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Ken Kubos
 
Default Self-Assembling Nano-Ice Discovered; Structure Resembles DNA

http://www.physorg.com/news85225602.html

Self-Assembling Nano-Ice Discovered; Structure Resembles DNA

A computer image of the nano-ice double helix. Oxygen atoms are blue in the
inner helix, purple in the outer helix. Hydrogen atoms are white. University
of Nebraska-Lincoln
Working at the frontier between chemistry and physics, the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln's Xiao Cheng Zeng usually finds his reward in discovering
the unexpected through computer modeling.

Zeng and his colleagues regularly find new and often unanticipated behaviors
of matter in extreme environments, and those discoveries have been published
several times in major international scientific journals. Their findings,
though, have been so far ahead of existing technology that their immediate
practical impact was essentially nil -- until now.

Chemistry professor Zeng and two members of his UNL team recently found
double helixes of ice molecules that resemble the structure of DNA and
self-assemble under high pressure inside carbon nanotubes. This discovery
could have major implications for scientists in other fields who study the
protein structures that cause diseases such as Alzheimer's and bovine
spongiform ecephalitis (mad cow disease). It could also help guide those
searching for ways to target or direct self-assembly in nanomaterials and
predict the kind of ice future astronauts will find on Mars and moons in the
solar system.

Zeng, post-doctoral student Jaeil Bai and doctoral candidate Jun Wang
reported their findings in the Dec. 11-15 online edition of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.

Zeng and his colleagues use powerful computers to model how materials behave
at the nanoscale (where measurements are made in billionths of meters) under
extremes of temperature, pressure and confinement. The team found the
self-assembling double helix of nano-ice following a months-long experiment
on UNL's PrairieFire supercomputer.

The experiment was a follow-up on a 2001 discovery through computer modeling
by Zeng and another team of four new kinds of one-dimensional ice inside
carbon nanotubes. Scientists elsewhere later confirmed through laboratory
experiment the existence of three of the new nano-ices. One result in
particular intrigued Zeng, Bai and Wang. Scientists at Argonne National
Laboratory near Chicago confirmed the existence of a chain of octagon-shaped
ice crystals inside a 1.4-nanometer carbon tube, just as Zeng and company
expected. But the Argonne group also found an additional, unexpected chain
of water molecules inside the octagon.

Zeng said that report inspired his team to take another look at
one-dimensional ice, but this time with a PrairieFire that was 20 times more
powerful that it had been five years earlier. The 2001 results were achieved
at atmospheric pressures, but PrairieFire's added processing power enabled
Zeng, Bai and Wang to design simulations that greatly increased the pressure
on the water molecules.

"We were shocked to see these molecules arrange themselves in this way,"
said Zeng, university professor of chemistry. "We thought it would be like
two tubes, one inside the other, but it didn't do that. It was helical, like
DNA. I'm just speculating, but maybe the helix is a way for molecules to
arrange themselves in a very compact, efficient way under high pressure.

"This ice formation can be viewed as a self-assembling process, and
self-assembly is a way for molecules to bond together through weak hydrogen
bonds. One example of a self-assembling material is protein. Proteins can
self-assemble into structures like amyloid fibrils that can build up in the
brain to cause Alzheimer's disease or prions that cause mad cow disease."

Another implication, Zeng said, is that these self-assembling helical ice
structures may give scientists and engineers a different way to think about
weak molecular bonds and the self-assembly process as they try to develop
ways to direct self-assembly in making new materials. He said that while
scientists have a good understanding of covalent bonds (the strong type of
bonding where atoms share electrons), knowledge is not as complete about the
weak bond, such as hydrogen bonds, that are essential to the self-assembly
process. In weak bonding, atoms don't share electrons.

"We're happy to see potential applications that can maybe advance some
fundamental science," Zeng said. "We're not engineers in direct contact with
technology, but if our research can make some contribution, we're happy."

Zeng and his colleagues achieved their results by running four series of
molecular dynamics simulations on PrairieFire and Department of Chemistry
computers, using simulated carbon nanotubes ranging in diameter from 1.35 to
1.9 nanometers. They used Earth-like temperatures ranging from 117 degrees
Fahrenheit to 9 degrees below zero F., but with pressures ranging from 10 to
40,000 atmospheres, with each series lasting no more than a few 10s of
nanoseconds.

Most of the experiments produced the expected tubular structures, but in a
simulation in a 1.35-nanometer tube at minus-9 degrees F. and 40,000
atmospheres, the ice transformed into a braid of double helix that resembles
DNA in structure and in the weak bonds between the helixes. Additionally, in
a simulation in a 1.9-nanometer tube at the same temperature, pressure on
the confined liquid water was instantly raised from 10 atmospheres to 8,000.
The confined liquid froze spontaneously into a high-density, triple-walled
helical structure.

Source: University of Nebraska-Lincoln

--

Ken

"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
"Karma means that you don't get away with anything."



 
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