The conformational properties of a lattice self-avoiding polymer chain tethered to an interacting and impenetrable flat surface were simulated using a dynamic Monte Carlo method. The results show that the conformational size reaches a minimum at the critical adsorption point (CAP) and that the scaling behavior of the polymer at the CAP is the same as that in the bulk solution. The results provide a new method to determine the CAP of polymer chains. Polymer Journal (2010) 42, 383-385; doi:10.1038/pj.2010.9; published online 17 March 2010Keywords: critical adsorption point; Monte Carlo simulation; self-avoiding chain
INTRODUCTIONThe adsorption of polymer chains on surfaces by means of physical or chemical interactions is an important subject in polymer and biological sciences. A polymer chain may adsorb or desorb, depending on interactions with the surface. This phenomenon is relevant to many technological applications such as in polymer compatibilizers, colloid stabilizers and polymeric surfactants. [1][2][3] In many biological systems, ligands are attached to a surface through flexible tether chains. 4,5 The conformation of the attached tether chains will affect the binding of the ligand to a receptor and will thus influence the whole biological process. 6 The adsorption phenomenon is also a part of many physical systems; for example, polymer chains grafted to colloid particles and block copolymers at liquid-air interfaces. 7 The adsorption of polymers has attracted a large number of theoretical and experimental studies. [7][8][9][10][11][12] The growing interest in polymers interacting with substrates warrants a thorough understanding of the static and dynamic properties of the tethered chain.A mathematical model often used for studying the adsorption of tethered polymers on surfaces is the self-avoiding walk (SAW) chain in a three-dimensional (3D) simple cubic lattice that interacts with a flat surface and is restricted to lie on one side of the surface. 13-17 Every walk step that contacts the surface is assigned an interaction energy e (in units of k B T, where k B is the Boltzmann constant and T is the temperature). It is well accepted that a single chain adsorbed on an attractive surface exhibits a phase transition from a desorbed state to an adsorbed state when the adsorption strength increases beyond a critical value. The CAP e c was estimated to be about À0.29 for polymers on the simple cubic lattice. [9][10][11][12]16,18,19 In this work, we studied how the conformational properties of the chain change from a desorbed state for e4e c to an adsorbed state for eoe c . We found that both the mean square end-to-end distance /R 2 S