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Inwardly curved polymer brushes: concave is not like convex

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The European Physical Journal E Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract:

Inwardly curved polymer brushes are present in cylindrical and spherical micelles or in membranes tubes and vesicles decorated with anchored polymers, and influence their stability. We consider such polymer brushes in good solvent and show that previous works, based on a self-similar concentric structure of the brush, do not describe the most stable structure. We use scaling laws to derive very simply the leading term of the free energy in the high curvature limit, where the osmotic pressure is the relevant physical ingredient. We also derive the complete conformation at all curvatures using a self-consistent field approach. The free energy is computed therefrom using a local scaling description

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Received 14 February 2001

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Manghi, M., Aubouy, M., Gay, C. et al. Inwardly curved polymer brushes: concave is not like convex. Eur. Phys. J. E 5 (Suppl 1), 519–530 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s101890170035

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s101890170035

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