Literature DB >> 33914530

Effects of the Chemical and Structural Properties of Silane Monolayers on the Organization of Water Molecules and Ions at Interfaces, from Molecular Dynamics Simulations.

Solène Lecot1, Antonin Lavigne1, Zihua Yang1, Yann Chevolot1, Magali Phaner-Goutorbe1, Christelle Yeromonahos1.   

Abstract

Understanding the organization of the hydration layer at functionalized silica surfaces is relevant for a large range of biosensing applications or surface phenomena such as biomolecule adsorption. Silane monolayers are widely used to functionalize silica surfaces. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we have investigated the role of silane molecule head-group charge, alkyl chain length, and surface coverage in the structural organization and dynamic properties of Na+ ions, Cl- ions, and water molecules at the interface. The silane molecules studied are 3-aminopropyldimethylethoxysilane, n-propyldimethylmethoxysilane, octadecyldimethylmethoxysilane, and (dimethylamino)dimethylsilylundecanoate. Our results suggest that the distribution of interfacial ions is sensitive to the 2D dispersion of the silane-charged head groups. Also, while charged silane monolayers show a strong orientation of interfacial water molecules, which leads to a rupture in the hydrogen bond network and disturbs their tetrahedral organization, the arrangement of water molecules at the interface with uncharged silane monolayers seems to be related to the surface roughness and to alkyl chain length. In line with these results, the diffusion of ions and water molecules is higher at the CH3 long monolayer interface than at the CH3 short monolayer interface and at the charged monolayer interfaces. Also, whatever the silane molecules studied, bulk properties are recovered around 0.7 nm above the interface. The interfacial water organization is known to impact biomolecule adsorption. Therefore, these results could further help in optimizing the functionalization layers to capture analytes.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33914530     DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00338

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  1 in total

1.  Structural and Dynamic Insights into SARS-CoV-2 Spike-Protein-Montmorillonite Interactions.

Authors:  Shivam Tiwari; Vasista Adupa; Dhanesh Sing Das; K Anki Reddy; Tadikonda Venkata Bharat
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 4.331

  1 in total

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