Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins

abstract: How water behaves at interfaces is relevant to many scientific and technological applications; however, many subtle phenomena are unknown in aqueous solutions. In this work, interfacial structural transition in hydration shells of a polarizable solute at critical polarizabilities is discov...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Dinpajooh, Mohammadhasan (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.39416
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-39416
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-394162018-06-22T03:07:34Z Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins abstract: How water behaves at interfaces is relevant to many scientific and technological applications; however, many subtle phenomena are unknown in aqueous solutions. In this work, interfacial structural transition in hydration shells of a polarizable solute at critical polarizabilities is discovered. The transition is manifested in maximum water response, the reorientation of the water dipoles at the interface, and an increase in the density of dangling OH bonds. This work also addresses the role of polarizability of the active site of proteins in biological catalytic reactions. For proteins, the hydration shell becomes very heterogeneous and involves a relatively large number of water molecules. The molecular dynamics simulations show that the polarizability, along with the atomic charge distribution, needs to be a part of the picture describing how enzymes work. Non Gaussian dynamics in time-resolved linear and nonlinear (correlation) 2D spectra are also analyzed. Additionally, a theoretical formalism is presented to show that when preferential orientations of water dipoles exist at the interface, electrophoretic charges can be produced without free charge carriers, i.e., neutral solutes can move in a constant electric field due to the divergence of polarization at the interface. Furthermore, the concept of interface susceptibility is introduced. It involves the fluctuations of the surface charge density caused by thermal motion and its correlation over the characteristic correlation length with the fluctuations of the solvent charge density. Solvation free energy and interface dielectric constant are formulated accordingly. Unlike previous approaches, the solvation free energy scales quite well in a broad range of ion sizes, namely in the range of 2-14 A° . Interface dielectric constant is defined such that the boundary conditions in the Laplace equation describing a micro- or mesoscopic interface are satisfied. The effective dielectric constant of interfacial water is found to be significantly lower than its bulk value. Molecular dynamics simulation results show that the interface dielectric constant for a TIP3P water model changes from nine to four when the effective solute radius is increased from 5 A° to 18 A° . The small value of the interface dielectric constant of water has potentially dramatic consequences for hydration. Dissertation/Thesis Dinpajooh, Mohammadhasan (Author) Matyushov, Dmitry V (Advisor) Richert, Ranko (Committee member) Beckstein, Oliver (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Physical chemistry Chemistry Molecular physics Electron Transfer Electrophoretic Mobility Interface Susceptibility Ion Hydration Non-Gaussian Dynamics Polarizable Solutes eng 245 pages Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.39416 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Physical chemistry
Chemistry
Molecular physics
Electron Transfer
Electrophoretic Mobility
Interface Susceptibility
Ion Hydration
Non-Gaussian Dynamics
Polarizable Solutes
spellingShingle Physical chemistry
Chemistry
Molecular physics
Electron Transfer
Electrophoretic Mobility
Interface Susceptibility
Ion Hydration
Non-Gaussian Dynamics
Polarizable Solutes
Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
description abstract: How water behaves at interfaces is relevant to many scientific and technological applications; however, many subtle phenomena are unknown in aqueous solutions. In this work, interfacial structural transition in hydration shells of a polarizable solute at critical polarizabilities is discovered. The transition is manifested in maximum water response, the reorientation of the water dipoles at the interface, and an increase in the density of dangling OH bonds. This work also addresses the role of polarizability of the active site of proteins in biological catalytic reactions. For proteins, the hydration shell becomes very heterogeneous and involves a relatively large number of water molecules. The molecular dynamics simulations show that the polarizability, along with the atomic charge distribution, needs to be a part of the picture describing how enzymes work. Non Gaussian dynamics in time-resolved linear and nonlinear (correlation) 2D spectra are also analyzed. Additionally, a theoretical formalism is presented to show that when preferential orientations of water dipoles exist at the interface, electrophoretic charges can be produced without free charge carriers, i.e., neutral solutes can move in a constant electric field due to the divergence of polarization at the interface. Furthermore, the concept of interface susceptibility is introduced. It involves the fluctuations of the surface charge density caused by thermal motion and its correlation over the characteristic correlation length with the fluctuations of the solvent charge density. Solvation free energy and interface dielectric constant are formulated accordingly. Unlike previous approaches, the solvation free energy scales quite well in a broad range of ion sizes, namely in the range of 2-14 A° . Interface dielectric constant is defined such that the boundary conditions in the Laplace equation describing a micro- or mesoscopic interface are satisfied. The effective dielectric constant of interfacial water is found to be significantly lower than its bulk value. Molecular dynamics simulation results show that the interface dielectric constant for a TIP3P water model changes from nine to four when the effective solute radius is increased from 5 A° to 18 A° . The small value of the interface dielectric constant of water has potentially dramatic consequences for hydration. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Chemistry 2016
author2 Dinpajooh, Mohammadhasan (Author)
author_facet Dinpajooh, Mohammadhasan (Author)
title Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
title_short Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
title_full Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
title_fullStr Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Solvent Electrostatic Response: From Simple Solutes to Proteins
title_sort solvent electrostatic response: from simple solutes to proteins
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.39416
_version_ 1718701184780337152