The Posner molecule: Ab initio investigations of a potential biomolecular qubit
ORAL
Abstract
The Posner molecule, Ca9(PO4)6, is of central biochemical relevance. It has also gained recent attention for its hypothesized role as a biological quantum information processor. The molecule is thought to maintain long-lived nuclear spin coherences and entanglement among its 31P nuclei, which could potentially be used for liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computing.
Central to the alleged favorable quantum characteristics of the molecule is the purported symmetrical arrangement of its 31P nuclei. An S6 symmetry, that has been widely assumed, renders the six nuclei magnetically equivalent and simplifies the spin coupling network. In contrast, a lower point-group symmetry is likely to adversely affect the ability of the system to sustain long-lived spin coherences.
Using extensive ab initio molecular dynamics and structural relaxation calculations on over 10,000 molecular geometries, we establish that the Posner molecule predominantly assumes low symmetry structures (Cs and Ci) at room temperature, instead of higher symmetry configurations explored previously. We describe how this critical finding may affect the molecule's viability as a biomolecular qubit.
Central to the alleged favorable quantum characteristics of the molecule is the purported symmetrical arrangement of its 31P nuclei. An S6 symmetry, that has been widely assumed, renders the six nuclei magnetically equivalent and simplifies the spin coupling network. In contrast, a lower point-group symmetry is likely to adversely affect the ability of the system to sustain long-lived spin coherences.
Using extensive ab initio molecular dynamics and structural relaxation calculations on over 10,000 molecular geometries, we establish that the Posner molecule predominantly assumes low symmetry structures (Cs and Ci) at room temperature, instead of higher symmetry configurations explored previously. We describe how this critical finding may affect the molecule's viability as a biomolecular qubit.
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Publication: The Dynamical Ensemble of the Posner Molecule Is Not Symmetric; Shivang Agarwal, Clarice D. Aiello, Daniel R. Kattnig, and Amartya S. Banerjee, The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 0, 12, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.1c02796
Presenters
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Shivang Agarwal
University of California, Los Angeles
Authors
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Shivang Agarwal
University of California, Los Angeles
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Amartya S Banerjee
University of California, Los Angeles
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Daniel R Kattnig
University of Exeter
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Clarice D Aiello
University of California, Los Angeles