Search results for "molecular dynamics"

showing 10 items of 1075 documents

Simulations of a Graphene Nanoflake as a Nanovector To Improve ZnPc Phototherapy Toxicity: From Vacuum to Cell Membrane

2017

International audience; We propose a new approach to improving photodynamic therapy (PDT) by transporting zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) in biological systems via a graphene nanoflake, to increase its targeting. Indeed, by means of time-dependent density functional theory simulations, we show that the ZnPc molecule in interaction with a graphene nanoflake preserves its optical properties not only in a vacuum but also in water. Moreover, molecular dynamic simulations demonstrate that the graphene nanoflake/ZnPc association, as a carrier, permits one to stabilize the ZnPc/graphene nanoflake system on the cellular membrane, which was not possible when using ZnPc alone. We finally conclude that the…

Cellular membraneIndolesMaterials scienceVacuum[SPI.NANO] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Micro and nanotechnologies/MicroelectronicsNanotechnology02 engineering and technology[SPI.MAT] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materials010402 general chemistry01 natural sciences[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialslaw.inventionCell membraneMolecular dynamicslawCell Line TumorOrganometallic CompoundsmedicineHumansMoleculeGeneral Materials Science[SPI.NANO]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Micro and nanotechnologies/Microelectronics[SPI.ACOU]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph]Zinc phthalocyanine[SPI.ACOU] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Acoustics [physics.class-ph]Photosensitizing AgentsGrapheneCell Membrane021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyNanostructures0104 chemical sciencesmedicine.anatomical_structurePhotochemotherapyGraphiteDensity functional theory0210 nano-technology
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On the role of interfacial hydrogen bonds in "on-water" catalysis.

2014

Numerous experiments have demonstrated that many classes of organic reactions exhibit increased reaction rates when performed in heterogeneous water emulsions. Despite enormous practical importance of the observed "on-water" catalytic effect and several mechanistic studies, its microscopic origins remains unclear. In this work, the second generation Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics method is extended to self-consistent charge density-functional based tight-binding in order to study "on-water" catalysis of the Diels-Alder reaction between dimethyl azodicarboxylate and quadricyclane. We find that the stabilization of the transition state by dangling hydrogen bonds exposed at the aqueous inte…

Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)Aqueous solutionHydrogen bondGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterPhotochemistryCatalysisReaction rateMolecular dynamicschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryOrganic reactionBiological Physics (physics.bio-ph)Physics - Chemical PhysicsSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Density functional theoryPhysics - Biological PhysicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryQuadricyclaneThe Journal of chemical physics
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Nanoscale ear drum: graphene based nanoscale sensors.

2012

The difficulty in determining the mass of a sample increases as its size diminishes. At the nanoscale, there are no direct methods for resolving the mass of single molecules or nanoparticles and so more sophisticated approaches based on electromechanical phenomena are required. More importantly, one demands that such nanoelectromechanical techniques could provide not only information about the mass of the target molecules but also about their geometrical properties. In this sense, we report a theoretical study that illustrates in detail how graphene membranes can operate as nanoelectromechanical mass-sensor devices. Wide graphene sheets were exposed to different types and amounts of molecul…

Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)FOS: Computer and information sciencesCondensed Matter - Materials ScienceMaterials scienceDopantGrapheneDopingDetectorNanoparticleMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)FOS: Physical sciencesNanotechnologylaw.inventionComputational Engineering Finance and Science (cs.CE)Molecular dynamicslawDirect methodsPhysics - Chemical PhysicsGeneral Materials ScienceComputer Science - Computational Engineering Finance and ScienceNanoscopic scaleNanoscale
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Nuclear quantum effects in liquid water from path-integral simulations using anab initioforce-matching approach

2014

We have applied path integral simulations, in combination with new ab initio based water potentials, to investigate nuclear quantum effects in liquid water. Because direct ab initio path integral simulations are computationally expensive, a flexible water model is parameterized by force-matching to density functional theory-based molecular dynamics simulations. The resulting effective potentials provide an inexpensive replacement for direct ab inito molecular dynamics simulations and allow efficient simulation of nuclear quantum effects. Static and dynamic properties of liquid water at ambient conditions are presented and the role of nuclear quantum effects, exchange-correlation functionals…

Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Liquid waterBiophysicsAb initioFOS: Physical sciencesComputational Physics (physics.comp-ph)Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterCondensed Matter PhysicsMolecular dynamicsForce matchingPhysics - Chemical PhysicsQuantum mechanicsDispersion (optics)Path integral formulationWater modelSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Density functional theoryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPhysics - Computational PhysicsMolecular BiologyCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMolecular Physics
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Adversarial reverse mapping of equilibrated condensed-phase molecular structures

2020

A tight and consistent link between resolutions is crucial to further expand the impact of multiscale modeling for complex materials. We herein tackle the generation of condensed molecular structures as a refinement -- backmapping -- of a coarse-grained structure. Traditional schemes start from a rough coarse-to-fine mapping and perform further energy minimization and molecular dynamics simulations to equilibrate the system. In this study we introduce DeepBackmap: A deep neural network based approach to directly predict equilibrated molecular structures for condensed-phase systems. We use generative adversarial networks to learn the Boltzmann distribution from training data and realize reve…

Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)Structure (mathematical logic)Artificial neural networkComputer sciencePhase (waves)FOS: Physical sciencesLink (geometry)Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterComputational Physics (physics.comp-ph)Energy minimizationMultiscale modelingBoltzmann distributionHuman-Computer InteractionMolecular dynamicsArtificial IntelligencePhysics - Chemical PhysicsSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Physics - Computational PhysicsAlgorithmSoftwareMachine Learning: Science and Technology
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Computer simulation of bottle-brush polymers with flexible backbone: good solvent versus theta solvent conditions.

