Hai Long
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hai Long.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010
Muhammet E. Köse; Hai Long; Kwiseon Kim; Peter Graf; David S. Ginley
We present here a theoretical methodology that exploits quantum mechanical calculations, molecular mechanics calculations, and Monte Carlo simulations to predict the time-of-flight measurement mobilities in films of phenyl-cored conjugated thiophene dendrimers. Our aim is to reveal structure-property relationships in amorphous films of organic pi-conjugated materials. The simulations show that both hole and electron mobilities increase with the size of dendrimer, and that the former is larger than latter in all dendrimers. Internal reorganization energies are inversely correlated with the mobilities. Our simulations also indicate that dendrimers have small density of states for energetic disorder (<60 meV), and both hole and electron mobilities possess weak electric field dependence. We examine the influence of external reorganization energy as well as the possible trap sites on charge transport in these materials.
Biophysical Journal | 2008
Hai Long; Christopher H. Chang; Paul W. King; Maria L. Ghirardi; Kwiseon Kim
The [FeFe] hydrogenase from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii can catalyze the reduction of protons to hydrogen gas using electrons supplied from photosystem I and transferred via ferredoxin. To better understand the association of the hydrogenase and the ferredoxin, we have simulated the process over multiple timescales. A Brownian dynamics simulation method gave an initial thorough sampling of the rigid-body translational and rotational phase spaces, and the resulting trajectories were used to compute the occupancy and free-energy landscapes. Several important hydrogenase-ferredoxin encounter complexes were identified from this analysis, which were then individually simulated using atomistic molecular dynamics to provide more details of the hydrogenase and ferredoxin interaction. The ferredoxin appeared to form reasonable complexes with the hydrogenase in multiple orientations, some of which were good candidates for inclusion in a transition state ensemble of configurations for electron transfer.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009
Hai Long; Paul W. King; Maria L. Ghirardi; Kwiseon Kim
The [FeFe]-hydrogenases in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii utilize photogenerated electrons to reduce protons into hydrogen gas. The electrons are supplied from photosystem I and transferred to the [FeFe]-hydrogenase through specific hydrogenase-ferredoxin association. To understand how structural and kinetic factors control the association better, we used Brownian dynamics simulation methods to simulate the charge-transfer complex formation between both native and in silico mutants of the [FeFe]-hydrogenase HYDA2 and the [2Fe2S]-ferredoxin FDX1 from C. reinhardtii . The changes in binding free energy between different HYDA2 mutants and the native FDX1 were calculated by the free-energy perturbation method. Within the limits of our current models, we found that two HYDA2 mutations, T99K(H) and D102K(H), led to lower binding free energies and higher association rate with FDX1 and are thus promising targets for improving hydrogen production rates in engineered organisms.
Photosynthesis Research | 2016
Marko Boehm; Markus Alahuhta; David W. Mulder; Erin A. Peden; Hai Long; Roman Brunecky; Vladimir V. Lunin; Paul W. King; Maria L. Ghirardi; Alexandra Dubini
The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains six plastidic [2Fe2S]-cluster ferredoxins (FDXs), with FDX1 as the predominant isoform under photoautotrophic growth. FDX2 is highly similar to FDX1 and has been shown to interact with specific enzymes (such as nitrite reductase), as well as to share interactors with FDX1, such as the hydrogenases (HYDA), ferredoxin:NAD(P) reductase I (FNR1), and pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFR1), albeit performing at low catalytic rates. Here we report the FDX2 crystal structure solved at 1.18 Å resolution. Based on differences between the Chlorella fusca FDX1 and C. reinhardtii FDX2xa0structures, we generated and purified point-mutated versions of the FDX2 protein and assayed them in vitro for their ability to catalyze hydrogen and NADPH photo-production. The data show that structural differences at two amino acid positions contribute to functional differences between FDX1 and FDX2, suggesting that FDX2 might have evolved from FDX1 toward a different physiological role in the cell. Moreover, we demonstrate that the mutations affect both the midpoint potentials of the FDX and kinetics of the FNR reaction, possibly due to altered binding between FDX and FNR. An effect on H2 photo-production rates was also observed, although the kinetics of the reaction were not further characterized.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Hai Long; Kwiseon Kim; Bryan S. Pivovar
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Hai Long; Bryan S. Pivovar
Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2015
Matthew R. Sturgeon; Clay Macomber; Chaiwat Engtrakul; Hai Long; Bryan S. Pivovar
Journal of The Electrochemical Society | 2017
Angela D. Mohanty; Steven E. Tignor; Matthew R. Sturgeon; Hai Long; Bryan S. Pivovar; Chulsung Bae
232nd ECS Meeting (October 1-5, 2017), | 2017
Andrew Michael Park; Zbyslaw R. Owczarczyk; Logan E. Garner; Ami C. Yang-Neyerlin; Hai Long; C. M. Antunes; Matthew R. Sturgeon; Matthew Lindell; Steven J. Hamrock; Michael A. Yandrasits; Bryan S. Pivovar
2014 ECS and SMEQ Joint International Meeting (October 5-9, 2014) | 2014
Hai Long; Bryan S. Pivovar