Abstract
Conformational variations of solvated trehaloses in binary mixtures of 1,3-dialkylimidazolium ([dmim]Cl) ionic liquids and trehalose as well as ternary mixtures of trehalose, [dmim]Cl and water have been studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with and without polarisable force fields. The interaction energy between anion Cl− and water is stronger than that between water itself in the [dmim]Cl-water mixtures. Isolated water clusters were found in the binary [dmim]Cl-water mixtures with 60.0 and 75.0% mole fraction of water, but a continuous water network appears when the concentration of the mixture increases to 99.9%. In the case of binary mixtures of trehalose and [dmim]Cl, both non-polarisable and polarisable models demonstrated that the pyranose rings of trehalose displayed chair conformations. MD simulations with polarisation model could sample larger conformation space than that with non-polarisable model. A self-aggregation behaviour of trehalose was found in the ternary trehalose-[dmim]Cl-water mixtures, which can be rationalised by the stronger non-bonded interaction energy between trehalose molecules and anion Cl− than that between trehalose molecules and water.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the High Performance Computing Center of Nanjing University for doing the quantum chemical calculations in this paper on its IBM Blade cluster system.