Driving and characterizing nucleation of urea and glycine polymorphs in water

Crystal nucleation is relevant across the domains of fundamental and applied sciences. However, in many cases, its mechanism remains unclear due to a lack of temporal or spatial resolution. To gain insights into the molecular details of nucleation, some form of molecular dynamics simulations is typi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2023-02, Vol.120 (7), p.e2216099120-e2216099120
Hauptverfasser: Zou, Ziyue, Beyerle, Eric R, Tsai, Sun-Ting, Tiwary, Pratyush
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Crystal nucleation is relevant across the domains of fundamental and applied sciences. However, in many cases, its mechanism remains unclear due to a lack of temporal or spatial resolution. To gain insights into the molecular details of nucleation, some form of molecular dynamics simulations is typically performed; these simulations, in turn, are limited by their ability to run long enough to sample the nucleation event thoroughly. To overcome the timescale limits in typical molecular dynamics simulations in a manner free of prior human bias, here, we employ the machine learning-augmented molecular dynamics framework "reweighted autoencoded variational Bayes for enhanced sampling (RAVE)." We study two molecular systems-urea and glycine-in explicit all-atom water, due to their enrichment in polymorphic structures and common utility in commercial applications. From our simulations, we observe multiple back-and-forth nucleation events of different polymorphs from homogeneous solution; from these trajectories, we calculate the relative ranking of finite-sized polymorph crystals embedded in solution, in terms of the free-energy difference between the finite-sized crystal polymorph and the original solution state. We further observe that the obtained reaction coordinates and transitions are highly nonclassical.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2216099120