Cellulose microfibril formation within a coarse grained molecular dynamics

ORAL

Abstract

Cellulose in biomass is mostly in the form of crystalline microfibrils composed of 18 to 36 parallel chains of polymerized glucose monomers. A single chain is produced by cellular machinery (CesA) located on the preliminary cell wall membrane. Information about the nucleation stage can address important questions about intermediate region between cell wall and the fully formed crystalline microfibrils. Very little is known about the transition from isolated chains to protofibrils up to a full microfibril, in contrast to a large body of studies on both CesA and the final crystalline microfibril. In addition to major experimental challenges in studying this transient regime, the length and time scales of microfibril nucleation are inaccessible to atomistic molecular dynamics. We have developed a novel coarse grained model for cellulose microfibrils which accounts for anisotropic interchain interactions. The model allows us to study nucleation, kinetics, and growth of cellulose chains/protofibrils/microfibrils.

Authors

  • Abdolmadjid Nili

    The Pennsylvania State University

  • Oleg Shklyaev

    The Pennsylvania State University

  • Vincent Crespi

    Department of Physics and Materials Research Institute, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA, Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University, Phys. Dept., Penn State University

  • Zhen Zhao

    The Pennsylvania State University

  • Linghao Zhong

    The Pennsylvania State University