Electric field modulated configuration and orientation of aqueous molecule chains.

J Chem Phys

College of Science, Guizhou Institute of Technology, Boshi Road, Dangwu Town, Gui'an New District, Guizhou 550025, China.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding how external electric fields affect aqueous molecules is important for chemistry, biology, and engineering applications.
  • This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to investigate how direct-current (DC) and alternative-current (AC) electric fields impact hydrophobic and hydrophilic oligomers, finding that DC fields are more effective.
  • The results show that electric fields enhance the alignment and stretched configurations of these molecules while also organizing water dipole moments and hydrogen bonds into structured patterns, which could influence future research on biomolecules.

Article Abstract

Understanding how external electric fields (EFs) impact the properties of aqueous molecules is crucial for various applications in chemistry, biology, and engineering. In this paper, we present a study utilizing molecular dynamics simulation to explore how direct-current (DC) and alternative-current (AC) EFs affect hydrophobic (n-triacontane) and hydrophilic (PEG-10) oligomer chains. Through a machine learning approach, we extract a 2-dimensional free energy (FE) landscape of these molecules, revealing that electric fields modulate the FE landscape to favor stretched configurations and enhance the alignment of the chain with the electric field. Our observations indicate that DC EFs have a more prominent impact on modulation compared to AC EFs and that EFs have a stronger effect on hydrophobic chains than on hydrophilic oligomers. We analyze the orientation of water dipole moments and hydrogen bonds, finding that EFs align water molecules and induce more directional hydrogen bond networks, forming 1D water structures. This favors the stretched configuration and alignment of the studied oligomers simultaneously, as it minimizes the disruption of 1D structures. This research deepens our understanding of the mechanisms by which electric fields modulate molecular properties and could guide the broader application of EFs to control other aqueous molecules, such as proteins or biomolecules.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0222122DOI Listing

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