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Molecular dynamics of bimolecular reactions : the equilibrium constant of dimerisation of carbon dioxide : rebinding molecular dynamics of nitric oxide to the V68F myoglobin mutant

Tsintsarska, Stefka. Molecular dynamics of bimolecular reactions : the equilibrium constant of dimerisation of carbon dioxide : rebinding molecular dynamics of nitric oxide to the V68F myoglobin mutant. 2007, Doctoral Thesis, University of Basel, Faculty of Science.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/diss/DissB_7849

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Abstract

1.1 Carbon dioxide
1.1.1 Significance
Theoretical and experimental investigations of weakly bound molecular complexes are of fundamental
importance for understanding of molecular interactions responsible for properties of
condensed phases. The carbon dioxide clusters provide a simple model for such studies. Carbon
dioxide has been a subject of many papers in recent years. Some deal with its role in the
biosphere, mainly the greenhouse effect. The greenhouse effect is the rise in temperature that
the Earth experiences because certain gases in the atmosphere (water vapor, carbon dioxide,
nitrous oxide, and methane, for example) trap energy from the sun. Without these gases,
heat would escape back into space and Earth’s average temperature would be lower. Other
investigations deal with the significance of carbon dioxide for the nutrition for plants, the supercritical
carbon dioxide as a green solvent for extraction and synthesis and the existance of
carbon dioxide in the atmospheres of Mars and Venus.
1.1.2 Previous Investigations
The carbon dioxide dimer was first detected in 1966 by Leckenby et al.[?]. The slippedparallel(
C2h - geometry) structure of the carbon dioxide dimer was shown experimentally in
references [?] - [?](high-resolution infrared) and [?](Raman studies) to be the stable one. That
the structure of the dimer is slipped-parallel(C2h - geometry) was shown in [?] as a result of
quantum-chemical calculations. The dimerisation equilibrium constant was evaluated using
partition functions [?].
1.1.3 Dimer formation
A new method is developed to calculate the equilibrium constant of weak dimer complexes
and the life time of the dimer in the gas phase. Actually it is not an easy task to define when
approaching monomers form a dimer. In the new method the defined time correlation function
from the molecular dynamics simulations shows a slow decay corresponding to real dimers and
a fast decay corresponding to unstable collisions. The results obtained for the carbon dioxide
dimerization are compared to results obtained by two other methods using partition function
and second virial coefficient. A possible application is to predict the dimer carbon dioxide
concentration in the atmospheres of Mars and Venus.
1.2 Rebinding dynamics of nitric oxide to the V68F Myoglobin
mutant
In connection with the work on rebinding molecular dynamics of nitric oxide to the V68F
Myoglobin mutant I would like to emphasize that the study of reactive processes in chemically
and biologically relevant systems is a topic of much current interest. For fast reactions (proton
transfer, ligand rebinding) computer simulations are a useful means to investigate and understand
the energetics and dynamics of chemical reactions. A new surface-crossing algorithm
suitable for describing bond-breaking and bond-forming processes in molecular dynamics simulations
is presented in [?]. The method is formulated for two intersecting potential energy
manifolds which dissociate to different adiabatic states. During simulations, crossings are detected
by monitoring an energy criterion. If fulfilled, the two manifolds are mixed over a finite
number of time steps, after which the system is propagated on the second adiabat and the
crossing is carried out with probability one.
Advisors:Huber, Hanspeter
Committee Members:Meuwly, Markus
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Chemie > Former Organization Units Chemistry > Computational Chemistry (Huber)
UniBasel Contributors:Meuwly, Markus
Item Type:Thesis
Thesis Subtype:Doctoral Thesis
Thesis no:7849
Thesis status:Complete
Number of Pages:60
Language:English
Identification Number:
edoc DOI:
Last Modified:22 Jan 2018 15:50
Deposited On:13 Feb 2009 15:55

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