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Soluble Oligomeric Nucleants: Simulations of Chain Length, Binding Strength, and Volume Fraction Effects

Recent theories and simulations suggest that molecular additives can bind to the surfaces of nuclei, lower the surface energy, and accelerate nucleation. Experiments have shown that oligomeric and polymeric additives can also modify nucleation rates of proteins, ice, and minerals; however, general d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry letters 2017-12, Vol.8 (23), p.5815-5820
Main Authors: Poon, Geoffrey G, Lemke, Tobias, Peter, Christine, Molinero, Valeria, Peters, Baron
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Recent theories and simulations suggest that molecular additives can bind to the surfaces of nuclei, lower the surface energy, and accelerate nucleation. Experiments have shown that oligomeric and polymeric additives can also modify nucleation rates of proteins, ice, and minerals; however, general design principles for oligomeric or polymeric promoters do not yet exist. Here we investigate oligomeric additives for which each segment of the oligomer can bind to surfaces of nuclei. We use semigrand canonical Monte Carlo simulations in a Potts lattice gas model to study the effects of oligomer chain length, volume fraction, and binding strength. We find that increasing each of those parameters lowers the nucleation barrier. At extremely low oligomer concentrations, the nucleation kinetics can be modeled as though each oligomer is a heterogeneous nucleation site in solution.
ISSN:1948-7185
1948-7185
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b02651