화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.2, 731-740, 2006
Quantum simulation of a hydrated noradrenaline analog with the torsional path integral method
An extended version of the torsional path integral Monte Carlo (TPIMC) method is presented and shown to be useful for studying the conformation of flexible molecules in solvated clusters. The new technique is applied to the hydrated clusters of the 2-amino-1-phenyl-ethanol (APE) molecule. APE + nH(2)O clusters with n = 0-4 are studied at 100 and 300 K using both classical and quantum simulations. Only at the lower temperature is the hydration number n found to impact the conformational distribution of the APE molecule. This is shown to be a result of the temperature-dependent balance between the internal energy and entropy contributions to the relative conformer free energies. Furthermore, at 100 K, large quantum effects are observed in the calculated conformer populations. A particularly large quantum shift of 30% of the total population is calculated for the APE + 214,0 cluster, which is explained in terms of the relative zero point energy of the lowest-energy hydrated structures for this cluster. Finally, qualitative agreement is found between the reported calculations and recent spectroscopy experiments oil the hydrated clusters of APE, including an entropically driven preference for the formation of AG-type hydrated structures and the formation of a water "droplet" in the APE + 4H(2)O cluster.