Publications by authors named "Ashley R Knoerdel"

Complex coacervate droplets formed by the liquid-liquid phase separation of polyelectrolyte solutions capture several important features of membraneless organelles including their ability to accumulate guest molecules and to provide distinct microenvironments. Here, we examine how polyions in complex coacervates can influence localized guest molecules, leading to a shifted protonation state of the guest molecule in response to its electrostatic environment. A fluorescent ratiometric pH indicator dye was used as a model guest molecule able to report its protonation state in the coacervate phase.

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Oppositely charged polyelectrolytes can undergo an associative phase separation, in a process known as polymeric complex coacervation. This phenomenon is driven by the electrostatic attraction between polyanion and polycation species, leading to the formation of a polymer-dense coacervate phase and a coexisting polymer-dilute supernatant phase. There has been significant recent interest in the physical origin and features of coacervation; yet notably, experiments often use weak polyelectrolytes the charge state of which depends on solution pH, while theoretical or computational efforts typically assume strong polyelectrolytes that remain fully charged.

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