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Water at functional interfaces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2014

Shekhar Garde
Affiliation:
The Howard P. Isermann Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA; gardes@rpi.edu
Mark L. Schlossman
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA; schloss@uic.edu

Abstract

Water is, perhaps, the most important material known to humankind—fascinating even in its pure state for the range of anomalous properties it displays. There has been an increasing realization that understanding the behavior of water at interfaces—from those of small solutes to biomolecules and polymers to inorganic materials and metals—holds the key to understanding disparate phenomena, from self-assembly, biofouling, and catalysis to corrosion. In this issue of MRS Bulletin, we highlight recent advances in understanding the molecular behavior of water near a range of interfaces of interest to the broader materials community.

Information

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2014 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Water desolvation barriers between solutes in bulk water are reduced near hydrophobic surfaces, leading to preferential assembly at the surface. Reprinted with permission from Reference 11. © 2013 American Chemical Society.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Molecular dynamics simulations of short peptides, with neutral (left) and charged end-groups (right), illustrate conformational changes that result from preferential ion–ion interactions near a water liquid–vapor interface. Amino (N) and carboxyl (C) termini of the peptides are marked in the figure. The peptides are amphiphilic because the hydrophobic leucine (L) groups prefer to position themselves near the vapor phase. Charged groups of the +GL5G peptide submerge into the water, thereby pulling the peptide to the liquid side of the interface. The yellow mesh illustrates the Willard-Chandler instantaneous interface. Reprinted with permission from Reference 12. © 2014 PNAS.