## Abstract The electric birefringence of polyโLโlysine hydrobromide in methanolโwater mixtures has been measured at 25 ยฐC over a wide range of field strengths by use of the rectangular pulse technique. An abrupt change in the specific Kerr constant was observed between 87 and 90 vol % methanol, co
The optical birefringence of DNA solutions induced by oscillatory electric and hydrodynamic fields
โ Scribed by Robert S. Wilkinson; George B. Thurston
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1976
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1021 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3525
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The optical birefringence induced in DNA solutions by both oscillating hydrodynamic fields (flow birefringence) and oscillating electric fields (Kerr effect) is measured over a wide frequency range. The observed frequency response of the birefrigence is compared with theories for rigid ellipsoidal particles and for Gaussian chains. DNA at 6 ร 10^5^ molecular weight is found to exhibit rigid particle hydrodynamic behavior, while DNA at 5 ร 10^6^ molecular weight behaves like a flexible chain. Characterization of the hydrodynamic relaxation spectra for the DNA's by oscillatory flow birefringence allows precise comparison between theory and the experimental Kerr effect response. The dielectric model for DNA contains both permanent and dispersionless induced dipole moments. The dielectric behavior of DNA has the character of a permanent dipole but with anomalous lowโfrequency dispersion in the Kerr effect. The existing theories do not adequately describe this dispersion. A fluctuation dipole mechanism with relaxation times comparable to those associated with the hydrodynamic motion could possibly demonstrate the observed polar behavior.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The rise and decay of electric birefringence for poly(Lโglutamic acid) (PLGA) in aqueous solvents containing 20 and 10 vol % methanol have been found to be unusual. The decay curves have been analyzed on the assumption that there exist two kinds of particles, namely, one (component I) w