigar-like object. For r ≈ 0 we witness the emergence of (green) wings in the probability distributions, spanning the regions where one ring resides in disk-like (oblate) interval −0.25 ⪅ (i) ⪅ 0, while the other in 0.25 ⪅ (j) ⪅ 0.75 holding a cigar-like shape. To conclude, in addition to the passive partner strongly inflating upon the threading, it also flattens up into a disk-like object, whereas the active partner inflates only weakly and it resembles an elongated cigar-like object.
In Sections V and IV in the ESI,† we present similar two-dimensional histograms also for the both asymmetric cases, nevertheless, due to the asymmetry in N and C∞, it is difficult to ascribe universal meaning to the observed trends. For this reason, we will again focus on the areas of the surface as an indicator of the conformational changes. The areas in the asymmetric case, Fig. 4b, show distinct types of behaviour for the flexible ring A and stiff ring B. As shown in Fig. 1b, at small separations, it is ring A (blue) which is the active threader, piercing the surface of the ring B (red), whose minimal surface is growing in the area, when compared to the rings being far apart. On the other hand, the area of the surface of ring A is almost constant irrespectively of the ring–ring separation and stiffness of the ring B. The latter means that in the asymmetric case, it is mainly the stiff ring B, the passive partner, opening up, while the contribution of confinement free energy of the active partner is the smaller of the two. Similarly, for the fully asymmetric case in Fig. 1c, the large flexible ring A (blue), now undertaking the role of the passive partner is the one whose surface is getting inflated as the ring approach. The small stiff ring B (red), being the active threader, has almost the same area in the whole range of separations.
Fig. 6 Probability of ring i threading ring j as a function of ring–ring separation. For the fully symmetric case, we show the probability averaged over both permutations (i → j, j → i) and the distance is normalized by the radius of gyration of a single ring at infinite dilution. For the asymmetric cases, we show the probabilities for both possible permutation respectively and a similar normalization of distance is applied, but using the average of the infinite-dilution radii of the rings from eqn (9). The color identifies the system, whereas line style (solid and dashed) in the asymmetric cases differentiates the permutation. The inset shows the probability of mutual threading at r ≈ 0 ring–ring separation. The analogous plots for different ring sizes, NA,NB are provided in Fig. S13 in the ESI.† |
The departure of the flexible rings from the trend of the stiff ones is based in the different nature of piercing of the surface. In Fig. 7, the separation length of the active threader at r ≈ 0 is slightly lower than N/2, since the minimal surfaces of the passive ring do not always slice the active threader in half, and Lsep is defined as a minimum of the lengths at the both sides of the surface (Fig. 2). At larger separations, Lsep for flexible rings decays more rapidly than for the stiff rings, similarly to the probability of threading in Fig. 6a. The reason is that flexible rings can easily fold and slip out from the passive ring, hence Lsep attains low values more frequently with respect to the stiff rings, bringing the mean Lsep down. For instance, flexible rings can easily attain Lsep ∼ 1 when a short fold just touches the surface of the other ring, while such conformation of a subchain is penalized by bending for the stiff rings. A similar phenomenon is captured also by the inset of Fig. 7, which shows that for the fully flexible rings, the most probable threading depth is of the order of one monomer. A flexible threader pierces the minimal surface of its passive partner typically several times, back and forth with shallow threading of lengths Lt ∼ 1. On the other hand, the most probable threading depth for the stiff rings is around ≈N/2, with the peak height at Lt ≈ 0 in the inset of Fig. 7 decreasing with increasing stiffness. Accordingly, stiff rings typically exhibit a small number of deep threadings in contrast to many shallow ones of the flexible rings. We note, however, that the latter observation might be affected by finite size effect, since our stiff rings are further away from the asymptotic regime, when compared to the fully flexible counterparts.
Fig. 7 Mean separation length, as defined in Fig. 2, as a function of ring–ring separation, shown for the fully symmetric case. The distance is normalized by the radius of gyration of a single ring at infinite dilution. The inset shows the probability distributions of threading depths, as defined in Fig. 2, at r ≈ 0. The analogous plots for different ring sizes, NA,NB are provided in Fig. S14 (ESI†) |
For the asymmetric case in Fig. 6b the clear definition of the threading roles is finally clearly visible. The probability that the flexible ring A is threading the stiff ring B (solid lines) closely approaches the unity at r ≈ 0, whereas the probability that the stiff ring B is threading the flexible ring A (dotted lines) is close to zero in the whole range of separations. For the fully asymmetric case in Fig. 6c, however, we see that the roles of A and B (solid and dashed lines) are flipped – it is the short stiff ring B that is threading the flexible ring A, while ring A is the passive threader. The difference between the asymmetric case and the fully asymmetric case is in the length of ring B. Without the loss of generality, for NA = 100,C∞(A) = 1.0 and C∞(B) = 15.4, ring B of length NB = 100 is the passive threader for the active flexible ring A, while ring B of length of NB = 25 is the active partner for ring A. If we imagine changing N as continuous process, there should be a critical size , where the threading role at r ≈ 0 changes, and P(A → B) changes from ≈0 to ≈1 and respectively P(B → A) from ≈1 to ≈0. One would expect that for values of NB around the critical value, , the threading roles are not clearly defined, and ring A (or ring B) can be either the active or the passive partner both with probabilities ≈1/2. How can one identify the critical will be the concern of the following subsection.
