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Cell-Sized Confinements Alter Molecular Diffusion in Concentrated Polymer Solutions Due to Length-Dependent Wetting of Polymers.

Yuki KanakuboChiho WatanabeJohtaro YamamotoNaoya YanagisawaHiroki SakutaArash NikoubashmanMiho Yanagisawa
Published in: ACS materials Au (2023)
Living cells are characterized by the micrometric confinement of various macromolecules at high concentrations. Using droplets containing binary polymer blends as artificial cells, we previously showed that cell-sized confinement causes phase separation of the binary polymer solutions because of the length-dependent wetting of the polymers. Here, we demonstrate that the confinement-induced heterogeneity of polymers also emerges in single-component polymer solutions. The resulting structural heterogeneity also leads to a slower transport of small molecules at the center of cell-sized droplets than that in bulk solutions. Coarse-grained molecular simulations support this confinement-induced heterogeneous distribution by polymer length and demonstrate that the effective wetting of the shorter chains at the droplet surface originates from the length-dependent conformational entropy. Our results suggest that cell-sized confinement functions as a structural regulator for polydisperse polymer solutions that specifically manipulates the diffusion of molecules, particularly those with sizes close to the correlation length of the polymer chains.
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