Issue 3, 2017

Evaluating the friction of rotary joints in molecular machines

Abstract

A computationally-efficient method for evaluating friction in molecular rotary bearings is presented. This method estimates drag from fluctuations in molecular dynamics simulations via the fluctuation–dissipation theorem. This is effective even for simulation times short compared to a bearing's energy damping time and for rotation speeds comparable to or below typical thermal values. We apply this method to two molecular rotary bearings of similar size at 300 K: previously studied nested (9,9)/(14,14) double-walled carbon nanotubes and a hypothetical rotary joint consisting of single acetylenic bonds in a rigid diamondoid housing. The acetylenic joint has a rotational frictional drag coefficient of 2 × 10−35 kg m2 s−1. The friction for the nested nanotubes is 120 times larger, comparable to values reported by previous studies. This fluctuation-based method could evaluate dissipation in a variety of molecular systems with similarly rigid and symmetric bearings.

Graphical abstract: Evaluating the friction of rotary joints in molecular machines

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Mar 2017
Accepted
16 May 2017
First published
16 May 2017

Mol. Syst. Des. Eng., 2017,2, 235-252

Evaluating the friction of rotary joints in molecular machines

T. Hogg, M. S. Moses and D. G. Allis, Mol. Syst. Des. Eng., 2017, 2, 235 DOI: 10.1039/C7ME00021A

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