Fig. 8 Probability of ring i threading ring j at ring–ring separation r ≈ 0 as a function of the length of ring B. We show the probabilities for both permutations respectively for the values of bending stiffness from Table 1 and also for an additional set of values from Section 1A in the ESI.† The color identifies the system, whereas line style (solid and dashed) differentiates the permutation. |
Fig. 9 Ratio of threading probabilities for both permutations B → A and A → B at r ≈ 0 ring–ring separation plotted as a function of the ratio of the gyration radii of the respective rings B and A at infinite dilution. The figure essentially collapses the data from Fig. 8 by dividing the dashed line by the solid line for each color. |
Evidently, one can manipulate the threading roles of the rings by modifying their stiffness or length. In principle, it should be possible to design a system with a specific dominant threading roles, once we know where is the crossover length, for the studied system. However, carrying out the full scale two ring simulations for many NB values as in Fig. 8 and subsequent surface minimization and threading detection is time-demanding and cumbersome. For that reason we propose two arguments, how to numerically obtain an estimate of using only single ring properties NA, NB and C∞(A), C∞(B), without the need of carrying out two ring simulations.
The first method is empirical and based on Fig. 9, where we noticed that simple mean radius of gyration of individual rings in the infinite dilution is almost a quantitative indicator for the assignment of the threading role. For this reason, we constructed a new system with only one ring, and we carried out simulations to measure its radius of gyration for different flexibilities C∞ and lengths N as shown in Fig. 10a. Next, we interpolated the data to find the value of NB which corresponds to Rg,0(B) equal to the Rg,0(A) with NA = 100 and C∞(A) = 1.0. This N is our first estimate of .
Fig. 10 Auxiliary single-ring calculations for estimation of as described in Section 3.4. (a) Radius of gyration of a single ring B in its infinite dilution as a function of ring length. The solid black line denotes the Rg,0 of the ring A in the infinite dilution, hence the points where the coloured lines intersect the black line are the points where we interpolate NB = . (b and c) Probability of ring i threading ring j estimated using the penalty argument from eqn (13) and (14). The color identifies the system, whereas line style (solid and dashed) differentiates the permutation in analogy to Fig. 8. |
The second method expands on the first one as we move from comparing the mean radii of gyration to comparing their full distributions. The assumption is the following: we know from Section 3.3, that at r ≈ 0, the states with mutual threading and the states with no threading at all comprise only a few percent of all of the states. Therefore, there are only two threading macrostates with non-negligible probabilities: A → B and B → A and whichever one is associated with lower free energy is the dominant one. In our simplified picture, in the case of A → B, ring A is located inside the ring B. As a result, ring B experiences the presence of an obstacle of a mean size Rg,0(A) inside, and hence loses all of the conformations with g(B) < Rg,0(A), which would be otherwise accessible at the infinite dilution, with no presence of the threader. Similarly, the ring A, the active threader, experiences a confinement in the cavity of mean size Rg,0(B) imposed by the ring B, the passive partner. Therefore, ring A cannot attain conformations where g(A) > Rg,0(B). Let us define the penalty function of bringing the two rings from the infinite dilution and consequently imposing the threading A → B as:
(10) |
(11) |
= (A → B) + (B → A). | (12) |
(13) |
(14) |
Eqn (13) and (14) above express the approximation that the probability that ring i threads ring j at r ≈ 0 is given as the ratio of the penalty on j threading i over the sum of the two penalties. This approximation is indeed a drastic one and it also constitutes a dramatic simplification of the problem. The calculation of the two penalties is carried using the single ring quantities in the infinite dilution, hence this approximate method provides an estimate of a complex many-body threading probabilities using only single-ring properties. It is worth noting, however, that the method is exact at three limits, namely for the cases (i → j) → 0 or 1 but also, by construction, for the symmetric case A = B, where the ratio on both sides of eqn (13) and (14) is equal to 1/2. Microscopically, whichever of the two threading macrostates possess more microstates is the dominant one. Based on our simplified approach, this is the state that has the lower penalty, as the latter is defined in eqn (10) and (11) above.
