Positional fluctuations of an atom in a protein can be described as motion in an effective local energy minimum created by the surrounding protein atoms. The dependence of atomic fluctuations on both temperature (T) and pressure (P) has been used to probe the nature of these minima, which are generally described as harmonic in experiments such as x-ray crystallography and neutron scattering. Here, a quasiharmonic analysis method is presented in which the P-T dependence of atomic fluctuations is in terms of an intrinsic isobaric thermal expansivity α and an intrinsic isothermal compressibility κ. The method is tested on previously reported mean-square displacements from P-T molecular dynamics simulations of lysozyme, which were interpreted to have a pressure-independent dynamical transition T near 200 K and a change in the pressure dependence near 480 MPa. Our quasiharmonic analysis of the same data shows that the P-T dependence can be described in terms of α and κ where below T, the temperature dependence is frozen at the T value. In addition, the purported transition at 480 MPa is reinterpreted as a consequence of the pressure dependence of T and the quasiharmonic frequencies. The former also indicates that barrier heights between substates are pressure dependent in these data. Furthermore, the insights gained from this quasiharmonic analysis, which was of the energy landscape near the native state of a protein, suggest that similar analyses of other simulations may be useful in understanding such phenomena as pressure-induced protein unfolding.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5003823 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
November 2024
Condensed Matter Theory Group, School of Studies in Physics, Jiwaji University, Gwalior, India.
RSC Adv
October 2024
Department of Chemistry, Government College University Faisalabad Pakistan
First-principles density functional investigations of the structural, electronic, optical and thermodynamic properties of KVO, NaVO and ZnVO were performed using generalized gradient approximation (GGA) ultrasoft pseudopotential and density functional theory (DFT). Their electronic structure was analyzed with a focus on the nature of electronic states near band edges. The electronic band structure revealed that between 6% Fe and 6% Co, 6% Co significantly tuned the band gap with the emergence of new states at the gamma point.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
July 2024
Department of Physics, University of Rajshahi, Rajshahi, 6205, Bangladesh.
We thoroughly investigated the structural, mechanical, electronic, vibrational, optical, thermodynamic, and a number of thermophysical properties of WN compound through first-principles calculations using the DFT based formalism The calculated structural parameters show very good agreement with the available theoretical and experimental results. The mechanical and dynamical stabilities of this compound have been investigated theoretically from the elastic constants and phonon dispersion curves. The Pugh's and Poisson's ratios of WN are located quite close to the brittle/ductile borderline.
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May 2024
Department of Applied Mechanics, School of Mathematics and Physics, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
Mater Horiz
June 2024
Key Laboratory for Special Functional Materials of Ministry of Education, and School of Materials and Engineering, Henan University, Kaifeng 475001, China.
Discovering new negative thermal expansion (NTE) materials is a great challenge in experiment. Meanwhile, the machine learning (ML) method can be another approach to explore NTE materials using the existing material databases. Herein, we adopt the multi-step ML method with efficient data augmentation and cross-validation to identify around 1000 materials, including oxides, fluorides, and cyanides, with bulk framework structures as new potential NTE candidate materials from ICSD and other databases.
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