Hydrated ions are crucially important in a wide array of environments, from biology to the atmosphere, and the presence and concentration of ions in a system can drastically alter its behavior. One way in which ions can affect systems is in their interactions with proteins. The Hofmeister series ranks ions by their ability to salt-out proteins, with kosmotropes, such as sulfate, increasing their stability and chaotropes, such as perchlorate, decreasing their stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe sulfate ion is the most kosmotropic member of the Hofmeister series, but the chemical origins of this effect are unclear. We present a global optimization and energy landscape mapping study of microhydrated sulfate ions, SO4(2-)(H2O)n, in the size range 3 ≤ n ≤ 50. The clusters are modeled using a rigid-body empirical potential and optimized using basin-hopping Monte Carlo in conjunction with a move set including cycle inversions to explore hydrogen bond topologies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe visualization of multidimensional energy landscapes is important, providing insight into the kinetics and thermodynamics of a system, as well the range of structures a system can adopt. It is, however, highly nontrivial, with the number of dimensions required for a faithful reproduction of the landscape far higher than can be represented in two or three dimensions. Metric disconnectivity graphs provide a possible solution, incorporating the landscape connectivity information present in disconnectivity graphs with structural information in the form of a metric.
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