Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Achintya Kundu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Achintya Kundu.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Communication: Quantitative estimate of the water surface pH using heterodyne-detected electronic sum frequency generation

Shoichi Yamaguchi; Achintya Kundu; Pratik Sen; Tahei Tahara

Most chemical reactions in water are very sensitive to pH. Many environmentally important chemical reactions are known to take place at the water surface (i.e., air/water interface). However, the pH of the water surface is still controversial. Spectroscopic experiments and theoretical calculations indicate that the water surface is more acidic than the bulk, whereas electrophoretic experiments provide a contrary view. Here, we report that a novel nonlinear optical experiment with a surface-active pH indicator can quantitatively evaluate the pH of the water surface. The result clearly shows that the pH of the water surface is lower than that of the bulk by 1.7. This is the first study to apply a principle of bulk pH measurements to the water surface, and therefore provides a reliable experimental estimate for the pH difference between the water surface and bulk. It is considered that the higher acidity of the water surface plays a key role in marine and atmospheric chemical reactions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Evaluation of pH at Charged Lipid/Water Interfaces by Heterodyne-Detected Electronic Sum Frequency Generation.

Achintya Kundu; Shoichi Yamaguchi; Tahei Tahara

Although the interface pH at a biological membrane is important for biological processes at the membrane, there has been no systematic study to evaluate it. We apply novel interface-selective nonlinear spectroscopy to the evaluation of the pH at model biological membranes (lipid/water interfaces). It is clearly shown that the pH at the charged lipid/water interfaces is substantially deviated from the bulk pH. The pH at the lipid/water interface is higher than that in the bulk when the head group of the lipid is positively charged, whereas the pH at the lipid/water interface is lower when the lipid has a negatively charged head group.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Bend Vibration of Surface Water Investigated by Heterodyne-Detected Sum Frequency Generation and Theoretical Study: Dominant Role of Quadrupole

Achintya Kundu; Shogo Tanaka; Tatsuya Ishiyama; Mohammed Ahmed; Kenichi Inoue; Satoshi Nihonyanagi; Hiromi Sawai; Shoichi Yamaguchi; Akihiro Morita; Tahei Tahara

Heterodyne-detected vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy was applied to the water surface for measuring the imaginary part of second-order nonlinear susceptibility (Im χ((2))) spectrum in the bend frequency region for the first time. The observed Im χ((2)) spectrum shows an overall positive band around 1650 cm(-1), contradicting former theoretical predictions. We further found that the Im χ((2)) spectrum of NaI aqueous solution exhibits an even larger positive band, which is apparently contrary to the flip-flop orientation of surface water. These unexpected observations are elucidated by calculating quadrupole contributions beyond the conventional dipole approximation. It is indicated that the Im χ((2)) spectrum in the bend region has a large quadrupole contribution from the bulk water.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Water Hydrogen-Bonding Network Structure and Dynamics at Phospholipid Multibilayer Surface: Femtosecond Mid-IR Pump–Probe Spectroscopy

Achintya Kundu; Bartosz Błasiak; Joon Hyung Lim; Kyungwon Kwak; Minhaeng Cho

The water hydrogen-bonding network at a lipid bilayer surface is crucial to understanding membrane structures and its functional activities. With a phospholipid multibilayer mimicking a biological membrane, we study the temperature dependence of water hydrogen-bonding structure, distribution, and dynamics at a lipid multibilayer surface using femtosecond mid-IR pump-probe spectroscopy. We observe two distinguished vibrational lifetime components. The fast component (0.6 ps) is associated with water interacting with a phosphate part, whereas the slow component (1.9 ps) is with bulk-like choline-associated water. With increasing temperature, the vibrational lifetime of phosphate-associated water remains constant though its relative fraction dramatically increases. The OD stretch vibrational lifetime of choline-bound water slows down in a sigmoidal fashion with respect to temperature, indicating a noticeable change of the water environment upon the phase transition. The water structure and dynamics are thus shown to be in quantitative correlation with the structural change of liquid multibilayer upon the gel-to-liquid crystal phase transition.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2016

Water Structure at the Lipid Multibilayer Surface: Anionic Versus Cationic Head Group Effects.

Achintya Kundu; Kyungwon Kwak; Minhaeng Cho

Membrane water interface is a potential reaction site for many biochemical reactions. Therefore, a molecular level understanding of water structure and dynamics that strongly depend on the chemical structure of lipid is prerequisite for elucidating the role of water in biological reactions on membrane surface. Recently, we carried out femtosecond infrared pump-probe studies of water structure and dynamics at multibilayer surfaces of zwitterionic phosphatidylcholine-analogue lipid ( J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2016 , 7 , 741 ). Here, to further elucidate the anionic and cationic headgroup effects on water, we study vibrational dynamics of water on lipid multibilayers formed by anionic phospho-glycerol lipid molecules as well as by cationic choline-derivatized lipid molecules. We observed two significantly different vibrational lifetime components (very fast 0.5 ps and slow 1.9 ps) of the OD stretch mode of HOD molecules at the negatively charged phospho-lipid multibilayer whereas only one vibrational lifetime component (1.6 ps) was observed at the positively charged choline-derivatized lipid multibilayer. From the detailed analyses about the vibrational energy and rotational relaxations of HOD molecules in lipid multibilayers composed of anionic lipid with phosphate and cationic lipid without phosphate, the role of phosphate group in structuring water molecules at phospholipid membrane interface is revealed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2017

