Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1383573 | Carbohydrate Polymers | 2016 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Molecular Mechanics, Hartree-Fock, and semi-empirical geometry optimizations were carried out on cellulose oligomers and crystallites with and without water solvation. The intramolecular bonding is visualized with the Delocalized Molecular Orbitals (DLMOs). Internal coordinates were relaxed and the structures were gradient optimized for cellulose oligomers composed of 4, 10, 12, 14, 19, and 65 glucose units. The cellulose conformation of minimum energy deviates from the flat ribbon conformation giving rise to half-twist repeating units of about 3-4Â nm and 60Â nm along the chain axis. An optimized cellulose chain which is ten glucose units long is 9.57Â kcal/mol more stable than the flat ribbon model. The DLMOs show the twisted model retains the same hydrogen bonding scheme as the flat model while minimizing steric interactions between H1 and H4â². In cellulose crystallites the twist, which can be left- or right-handed, calls into question the assumption of twofold symmetry in the current flat unit cell. Additionally the hydrogen bonded sheets reorient themselves, suggesting the crystallites are in fact crystalloids. The overall length of the crystal twist is dependent on the cross-section of the crystal. Powder X-ray diffraction patterns of the optimized crystallites were simulated.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Kevin Conley, Louis Godbout, M.A. (Tony) Whitehead, Theo G.M. van de Ven,