Entropy and Entropic Forces to Model Biological Fluids |
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Authors: | Rafael M. Gutierrez George T. Shubeita Chandrashekhar U. Murade Jianfeng Guo |
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Affiliation: | 1.Science Division, Physics, New York University Abu Dhabi, Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates; (G.T.S.); (C.U.M.); (J.G.);2.Centro de Investigaciones en Ciencias Básicas y Aplicadas, Universidad Antonio Nariño, Bogotá 111321, Colombia |
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Abstract: | ![]() Living cells are complex systems characterized by fluids crowded by hundreds of different elements, including, in particular, a high density of polymers. They are an excellent and challenging laboratory to study exotic emerging physical phenomena, where entropic forces emerge from the organization processes of many-body interactions. The competition between microscopic and entropic forces may generate complex behaviors, such as phase transitions, which living cells may use to accomplish their functions. In the era of big data, where biological information abounds, but general principles and precise understanding of the microscopic interactions is scarce, entropy methods may offer significant information. In this work, we developed a model where a complex thermodynamic equilibrium resulted from the competition between an effective electrostatic short-range interaction and the entropic forces emerging in a fluid crowded by different sized polymers. The target audience for this article are interdisciplinary researchers in complex systems, particularly in thermodynamics and biophysics modeling. |
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Keywords: | entropic forces, biological fluids, crowding, polymer’ s configurations |
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