4.8 Article

Chemical engines: driving systems away from equilibrium through catalyst reaction cycles

Journal

NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 1057-1067

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00975-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/P027067/1]
  2. European Research Council [786630]
  3. East China Normal University

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This article discusses the complex functions exhibited by biological and chemical systems under non-equilibrium conditions, as well as the mechanisms of energy extraction and utilization through chemical engines. By linking different examples using a common conceptual framework, it explores future challenges and potential applications. The focus of the research is on how to utilize these mechanisms to operate chemical engines.
Biological systems exhibit a range of complex functions at the micro- and nanoscales under non-equilibrium conditions (for example, transportation and motility, temporal control, information processing and so on). Chemists also employ out-of-equilibrium systems, for example in kinetic selection during catalysis, self-replication, dissipative self-assembly and synthetic molecular machinery, and in the form of chemical oscillators. Key to non-equilibrium behaviour are the mechanisms through which systems are able to extract energy from the chemical reactants ('fuel') that drive such processes. In this Perspective we relate different examples of such powering mechanisms using a common conceptual framework. We discuss how reaction cycles can be coupled to other dynamic processes through positive (acceleration) or negative (inhibition) catalysis to provide the thermodynamic impetus for diverse non-equilibrium behaviour, in effect acting as a 'chemical engine'. We explore the way in which the energy released from reaction cycles is harnessed through kinetic selection in a series of what have sometimes been considered somewhat disparate fields (systems chemistry, molecular machinery, dissipative assembly and chemical oscillators), highlight common mechanistic principles and the potential for the synchronization of chemical reaction cycles, and identify future challenges for the invention and application of non-equilibrium systems. Explicit recognition of the use of fuelling reactions to power structural change in catalysts may stimulate the investigation of known catalytic cycles as potential elements for chemical engines, a currently unexplored area of catalysis research. This Perspective relates seemingly diverse examples of chemically driven non-equilibrium systems (dissipative assembly, self-replicators, molecular motors, oscillators) using a common conceptual framework, and discusses how catalytic cycles can be coupled to dynamic processes.

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