Gradient-driven diffusion in crowded, multicomponent mixtures is a topic of high interest because of its role in biological processes such as transport in cell membranes. In partially phase-separated solutions, gradient-driven diffusion affects microstructure, which in turn affects diffusivity; a key question is how this complex coupling controls both transport and pattern formation. To examine these mechanisms, we study a two-dimensional multicomponent lattice gas model, where "tracer" molecules diffuse between a source and a sink separated by a solution of sticky "crowder" molecules that cluster to form dynamically evolving obstacles. In the high-temperature limit, crowders and tracers are miscible, and transport may be predicted analytically. At intermediate temperatures, crowders phase separate into clusters that drift toward the tracer sink. As a result, steady-state tracer diffusivity depends nonmonotonically on both temperature and crowder density, and we observe a variety of complex microstructures. In the low-temperature limit, crowders rapidly aggregate to form obstacles that are kinetically arrested; if crowder density is near the percolation threshold, resulting tracer diffusivity shows scaling behavior with the same scaling exponent as the random resistor network model. Though highly idealized, this simple model reveals fundamental mechanisms governing coupled gradient-driven diffusion, phase separation, and microstructural evolution in crowded mixtures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.95.022107 | DOI Listing |
Langmuir
September 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 20742, United States.
In this paper, we develop a theory to capture Taylor dispersion and concentration profiles of a solute band transporting in a circular capillary in the presence of a background active fluid flow. Specifically, we consider active liquids containing active particles with vortex defects: under such circumstances, our recent calculations have revealed the generation of (diffusioosmosis-like) induced pressure-gradient-driven fluid flow in the presence of an axial gradient in the activity (or concentration of the active particles). This paper, therefore, captures the solute transport in such activity-gradient-triggered induced pressure-driven background flows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Biol
April 2024
Department of Microbial Pathogenesis, School of Dentistry, University of Maryland, Baltimore, 650 W. Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA. Electronic address:
Dedicated translocase channels are nanomachines that often, but not always, unfold and translocate proteins through narrow pores across the membrane. Generally, these molecular machines utilize external sources of free energy to drive these reactions, since folded proteins are thermodynamically stable, and once unfolded they contain immense diffusive configurational entropy. To catalyze unfolding and translocate the unfolded state at appreciable timescales, translocase channels often utilize analogous peptide-clamp active sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
December 2023
School of Emergency Management and Safety Engineering, China University of Mining & Technology, Beijing, Beijing, 100083, People's Republic of China.
An in-depth understanding of gas diffusion characteristics in coal is of great value to coalbed methane (CBM) production planning and coal mine safety management. However, the mechanism and model of gas diffusion is still unclear, and some methods for determining diffusion coefficients are not accurate enough. Accordingly, a free gas density gradient (FGDG)-driven coal particle gas desorption and diffusion model was established in this work, and numerical solutions were performed via finite difference method (FDM) and dimensionless method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
October 2023
Department of Material Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Katsura, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 615-8510, Japan.
Small
June 2023
Institute of Biomedical Engineering, College of Medicine, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610031, China.
The abnormal pressure in tumor tissue is a significant limitation on the drug delivery efficiency of tumor therapy. This work reports a gradient-driven nanomotor as drug nanocarrier with the pressure-counterworking function. The dual-fuel nanomotors are formed by co-electrospinning of the photosensitive polymers with calcium peroxide (CaO ) and catalase (CAT), followed by ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and bovine serum albumin (BSA) incubation.
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