Studying Water Hydrogen-Bonding Network near the Lipid Multibilayer with Multiple IR Probes

Achintya Kundu; Pramod Kumar Verma; Jeong Hyon Ha; Minhaeng Cho

A critical difference between living and nonliving is the existence of cell membranes, and hydration of membrane surface is a prerequisite for structural stability and various functions such as absorption/desorption of drugs, proteins, and ions. Therefore, a molecular level understanding of water structure and dynamics near the membrane is important to perceive the role of water in such a biologically relevant environment. In our recent paper [ J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2016 , 7 , 741 ] on the IR pump-probe study of the OD stretch mode of HDO near lipid multibilayers, we have observed two different vibrational lifetime components of OD stretch mode in the phospholipid multibilayer systems. The faster component (0.6 ps) is associated with OD groups interacting with the phosphate moiety of the lipid, while the slower component (1.9 ps) is due to choline-associated water molecules that are close to bulklike water. Here, we additionally use hydrazoic acid (HN3) as another IR probe of which frequency is highly sensitive to its local H-bonding water density. Interestingly, we found that the vibrational lifetime of the asymmetric azido stretch mode of HN3 in the lipid multibilayer system is similar to that in neat water, whereas its orientational relaxation is a bit slower than that in bulk water. This indicates that due to the tight packing of lipid molecules, particularly the head parts, in the gel phase, HN3 molecules mostly stay near the choline group of lipid and interact with water molecules in the vicinity of choline groups. This suggests that membrane surface-adsorbed molecules such as hydrophilic drug molecules may interact with choline-associated water molecules, when the membrane is in the gel phase, instead of phosphate-associated water molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Effect of Osmolytes on the Conformational Behavior of a Macromolecule in a Cytoplasm-like Crowded Environment: A Femtosecond Mid-IR Pump–Probe Spectroscopy Study

Achintya Kundu; Pramod Kumar Verma; Minhaeng Cho

Osmolytes found endogenously in almost all living beings play an important role in regulating cell volume under harsh environment. Here, to address the longstanding questions about the underlying mechanism of osmolyte effects, we use femtosecond mid-IR pump-probe spectroscopy with two different IR probes that are the OD stretching mode of HDO and the azido stretching mode of azido-derivatized poly(ethylene glycol) dimethyl ether (PEGDME). Our experimental results show that protecting osmolytes bind strongly with water molecules and dehydrate polymer surface, which results in promoting intramolecular interactions of the polymer. By contrast, urea behaves like water molecules without significantly disrupting water H-bonding network and favors extended and random-coil segments of the polymer chain by directly participating in solvation of the polymer. Our findings highlight the importance of direct interaction between urea and macromolecule, while protecting osmolytes indirectly affect the macromolecule through enhancing the water-osmolyte interaction in a crowded environment, which is the case that is often encountered in real biological systems.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017

Role of Solvent Water in the Temperature-Induced Self-Assembly of a Triblock Copolymer

Achintya Kundu; Pramod Kumar Verma; Minhaeng Cho

Water-soluble triblock copolymers have received much attention in industrial applications and scientific fields. We here show that femtosecond mid-IR pump-probe spectroscopy is useful to study the role of water in the temperature-induced self-assembly of triblock copolymers. Our experimental results suggest two distinct subpopulations of water molecules: those that interact with other water molecules and those involved in the hydration of a triblock copolymer surface. We find that the vibrational dynamics of bulk-like water is not affected by either micellation or gelation of triblock copolymers. The increased population of water interacting with ether oxygen atoms of the copolymer during the unimer to micelle phase transition is important evidence for the entropic role of water in temperature-induced micelle formation at a low copolymer concentration. In contrast, at the critical gelation temperature and beyond, the population of surface-associated water molecules interacting with ether oxygen atoms decreases, which indicates important enthalpic control by water. The present study on the roles of water in the two different phase transitions of triblock copolymers sheds new light on the underlying mechanisms of temperature-induced self-aggregation behaviors of amphiphiles that are ubiquitous in nature.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

“Up” versus “down” alignment and hydration structures of solutes at the air/water interface revealed by heterodyne-detected electronic sum frequency generation with classical molecular dynamics simulation

Shoichi Yamaguchi; Hidekazu Watanabe; Sudip Kumar Mondal; Achintya Kundu; Tahei Tahara


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

Agreement between Experimentally and Theoretically Estimated Orientational Distributions of Solutes at the Air/Water Interface

Achintya Kundu; Hidekazu Watanabe; Shoichi Yamaguchi; Tahei Tahara

Collaboration


Dive into the Achintya Kundu's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pramod Kumar Verma

S.N. Bose National Centre for Basic Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hidekazu Watanabe

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pratik Sen

Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sudip Kumar Mondal

Indian Association for the Cultivation of Science

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge