15 research outputs found
Ab initio molecular dynamics study of liquid methanol
We present a density-functional theory based molecular-dynamics study of the structural, dynamical, and electronic properties of liquid methanol under ambient conditions. The calculated radial distribution functions involving the oxygen and hydroxyl hydrogen show a pronounced hydrogen bonding and compare well with recent neutron diffraction data, except for an underestimate of the oxygen-oxygen correlation. We observe that, in line with infrared spectroscopic data, the hydroxyl stretching mode is significantly red-shifted in the liquid. A substantial enhancement of the dipole moment is accompanied by significant fluctuations due to thermal motion. Our results provide valuable data for improvement of empirical potentials. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.status: publishe
An integrated experimental/computational approach to the characterization of polymer-grafted silica-based polymer nanocomposites
Nanocompositi: da micro a mesoscala
La prospettiva generale di questo lavoro consiste nell\u2019integrazione completa di tutte le scale di simulazione ora disponibili, all\u2019interno di una procedura gerarchica finalizzata a
fornire un protocollo di simulazione efficiente e solido, idoneo alla progettazionendi PCN di interesse industriale e la previsione della loro performance finale
Modeling of Nanocomposite Materials. An integrated experimental/computational approach to the characterization of polymer-grafted silica-based polymer nanocomposites
Supramolecular structure of self-assembling alamethicin analog studied by ESR and PELDOR
Three analogs of alamethicin F50/5, labelled with the TOAC (=‘2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxylic acid’) spin label at positions 1 (Alm1), 8 (Alm8), and 16 (Alm16), resp., were studied by Electron-Spin-Resonance (ESR) and Pulsed Electron–Electron Double-Resonance (PELDOR) techniques in solvents of different polarity to investigate the self-assembly of amphipathic helical peptides in membrane-mimicking environments. In polar solvents, alamethicin forms homogeneous solutions. In the weakly polar chloroform/toluene 1 : 1 mixture, however, this peptide forms aggregates that are detectable at 293 K by ESR in liquid solution, as well as by PELDOR in frozen, glassy solution at 77 K. In liquid solution, free alamethicin molecules and their aggregates show rotational-mobility correlation times τr of 0.87 and 5.9 ns, resp. Based on these values and analysis of dipole–dipole interactions of the TOAC labels in the aggregates, as determined by PELDOR, the average number N of alamethicin molecules in the aggregates is estimated to be less than nine. A distance-distribution function between spin labels in the supramolecular aggregate was obtained. This function exhibits two maxima: a broad one at a distance of 3.0 nm, and a wide one at a distance of ca. 7 nm. A molecular-dynamics (MD)-based model of the aggregate, consisting of two parallel tetramers, each composed of four molecules arranged in a ‘head-to-tail’ fashion, is proposed, accounting for the observed distances and their distribution
Two-dimensional ordered â-sheet lipopeptide monolayers
A series of amphiphilic lipopeptides, ALPs, consisting of an alternating hydrophilic and hydrophobic amino acid residue sequence coupled to a phospholipid tail, was designed to form supramolecular assemblies composed of -sheet monolayers decorated by lipid tails at the air-water interface. A straightforward synthetic approach based on solid-phase synthesis, followed by an efficient purification protocol was used to prepare the lipid-peptide conjugates. Structural insight into the organization of monolayers was provided by surface pressure versus area isotherms, circular dichroism, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and Brewster angle microscopy. In situ grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) revealed that lipopeptides six to eight amino acids in length form a new type of 2D self-organized monolayers that exhibit -sheet ribbons segregated by lipid tails. The conclusions drawn from the experimental findings were supported by a representative model based on molecular dynamics simulations of amphiphilic lipopeptides at the vacuum-water interface
