For the process of sediment transport by wind, see Aeolian processes.
A peculiarity of thermal motion of very long linear macromolecules in entangledpolymer melts or concentrated polymer solutions is reptation.[1] Derived from the word reptile, reptation suggests the movement of entangled polymer chains as being analogous to snakes slithering through one another.[2]Pierre-Gilles de Gennes introduced (and named) the concept of reptation into polymer physics in 1971 to explain the dependence of the mobility of a macromolecule on its length. Reptation is used as a mechanism to explain viscous flow in an amorphous polymer.[3][4]Sir Sam Edwards and Masao Doi later refined reptation theory.[5][6] Similar phenomena also occur in proteins.[7]
Two closely related concepts are reptons and entanglement. A repton is a mobile point residing in the cells of a lattice, connected by bonds.[8][9] Entanglement means the topological restriction of molecular motion by other chains.[10]
^Rubinstein, Michael (March 2008). Dynamics of Entangled Polymers. Pierre-Gilles de Gennes Symposium. New Orleans, LA: American Physical Society. Retrieved 6 April 2015.
^De Gennes, P. G. (1983). "Entangled polymers". Physics Today. 36 (6): 33. Bibcode:1983PhT....36f..33D. doi:10.1063/1.2915700. A theory based on the snake-like motion by which chains of monomers move in the melt is enhancing our understanding of rheology, diffusion, polymer-polymer welding, chemical kinetics and biotechnology
^De Gennes, P. G. (1971). "Reptation of a Polymer Chain in the Presence of Fixed Obstacles". The Journal of Chemical Physics. 55 (2): 572. Bibcode:1971JChPh..55..572D. doi:10.1063/1.1675789.
^Doi, M.; Edwards, S. F. (1978). "Dynamics of concentrated polymer systems. Part 1.?Brownian motion in the equilibrium state". Journal of the Chemical Society, Faraday Transactions 2. 74: 1789–1801. doi:10.1039/f29787401789.
^Bu, Z; Cook, J; Callaway, D. J. (2001). "Dynamic regimes and correlated structural dynamics in native and denatured alpha-lactalbumin". Journal of Molecular Biology. 312 (4): 865–73. doi:10.1006/jmbi.2001.5006. PMID11575938.