scholarly journals Polymer Glass Formation: Role of Activation Free Energy, Configurational Entropy, and Collective Motion

2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 3001-3033 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Sheng Xu ◽  
Jack F. Douglas ◽  
Zhao-Yan Sun
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 651-662 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gourav Shrivastav ◽  
Tuhin S. Khan ◽  
Manish Agarwal ◽  
M. Ali Haider

Utilizing the differential stabilization of reactant and transition state in the polar and apolar solvents to lower the activation free energy barrier for acid-catalyzed dehydration of hydroxy lactones.


2008 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 273-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Piana ◽  
F. Jones ◽  
Z. Taylor ◽  
P. Raiteri ◽  
J. D. Gale

AbstractThe influence of both sulphate ions and aspartic acid on directing the growth of baryte has been explored using computer simulation. Both species are found to significantly reduce the activation free-energy to growth under appropriate conditions, with the influence of sulphate being surface specific. This offers the potential for a new approach to morphology control without inhibition that may have implications for biomineralization.


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (10) ◽  
pp. 2966-2971 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz A. Pazmiño Betancourt ◽  
Paul Z. Hanakata ◽  
Francis W. Starr ◽  
Jack F. Douglas

The study of glass formation is largely framed by semiempirical models that emphasize the importance of progressively growing cooperative motion accompanying the drop in fluid configurational entropy, emergent elasticity, or the vanishing of accessible free volume available for molecular motion in cooled liquids. We investigate the extent to which these descriptions are related through computations on a model coarse-grained polymer melt, with and without nanoparticle additives, and for supported polymer films with smooth or rough surfaces, allowing for substantial variation of the glass transition temperature and the fragility of glass formation. We find quantitative relations between emergent elasticity, the average local volume accessible for particle motion, and the growth of collective motion in cooled liquids. Surprisingly, we find that each of these models of glass formation can equally well describe the relaxation data for all of the systems that we simulate. In this way, we uncover some unity in our understanding of glass-forming materials from perspectives formerly considered as distinct.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Tse ◽  
L. Wickstrom ◽  
M. Kvaratskhelia ◽  
E. Gallicchio ◽  
R. Levy ◽  
...  

AbstractWe report the free energy landscape and thermodynamics of the protein-protein association responsible for the drug-induced multimerization of HIV-1 integrase (IN). Allosteric HIV-1 integrase inhibitors (ALLINIs) promote aberrant IN multimerization by bridging IN-IN intermolecular interactions. However, the thermodynamic driving forces and kinetics of the multimerization remain largely unknown. Here we explore the early steps in the IN multimerization by using umbrella sampling and unbiased molecular dynamics simulations in explicit solvent. In direct simulations, the two initially separated dimers spontaneously associate to form near-native complexes that resemble the crystal structure of the aberrant tetramer. Most strikingly, the effective interaction of the protein-protein association is very short-ranged: the two dimers associate rapidly within tens of nanoseconds when their binding surfaces are separated by d ≤ 4.3 Å (less than two water diameters). Beyond this distance, the oligomerization kinetics appears to be diffusion controlled with a much longer association time. The free energy profile also captured the crucial role of ALLINI in promoting multimerization, and explained why several CTD mutations are remarkably resistant to the drug-induced multimerization. The results also show that at small separation the protein-protein binding process contains two consecutive phases with distinct thermodynamic signatures. First, inter-protein water molecules are expelled to the bulk resulting in a small increase in entropy, as the solvent entropy gain from the water release is nearly cancelled by the loss of side chain entropies as the two proteins approach each other. At shorter distances, the two dry binding surfaces adapt to each other to optimize their interaction energy at the expense of further protein configurational entropy loss. While the binding interfaces feature clusters of hydrophobic residues, overall, the protein-protein association in this system is driven by enthalpy and opposed by entropy.Statement of SignificanceElucidating the energetics and thermodynamic aspects of protein-protein association is important for understanding this fundamental biophysical process. This study provided a more complete physical picture of the protein-protein association responsible for the drug-induced HIV-1 integrase multimerization. The results captured the critical role of the inhibitor, and accounted for the effects of mutations on the protein association. Remarkably, the effective range of the protein-protein attractive funnel is found to be very short, at less than two layers of water, despite the fact that the two binding partners carry opposite net charges. Lastly, entropy/enthalpy decomposition shows that the solvent release from the inter-protein region into the bulk is more than offset by the loss of the solute configurational entropy due to complexation.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Preeti Bhumla ◽  
Manish Kumar ◽  
Saswata Bhattacharya

To incorporate the anharmonicity in the vibrational free energy contribution to the configurational entropy, we evaluate the excess free energy of clusters numerically by a thermodynamic integration method with ab initio molecular dynamics (aiMD) simulation inputs.


Author(s):  
Nayara Dantas Coutinho ◽  
Hugo Gontijo Machado ◽  
Valter Henrique Carvalho-Silva ◽  
Wender A. Silva

Recent studies have assigned hydroxide elimination and C=C bond formation step in base-promoted aldol condensation the role of having a strong influence in the overall rate reaction, in contrast to...


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