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Kinetics of docking in postnucleation stages of self-assembly.

Authors :
Garza-López, Roberto A.
Bouchard, Philippe
Nicolis, Gregoire
Sleutel, Mike
Brzezinski, Jack
Kozak, John J.
Source :
Journal of Chemical Physics; 3/21/2008, Vol. 128 Issue 11, p114701, 13p, 3 Diagrams, 6 Charts, 2 Graphs
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

In a previous study, the early stages of self-assembly in nanophase materials were explored by coupling a kinetic mean-field analysis with a lattice-based stochastic theory [J. J. Kozak et al., J. Chem. Phys. 126, 154701 (2007)]. Recent experimental results on the postnucleation stages of zeolite assembly and protein crystallite formation have suggested a new study, presented here, in which the docking of a platelet on the existing surface of a structured crystallite is similarly investigated. A model is designed which allows the quantification of factors affecting docking efficiency; principal among these is the structure of the template itself, which here is assumed to be either unstructured or bifurcated into terraces and edges/ledges. Going beyond our earlier study (in which diffusion was restricted to d=2 dimensions), the diffusion space here is enlarged to consider both d=2 and d=3 dimensional flows. By expanding the external diffusion space systematically, we are able to document the consequences (as regards docking efficiency) of diffusive flows in the near neighborhood of a developing crystallite versus surface-only processes. Particularly in regimes where the barriers to surface diffusion are high, and/or the probability of desorption significant, we find that d=3 dimensional processes (leading to a “direct hit”) can compete kinetically with surface-only mediated processes. Although the crystallite model studied here is simple, it can be diffeomorphically distorted into a manifold of possible geometries; in analogy with the classical theory of corresponding states, we argue that the familial relationship among these structures suggests that the generic results obtained provide a qualitatively correct description of the kinetics of docking on structured surfaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219606
Volume :
128
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Chemical Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31424435
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2876271