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Dive into the research topics where J. A. Rodriguez Fris is active.

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Featured researches published by J. A. Rodriguez Fris.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Democratic particle motion for metabasin transitions in simple glass formers.

Gustavo A. Appignanesi; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; R.A. Montani; Walter Kob

We use molecular dynamics computer simulations to investigate the local motion of the particles in a supercooled binary liquid. Using the concept of the distance matrix, we find that the alpha relaxation corresponds to a small number of crossings from one metabasin to a neighboring one. Each crossing is very rapid and involves the collective motion of O(40) particles that form a relatively compact cluster, whereas stringlike motions seem not to be relevant for these transitions. These compact clusters are thus potential candidates for the cooperatively rearranging regions proposed a long time ago by Adam and Gibbs.


European Physical Journal E | 2009

Evidence of a two-state picture for supercooled water and its connections with glassy dynamics

Gustavo A. Appignanesi; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; Francesco Sciortino

The picture of liquid water as consisting of a mixture of molecules of two different structural states (structured, low-density molecules and unstructured, high-density ones) represents a belief that has been around for long time awaiting for a conclusive validation. While in the last years some indicators have indeed provided certain evidence for the existence of structurally different “species”, a more definite bimodality in the distribution function of a sound structural quantity would be desired. In this context, our present work combines the use of a structural parameter with a minimization technique to yield neat bimodal distributions in a temperature range within the supercooled liquid regime, thus clearly revealing the presence of two populations of differently structured water molecules. Furthermore, we elucidate the role of the inter-conversion between the identified two kinds of states for the dynamics of structural relaxation, thus linking structural information to dynamics, a long-standing issue in glassy physics.


European Physical Journal E | 2011

Quantitative investigation of the two-state picture for water in the normal liquid and the supercooled regime

Sebastián R. Accordino; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; Francesco Sciortino; Gustavo A. Appignanesi

Several evidences have helped to establish the two-state nature of liquid water. Thus, within the normal liquid and supercooled regimes water has been shown to consist of a mixture of well-structured, low-density molecules and unstructured, high-density ones. However, quantitative analyses have faced the burden of unambiguously determining both the presence and the fraction of each kind of water “species”. A recent approach by combining a local structure index with potential-energy minimisations allows us to overcome this difficulty. Thus, in this work we extend such study and employ it to quantitatively determine the fraction of structured molecules as a function of temperature for different densities. This enables us to validate predictions of two-state models.


EPL | 2009

Identifying a causal link between structure and dynamics in supercooled water

D. C. Malaspina; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; Gustavo A. Appignanesi; Francesco Sciortino

By means of molecular-dynamics simulations we firmly establish the long-awaited existence of strong correlations between structure and dynamics for a glass-forming system: supercooled water. We find molecules with similar structural (and dynamical) properties to be clustered in space, thus reveling the existence of structured regions with low dynamic propensity and unstructured ones with a high-mobility tendency.


European Physical Journal E | 2012

A unifying motif of intermolecular cooperativity in protein associations

Sebastián R. Accordino; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; Gustavo A. Appignanesi; Ariel Fernández

At the molecular level, most biological processes entail protein associations which in turn rely on a small fraction of interfacial residues called hot spots. Our theoretical analysis shows that hot spots share a unifying molecular attribute: they provide a third-body contribution to intermolecular cooperativity. Such motif, based on the wrapping of interfacial electrostatic interactions, is essential to maintain the integrity of the interface. Thus, our main result is to unravel the molecular nature of the protein association problem by revealing its underlying physics and thus by casting it in simple physical grounds. Such knowledge could then be exploited in rational drug design since the regions here indicated may serve as blueprints to engineer small molecules disruptive of protein-protein interfaces.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

Time evolution of dynamic propensity in a model glass former: the interplay between structure and dynamics.

J. A. Rodriguez Fris; L.M. Alarcón; Gustavo A. Appignanesi

By means of the isoconfigurational method, we calculate the change in the propensity for motion that the structure of a glass-forming system experiences during its relaxation dynamics. The relaxation of such a system has been demonstrated to evolve by means of rapid crossings between metabasins of its potential energy surface (a metabasin being a group of mutually similar, closely related structures which differ markedly from other metabasins), as collectively relaxing units (d-clusters) take place. We now show that the spatial distribution of propensity in the system does not change significantly until one of these d-clusters takes place. However, the occurrence of a d-cluster clearly decorrelates the propensity of the particles, thus ending up with the dynamical influence of the structural features proper of the local metabasin. We also show an important match between particles that participate in d-clusters and that which show high changes in their propensity.


Sub-cellular biochemistry | 2015

Hydration and Nanoconfined Water: Insights from Computer Simulations.

L.M. Alarcón; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; Marcela A. Morini; M. Belén Sierra; S. A. Accordino; J.M. Montes de Oca; Viviana Isabel Pedroni; Gustavo A. Appignanesi

The comprehension of the structure and behavior of water at interfaces and under nanoconfinement represents an issue of major concern in several central research areas like hydration, reaction dynamics and biology. From one side, water is known to play a dominant role in the structuring, the dynamics and the functionality of biological molecules, governing main processes like protein folding, protein binding and biological function. In turn, the same principles that rule biological organization at the molecular level are also operative for materials science processes that take place within a water environment, being responsible for the self-assembly of molecular structures to create synthetic supramolecular nanometrically-sized materials. Thus, the understanding of the principles of water hydration, including the development of a theory of hydrophobicity at the nanoscale, is imperative both from a fundamental and an applied standpoint. In this work we present some molecular dynamics studies of the structure and dynamics of water at different interfaces or confinement conditions, ranging from simple model hydrophobic interfaces with different geometrical constraints (in order to single out curvature effects), to self-assembled monolayers, proteins and phospholipid membranes. The tendency of the water molecules to sacrifice the lowest hydrogen bond (HB) coordination as possible at extended interfaces is revealed. This fact makes the first hydration layers to be highly oriented, in some situations even resembling the structure of hexagonal ice. A similar trend to maximize the number of HBs is shown to hold in cavity filling, with small subnanometric hydrophobic cavities remaining empty while larger cavities display an alternation of filled and dry states with a significant inner HB network. We also study interfaces with complex chemical and geometrical nature in order to determine how different conditions affect the local hydration properties. Thus, we show some results for protein hydration and, particularly, some preliminary studies on membrane hydration. Finally, calculations of a local hydrophobicity measure of relevance for binding and self-assembly are also presented. We then conclude with a few words of further emphasis on the relevance of this kind of knowledge to biology and to the design of new materials by highlighting the context-dependent and non-additive nature of different non-covalent interactions in an aqueous nanoenvironment, an issue that is usually greatly overlooked.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2009

Space and time dynamical heterogeneity in glassy relaxation. The role of democratic clusters

Gustavo A. Appignanesi; J. A. Rodriguez Fris


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Reproducibility of dynamical heterogeneities and metabasin dynamics in glass forming liquids : The influence of structure on dynamics

Gustavo A. Appignanesi; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; M. A. Frechero


Physical Review E | 2012

Temperature dependence of the structure of protein hydration water and the liquid-liquid transition.

Sebastián R. Accordino; D. C. Malaspina; J. A. Rodriguez Fris; L.M. Alarcón; Gustavo A. Appignanesi

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L.M. Alarcón

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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M. A. Frechero

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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R.A. Montani

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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D. C. Malaspina

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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J.M. Montes de Oca

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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Frechero

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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M. Belén Sierra

Universidad Nacional del Sur

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