Self-assembly of Spherical Macroions in Solution: A Coarse-grained Molecular Dynamics Study
ORAL
Abstract
Macroions (such as polyoxometalates) in solution can form a stable hollow spherical super-molecular structure called blackberry when they have moderate surface charge density and size (1-10 nm). Depending on the surface charge density of macroions, the size of the blackberry can be from 20 to more than 100 nm. Other macroions such as dendrimers can also self-assemble into similar super-molecular structure in solution. Existing theories such as Debye-H\"{u}ckel and DLVO theories cannot explain this phenomenon and we are not aware of any other theory that can explain this. Previous studies using all-atom Molecular Dynamics simulations have shown identical macroions forming oligomers mediated by counterions. Due to the limitations in all-atom simulation and available computational capabilities, these studies handled only small systems with simple macroions, leading to less conclusive but still relevant results on the self-assembly behavior. To overcome these limitations, in this work large-scale coarse-grained modeling of macroions in solution is used. In order to understand the origin of the attractive force that is responsible for the self-assembly of macroions, different types of macroions in different solution conditions are studied.
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Authors
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Zhuonan Liu
University of Akron, Department of Polymer Science, Akron, Ohio
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Tianbo Liu
University of Akron, Department of Polymer Science, Akron, Ohio
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Mesfin Tsige
University of Akron, Department of Polymer Science, Akron, Ohio, Department of Polymer Science, The University of Akron, The University of Akron, Department of Polymer Science, Akron, Ohio, The University of Akron