118 research outputs found
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains report on research project.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM81-11534
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains report on one research project.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM81-11534
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains report on one research project.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM81-11534
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains a report on the research program.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM78-15844
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains report on research program.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM78-15844
Logarithmic decay in single-particle relaxations of hydrated lysozyme powder
We present the self-dynamics of protein amino acids of hydrated lysozyme
powder around the physiological temperature by means of molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations. The self-intermediate scattering functions (SISF) of the amino
acid residue center-of-mass and of the protein hydrogen atoms display a
logarithmic decay over 3 decades of time, from 2 picoseconds to 2 nanoseconds,
followed by an exponential alpha-relaxation. This kind of slow dynamics
resembles the relaxation scenario within the beta-relaxation time range
predicted by the mode coupling theory (MCT) in the vicinity of higher-order
singularities. These results suggest a strong analogy between the
single-particle dynamics of the protein and the dynamics of colloidal,
polymeric and molecular glass-forming liquids.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Photon Correlation Spectroscopy and Applications
Contains report on the research program.National Science Foundation (Grant PCM78-15844
Detection of the liquid-liquid transition in the deeply cooled water confined in MCM-41 with elastic neutron scattering technique
In this paper we present a review on our recent experimental investigations into the phase behavior of the deeply cooled water confined in a nanoporous silica material, MCM-41, with elastic neutron scattering technique. Under such strong confinement, the homogeneous nucleation process of water is avoided, which allows the confined water to keep its liquid state at temperatures and pressures that are inaccessible to the bulk water. By measuring the average density of the confined heavy water, we observe a likely first-order low-density liquid (LDL) to high-density liquid (HDL) transition in the deeply cooled region of the confined heavy water. The phase separation starts from 1.12 ± 0.17 kbar and 215 ± 1K and extends to higher pressures and lower temperatures in the phase diagram. This starting point could be the liquid-liquid critical point of the confined water. The locus of the Widom line is also estimated. The observation of the liquid-liquid transition in the confined water has potential to explain the mysterious behaviors of water at low temperatures. In addition, it may also have impacts on other disciplines, because the confined water system represents many biological and geological systems in which water resides in nanoscopic pores or in the vicinity of hydrophilic or hydrophobic surfaces
An effective long-range attraction between protein molecules in solutions studied by small angle neutron scattering
Small angle neutron scattering intensity distributions taken from cytochrome
C and lysozyme protein solutions show a rising intensity at very small wave
vector, Q, which can be interpreted in terms of the presence of a weak
long-range attraction between protein molecules. This interaction has a range
several times that of the diameter of the protein molecule, much greater than
the range of the screened electrostatic repulsion. We show evidence that this
long-range attraction is closely related to the type of anion present and ion
concentration in the solution
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