4.7 Article

Critical behavior in a chiral molecular model

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 159, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0161732

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Understanding the behavior of chiral molecules in condensed phase is crucial for biology and various technological applications. In this study, molecular dynamics simulations were used to investigate a chiral molecular model with second-order symmetry-breaking phase transition and determine the critical temperature. The finite-size scaling behavior of the order parameter suggests compatibility with the 3D Ising universality class. The presence of a free energy barrier indicates a suppressed fluctuation between the enantiomers, which could explain the origin of biological homochirality.
Understanding the condensed-phase behavior of chiral molecules is important in biology as well as in a range of technological applications, such as the manufacture of pharmaceuticals. Here, we use molecular dynamics simulations to study a chiral four-site molecular model that exhibits a second-order symmetry-breaking phase transition from a supercritical racemic liquid into subcritical D-rich and L-rich liquids. We determine the infinite-size critical temperature using the fourth-order Binder cumulant, and we show that the finite-size scaling behavior of the order parameter is compatible with the 3D Ising universality class. We also study the spontaneous D-rich to L-rich transition at a slightly subcritical temperature of T = 0.985Tc, and our findings indicate that the free energy barrier for this transformation increases with system size as N2/3, where N is the number of molecules, consistent with a surface-dominated phenomenon. The critical behavior observed herein suggests a mechanism for chirality selection in which a liquid of chiral molecules spontaneously forms a phase enriched in one of the two enantiomers as the temperature is lowered below the critical point. Furthermore, the increasing free energy barrier with system size indicates that fluctuations between the L-rich and D-rich phases are suppressed as the size of the system increases, trapping it in one of the two enantiomerically enriched phases. Such a process could provide the basis for an alternative explanation for the origin of biological homochirality. We also conjecture the possibility of observing nucleation at subcritical temperatures under the action of a suitable chiral external field.

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