In Fig. 10b and c we plot, the threading probabilities obtained with eqn (13) and (14), which should be compared with the corresponding curves based on simulations of interacting rings in Fig. 8. The results on the probability based on the penalty estimate are in semi-quantitative agreement with the real ones with the general characteristic that there are steeper than the latter, i.e., they approach their asymptotic values of 0 and 1 within a narrower NB transition domain. In parallel to Fig. 8, the points where the dashed and solid lines cross, determine the critical point, where threading A → B and B → A are equally probable, hence yielding our second estimate of .
In Fig. 11 we compare the measured in the two ring simulation with our two estimates of based on single ring calculations. For rather flexible rings (C∞ ⪅ 6.6), both the argument using the mean Rg and the one using the penalty function comparison agree well with the two ring simulations. For the stiffer rings, our single ring ideas overestimate the actual by length of ⪅10 monomers. The reasons for the overall slight deviation of the size-based estimates of the quantity from the measured ones as C∞(B) grows can be traced back on the results shown in Fig. 9. Indeed, although in general the value of the size ratio of the two rings and the value of the probability ratio of the threadings meet at the point (1,1), for stiff B-rings a deviation can be noticed: there is a narrow region 0.9 ⪅ Rg,0(B)/Rg,0(A) ≤ 1 for which P(A → B) > P(B → A), i.e., the larger, flexible ring A threads the smaller, very stiff ring B more frequently than the reverse. The reason for this lies in the fact that ring B is sufficiently stiff, so that its configuration is almost planar and the opening undergoes only weak fluctuations in its size and shape, offering thereby an entropically favoured pathway to be threaded by the flexible A ring, despite the latter being larger in overall size. In other words, it is not only the invariant trace of the gyration tensor of each ring that plays a role in determining the relative magnitude of the threading probabilities but additional invariants, such as the prolateness or the asphericity also play an additional role. Nevertheless, our estimates demonstrate that the dominant contribution is indeed given by the relative sizes of the two rings in isolation, providing therefore an accurate estimate for the roles of passive and active threader that the rings will undertake at separations r ≈ 0.
Fig. 11 Critical length of ring B as a function of its flexibility estimated from the full two ring simulations from Fig. 8 and using the single ring calculations from Fig. 10. |
Possible extensions of the current work are manyfold. On the one hand, there is the realm of the concentrated-ring problems, in which it will be very interesting to see how much of the effective potential notion will continue to be of practical importance as the density grows, i.e., the role that ring deformations will play in bringing forward strong many-body effective interactions, depending on the details of the ring architecture. While it is known that the effective potential description is accurate for up to about five times the overlap concentration, whether this fully applies to the threading properties as well, deserves future verification. However, our effective theory that uses only single-ring properties suggests this is the case. Although many interesting applications are at the melt conditions, we stress that in melts the ring conformations are strongly distorted only above the entanglement length scale, while below the ring segments form loops that allow for mutual threading. It is very interesting to compare our results to the threading statistics in melts at these scales. Further interestingly, we notice that for the effective potentials between long rings with bending asymmetry, the value of the inter-species potential (flexible-stiff) is lower than the average of the intra-species potentials (flexible-flexible and stiff-stiff). Using the Flory–Huggins-like mixing argument, we would expect that flexible and stiff rings should be miscible, in contrast to their linear counterparts which are known to demix into two phases. Along similar lines, the extension of the present coarse-graining approach to the currently topical issue of poly[n]catenanes and their mixtures with linear polymers is also an interesting line for future investigations. An additional interesting future application of our work could be the attempt to predict the elastic properties of polymer networks made of ring polymers. Similarly to the case of networks of linear chains, where the significant contribution to the shear modulus comes from the topological constraints (pairwise links between chains),89,90 we speculate that the threadings of rings can play the role of the constraints. A starting point for a general theory would be the threading propensity for two loops at different distances as a function of their size and stiffness – data that we provide here, albeit only in a dilute regime.
On the two-body level, the exploration of the effects of solvent quality, torsional degrees of freedom causing supercoiling91 as well as the quantitative description of dynamics of the exchange of threading roles are immediately relevant questions. Work on some of the above problems is currently under way. Another possible direction would be to explore the threading of two rings under nonequilibrium conditions, such as shear flow. There the ring swells due to hydrodynamic interactions coupled with the ring topology.92,93 The interplay of this effect with the ring size changes due to threading would be very interesting to analyze. Our present work serves as the equilibrium reference point for such considerations.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2sm01177h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |