• 文献标题:   Cellulose I beta microfibril interaction with pristine graphene in water: Effects of amphiphilicity by molecular simulation
  • 文献类型:   Article
  • 作  者:   KONG LH, ALQUS R, YONG CW, TODOROV I, EICHHORN SJ, BRYCE RA
  • 作者关键词:  
  • 出版物名称:   JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR GRAPHICS MODELLING
  • ISSN:   1093-3263 EI 1873-4243
  • 通讯作者地址:  
  • 被引频次:   1
  • DOI:   10.1016/j.jmgm.2022.108336 EA SEP 2022
  • 出版年:   2023

▎ 摘  要

Graphene-cellulose interactions have considerable potential in the development of new materials. In previous computational work (Biomacromolecules 2016, 16, 1771), we predicted that the model 100 hydrophobic surface of cellulose interacted favourably with pristine graphene in aqueous solution molecular dynamics simulations; conversely, a model of the hydrophilic 010 surface of cellulose exhibited progressive rearrangement to present a more hydrophobic face with the graphene, with weakened hydrogen bonds between cellulose chains and partial permeation of water. Here, we extend this work by simulating the interaction in aqueous solution of the amphiphilic 110 surface of a cellulose I beta microfibril model, comprising 36 chains of 40 glucosyl residues, with an infinite sheet of pristine graphene. This face of the microfibril is of intermediate hydrophilicity and progressively associates with graphene over replicate simulations. As cellulose chains adhere to the graphene surface, forming interactions via its CH and OH groups, we observe a degree of local and global untwisting of the microfibril. Complementary rippling of the graphene surface is also observed, as it adapts to interaction with the microfibril. This adsorption process is accompanied by increased exclusion of water between cellulose and graphene although some water localises between chains at the immediate interface. The predicted propensity of a cellulose microfibril to adsorb spontaneously on the graphene surface, with mutual structural accommodation, highlights the amphiphilic nature of cellulose and the types of interactions that can be harnessed to design new graphene-carbohydrate biopolymer materials.