4.7 Article

Fluid-fluid phase transitions in a chiral molecular model

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 157, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0105851

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-1856704]
  2. Princeton Institute for Computational Science and Engineering (PICSciE)
  3. Office of Information Technology's High Performance Computing Center
  4. Visualization Laboratory at Princeton University

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In this study, molecular dynamics simulations were performed to investigate the fluid-fluid phase transitions of a flexible three-dimensional four-site chiral molecular model. By introducing bias favoring local homochiral vs heterochiral interactions, the system exhibited a phase transition from a single achiral phase to a single chiral phase, with infrequent interconversion between the two chiral states. The results provide basic thermodynamic and kinetic insights for understanding many-body chiral symmetry breaking phenomena.
Molecular chirality is a fundamental phenomenon, underlying both life as we know it and industrial pharmaceutical syntheses. Understanding the symmetry breaking phase transitions exhibited by many chiral molecular substances provides basic insights for topics ranging from the origin of life to the rational design of drug manufacturing processes. In this work, we have performed molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the fluid-fluid phase transitions of a flexible three-dimensional four-site chiral molecular model developed by Latinwo et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 145, 154503 (2016)] and Petsev et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 155, 084105 (2021)]. By introducing a bias favoring local homochiral vs heterochiral interactions, the system exhibits a phase transition from a single achiral phase to a single chiral phase that undergoes infrequent interconversion between the two thermodynamically identical chiral states: the L-rich and D-rich phases. According to the phase rule, this reactive binary system has two independent degrees of freedom and exhibits a density-dependent critical locus. Below the liquid-liquid critical locus, there exists a first-order vapor-liquid coexistence region with a single independent degree of freedom. Our results provide basic thermodynamic and kinetic insights for understanding many-body chiral symmetry breaking phenomena.

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