2011

By Molecular Dynamics simulation of a coarse-grained bead-spring type model for a cylindrical molecular brush with a backbone chain of $N_b$ effective monomers to which with grafting density $\sigma$ side chains with $N$ effective monomers are tethered, several characteristic length scales are studied for variable solvent quality. Side chain lengths are in the range $5 \le N \le 40$, backbone chain lengths are in the range $50 \le N_b \le 200$, and we perform a comparison to results for the bond fluctuation model on the simple cubic lattice (for which much longer chains are accessible, $N_b \le 1027$, and which corresponds to an athermal, very good, solvent). We obtain linear dimensions of …

Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)chemistry.chemical_classificationQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesMaterials scienceCharacteristic lengthTheta solventFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyBackbone chainPolymerCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed MatterPower lawCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matterchemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular dynamicschemistryChemical physicsPhysics - Chemical PhysicsSide chainSoft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)Physical and Theoretical ChemistrySolvent effectsThe Journal of chemical physics
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Charged supramolecular assemblies of surfactant molecules in gas phase

2015

The aim of this review is to critically analyze recent literature on charged supramolecular assemblies formed by surfactant molecules in gas phase. Apart our specific interest on this research area, the stimuli to undertake the task arise from the widespread theoretical and applicative benefits emerging from a comprehensive view of this topic. In fact, the study of the formation, stability, and physicochemical peculiarities of non-covalent assemblies of surfactant molecules in gas phase allows to unveil interesting aspects such as the role of attractive, repulsive, and steric intermolecular interactions as driving force of supramolecular organization in absence of interactions with surround…

Chemical processChemistry010401 analytical chemistryIntermolecular forceDispersitySupramolecular chemistryNanotechnologyNanoreactor010402 general chemistryCondensed Matter Physics01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology0104 chemical sciencesAnalytical ChemistryMolecular dynamicsMoleculeConfined spaceSpectroscopyMass Spectrometry Reviews
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Exploring Chemical Reactivity in Enzyme Catalyzed Processes Using QM/MM Methods: An Application to Dihydrofolate Reductase

2015

Enzymes are the catalysts used by living organisms to accelerate chemical processes under physiological conditions. In this chapter, we illustrate the current view about the origin of their extraordinary rate enhancement based on molecular simulations and, in particular, on methods based on the combination of Quantum Mechanics and Molecular Mechanics potentials which provide a solution to treat the chemical reactivity of these large and complex molecular systems. Computational studies on Dihydrofolate Reductase have been selected as a conductor wire to present the evolution and difficulties to model chemical reactivity in enzymes. The results discussed here show that experimental observatio…

Chemical processQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesbiologyChemistryProtein dynamicsMolecular mechanicsEnzyme catalysisQM/MMTransition state theoryMolecular dynamicsBiochemistryChemical physicsDihydrofolate reductasebiology.protein
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Giant Mechanocaloric Effects in Fluorite-Structured Superionic Materials

2016

Mechanocaloric materials experience a change in temperature when a mechanical stress is applied on them adiabatically. Thus, far, only ferroelectrics and superelastic metallic alloys have been considered as potential mechanocaloric compounds to be exploited in solid-state cooling applications. Here we show that giant mechanocaloric effects occur in hitherto overlooked fast ion conductors (FIC), a class of multicomponent materials in which above a critical temperature, Ts, a constituent ionic species undergoes a sudden increase in mobility. Using first-principles and molecular dynamics simulations, we found that the superionic transition in fluorite-structured FIC, which is characterized by …

Chemical substanceMaterials scienceCondensed matter physicsMechanical EngineeringIonic bondingBioengineering02 engineering and technologyGeneral Chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter Physics01 natural scienceslaw.inventionMolecular dynamicslaw0103 physical sciencesUltimate tensile strengthFast ion conductorFrenkel defectGeneral Materials ScienceDensity functional theoryHydrostatic equilibrium010306 general physics0210 nano-technologyNano Letters
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Short hydrogen bonds enhance nonaromatic protein-related fluorescence

2021

Significance Intrinsic fluorescence of nonaromatic amino acids is a puzzling phenomenon with an enormous potential in biophotonic applications. The physical origins of this effect, however, remain elusive. Herein, we demonstrate how specific hydrogen bond networks can modulate fluorescence. We highlight the key role played by short hydrogen bonds, present in the protein structure, on the ensuing fluorescence. We provide detailed experimental and molecular evidence to explain these unusual nonaromatic optical properties. Our findings should benefit the design of novel optically active biomaterials for applications in biosensing and imaging.

Chemical transformationOptics and PhotonicsGlutamineIntrinsic fluorescenceMolecular Dynamics SimulationPhotochemistryFluorescenceAb initio molecular dynamicsAmmoniaHumansSingle amino acidshort hydrogen bondDensity Functional TheoryMultidisciplinaryHydrogen bondChemistryintrinsic fluorescenceultraviolet fluorescenceHydrogen BondingConical intersectionFluorescenceBiophysics and Computational BiologyExcited statePhysical Sciences408PeptidesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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