Molecular Simulation Methods of Evaporating Electrosprayed Droplets

02 July 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Molecular simulations provide significant insights into the relationship between the release of a macromolecule from charged droplets and its charge state. These simulations also help determine the possible location of the charge in macroions detected by mass spectrometry. However, several significant challenges must be considered in the modeling process. These challenges include the effect of the droplet-size-dependent chemistry on the charge state of a macroion, limitations in force fields, efficient droplet evaporation at any temperature, and effective treatment of electrostatic interactions. Here, we present a robust methodology for molecular simulations that enables the study of the chemistry and interactions of macromolecules within a droplet, and the relationship between the dynamics of the process of interest and the solvent evaporation rate. The competition of these dynamic processes will determine the mass spectrum. The success of the approach depends on the accurate and effective treatment of electostatic interactions in combination with the efficient use of spherical boundary conditions. Multilevel summation method (MSM) has been developed [Hardy et al. ``Multilevel summation method for electrostatic force evaluation'' J. Chem. Theory Comput. {\bf 11}, 766 (2015)] for the efficient treatment of electrostatics in non-periodic and semi-periodic systems, charged and neutral. We present comparison of MSM with particle-mesh Ewald (PME) method in order to show MSM's ability to study conformational changes of macromolecules in droplets. We find that MSM produces the same conformations of macromolecules (within one standard deviation) as PME. We demonstrate the capability of spherical boundary condition and MSM to study physical and chemical processes in droplets by using the example of the Rayleigh jet formation and charge emission from it. We conclude that robust approaches for droplet simulations that can be used with a force field of any complexity are available and can be implemented within many of the available open-source molecular modeling softwares. In the near future, the presented approach may provide reliable reference mass spectra for experiments, where the deviations from the experimental data may reveal valuable information about the processes that take place within the instrument.

Keywords

evaporation
dynamics
statistical mechanics
protonation
macromolecules
electrospray

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supplementary Material: Molecular Simulation Methods of Evaporating Electrosprayed Droplets
Description
(S1) NAMD input for a droplet simulation using a spherical boundary condition. Scripts are provided upon request. (S2) Details of simulations with PBC to compare MSM with PME in the generation of peptide conformations; (S3) Time autocorrelation function of radius of gyration and end-to-end distance probability density profile of polyglycine. A movie with the Rayleigh jet formation of an aqueous droplet containing linear macromolecules is provided.
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Supplementary Material - Movie
Description
Rayleigh jet of a charged droplet
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