Unveiling Zwitterionization of Glycine in the Microhydration Limit.
Ravi TripathiLaura Durán CaballeroRicardo Pérez de TudelaChristoph HölzlDominik MarxPublished in: ACS omega (2021)
Charge separation under solvation stress conditions is a fundamental process that comes in many forms in doped water clusters. Yet, the mechanism of intramolecular charge separation, where constraints due to the molecular structure might be intricately tied to restricted solvation structures, remains largely unexplored. Microhydrated amino acids are such paradigmatic molecules. Ab initio simulations are carried out at 300 K in the frameworks of metadynamics sampling and thermodynamic integration to map the thermal mechanisms of zwitterionization using Gly(H2O) n with n = 4 and 10. In both cases, a similar water-mediated proton transfer chain mechanism is observed; yet, detailed analyses of thermodynamics and kinetics demonstrate that the charge-separated zwitterion is the preferred species only for n = 10 mainly due to kinetic stabilization. Structural analyses disclose that bifurcated H-bonded water bridges, connecting the cationic and anionic sites in the fluctuating microhydration network at room temperature, are enhanced in the transition-state ensemble exclusively for n = 10 and become overwhelmingly abundant in the stable zwitterion. The findings offer potential insights into charge separation under solvation stress conditions beyond the present example.