Recent experiments show that networks of stiff biopolymers cross-linked by transient linker proteins exhibit complex stress relaxation, enabling network flow at long times. We present a model for the dynamics controlled by cross-links in such networks. We show that a single microscopic time scale for cross-linker unbinding leads to a broad spectrum of macroscopic relaxation times and a shear modulus G ∼ ω(1/2) for low frequencies ω. This model quantitatively describes the measured rheology of actin networks cross-linked with α-actinin-4 over more than four decades in frequency.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.238101 | DOI Listing |
Phys Rev Lett
December 2010
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Recent experiments show that networks of stiff biopolymers cross-linked by transient linker proteins exhibit complex stress relaxation, enabling network flow at long times. We present a model for the dynamics controlled by cross-links in such networks. We show that a single microscopic time scale for cross-linker unbinding leads to a broad spectrum of macroscopic relaxation times and a shear modulus G ∼ ω(1/2) for low frequencies ω.
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