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1.
Langmuir ; 39(1): 220-226, 2023 01 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36537801

ABSTRACT

Structured water near surfaces is important in nonclassical crystallization, biomineralization, and restructuring of cellular membranes. In addition to equilibrium structures, studied by atomic force microscopy (AFM), high-speed AFM (H-S AFM) can now detect piconewton forces in microseconds. With increasing speeds and decreasing tip diameters, there is a danger that continuum water models will not hold, and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations would be needed for accurate predictions. MD simulations, however, can only evolve over tens of nanoseconds due to memory and computational efficiency/speed limitations, so new methods are needed to bridge the gap. Here, we report a hybrid, multiscale simulation method, which can bridge the size and time scale gaps to existing experiments. Structured water is studied between a moving silica AFM colloidal tip and a cleaved mica surface. The computational domain includes 1,472,766 atoms. To mimic the effect of long-range hydrodynamic forces occurring in water, when moving the AFM tip at speeds from 5 × 10-7 to 30 m/s, a hybrid multiscale method with local atomistic resolution is used, which serves as an effective open-domain boundary condition. The multiscale simulation is thus equivalent to using a macroscopically large computational domain with equilibrium boundary conditions. Quantification of the drag force shows the breaking of continuum behavior. Nonmonotonic dependence on both the tip speed and distance from the surface implies breaking of the hydration layer around the moving tip at time scales smaller than water cluster formation and strong water compressibility effects at the highest speeds.


Subject(s)
Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Software , Microscopy, Atomic Force/methods , Water/chemistry
2.
J Phys Chem B ; 125(19): 5145-5159, 2021 05 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33724846

ABSTRACT

Accurate prediction of alkane phase transitions involving solids is needed to prevent catastrophic pipeline blockages, improve lubrication formulations, smart insulation, and energy storage, as well as bring fundamental understanding to processes such as artificial morphogenesis. However, simulation of these transitions is challenging and therefore often omitted in force field development. Here, we perform a series of benchmarks on seven representative molecular dynamics models (TraPPE, PYS, CHARMM36, L-OPLS, COMPASS, Williams, and the newly optimized Williams 7B), comparing with experimental data for liquid properties, liquid-solid, and solid-solid phase transitions of two prototypical alkanes, n-pentadecane (C15) and n-hexadecane (C16). We find that existing models overestimate the melting points by up to 34 K, with PYS and Williams 7B yielding the most accurate results deviating only 2 and 3 K from the experiment. We specially design order parameters to identify crystal-rotator phase transitions in alkanes. United-atom models could only produce a rotator phase with complete rotational disorder, whereas all-atom models using a 12-6 Lennard-Jones potential show no rotator phase even when superheated above the melting point. In contrast, Williams (Buckingham potential) and COMPASS (9-6 Lennard-Jones) reproduce the crystal-to-rotator phase transition, with the optimized Williams 7B model having the most accurate crystal-rotator transition temperature of C15.

3.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 1182, 2020 03 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32132534

ABSTRACT

Supramolecular chemistry offers an exciting opportunity to assemble materials with molecular precision. However, there remains an unmet need to turn molecular self-assembly into functional materials and devices. Harnessing the inherent properties of both disordered proteins and graphene oxide (GO), we report a disordered protein-GO co-assembling system that through a diffusion-reaction process and disorder-to-order transitions generates hierarchically organized materials that exhibit high stability and access to non-equilibrium on demand. We use experimental approaches and molecular dynamics simulations to describe the underlying molecular mechanism of formation and establish key rules for its design and regulation. Through rapid prototyping techniques, we demonstrate the system's capacity to be controlled with spatio-temporal precision into well-defined capillary-like fluidic microstructures with a high level of biocompatibility and, importantly, the capacity to withstand flow. Our study presents an innovative approach to transform rational supramolecular design into functional engineering with potential widespread use in microfluidic systems and organ-on-a-chip platforms.


Subject(s)
Bioprinting/methods , Equipment Design/methods , Graphite/chemistry , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , ets-Domain Protein Elk-1/chemistry , Animals , Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Cell Line , Chick Embryo , Chorioallantoic Membrane , Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Printing, Three-Dimensional , Protein Multimerization , Protein Structure, Quaternary
4.
J Chem Phys ; 143(1): 014110, 2015 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26156468

ABSTRACT

A new 3D implementation of a hybrid model based on the analogy with two-phase hydrodynamics has been developed for the simulation of liquids at microscale. The idea of the method is to smoothly combine the atomistic description in the molecular dynamics zone with the Landau-Lifshitz fluctuating hydrodynamics representation in the rest of the system in the framework of macroscopic conservation laws through the use of a single "zoom-in" user-defined function s that has the meaning of a partial concentration in the two-phase analogy model. In comparison with our previous works, the implementation has been extended to full 3D simulations for a range of atomistic models in GROMACS from argon to water in equilibrium conditions with a constant or a spatially variable function s. Preliminary results of simulating the diffusion of a small peptide in water are also reported.

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