306 research outputs found
Stochastic thermodynamics of single enzymes and molecular motors
For a single enzyme or molecular motor operating in an aqueous solution of
non-equilibrated solute concentrations, a thermodynamic description is
developed on the level of an individual trajectory of transitions between
states. The concept of internal energy, intrinsic entropy and free energy for
states follows from a microscopic description using one assumption on
time-scale separation. A first law energy balance then allows the unique
identification of the heat dissipated in one transition. Consistency with the
second law on the ensemble level enforces both stochastic entropy as third
contribution to the entropy change involved in one transition and the local
detailed balance condition for the ratio between forward and backward rates for
any transition. These results follow without assuming weak coupling between the
enzyme and the solutes, ideal solution behavior or mass action law kinetics.
The present approach highlights both the crucial role of the intrinsic entropy
of each state and the physically questionable role of chemiostats for deriving
the first law for molecular motors subject to an external force under realistic
conditions.Comment: 11 page
Efficiency of molecular motors at maximum power
Molecular motors transduce chemical energy obtained from hydrolizing ATP into
mechanical work exerted against an external force. We calculate their
efficiency at maximum power output for two simple generic models and show that
the qualitative behaviour depends crucially on the position of the transition
state. Specifically, we find a transition state near the initial state
(sometimes characterized as a "power stroke") to be most favorable with respect
to both high power output and high efficiency at maximum power. In this regime,
driving the motor further out of equilibrium by applying higher chemical
potential differences can even, counter-intuitively, increase the efficiency.Comment: published in EPL: http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0295-5075/83/3/3000
Multi-terminal Thermoelectric Transport in a Magnetic Field: Bounds on Onsager Coefficients and Efficiency
Thermoelectric transport involving an arbitrary number of terminals is
discussed in the presence of a magnetic field breaking time-reversal symmetry
within the linear response regime using the Landauer-B\"uttiker formalism. We
derive a universal bound on the Onsager coefficients that depends only on the
number of terminals. This bound implies bounds on the efficiency and on
efficiency at maximum power for heat engines and refrigerators. For isothermal
engines pumping particles and for absorption refrigerators these bounds become
independent even of the number of terminals. On a technical level, these
results follow from an original algebraic analysis of the asymmetry index of
doubly substochastic matrices and their Schur complements.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, New J. Phys., in pres
Nonexistence of classical diamagnetism and nonequilibrium fluctuation theorems for charged particles on a curved surface
We show that the classical Langevin dynamics for a charged particle on a
closed curved surface in a time-independent magnetic field leads to the
canonical distribution in the long time limit. Thus the Bohr-van Leeuwen
theorem holds even for a finite system without any boundary and the average
magnetic moment is zero. This is contrary to the recent claim by Kumar and
Kumar (EPL, {\bf 86} (2009) 17001), obtained from numerical analysis of
Langevin dynamics, that a classical charged particle on the surface of a sphere
in the presence of a magnetic field has a nonzero average diamagnetic moment.
We extend our analysis to a many-particle system on a curved surface and show
that the nonequilibrium fluctuation theorems also hold in this geometry.Comment: 6 pages; typos correcte
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