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Featured researches published by Matteo Broccio.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Evidence of the existence of the low-density liquid phase in supercooled, confined water

Francesco Mallamace; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; Antonio Faraone; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti; Li Liu; Chung-Yuan Mou; Sow-Hsin Chen

By confining water in a nanoporous structure so narrow that the liquid could not freeze, it is possible to study properties of this previously undescribed system well below its homogeneous nucleation temperature TH = 231 K. Using this trick, we were able to study, by means of a Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, vibrational spectra (HOH bending and OH-stretching modes) of deeply supercooled water in the temperature range 183 < T < 273 K. We observed, upon decreasing temperature, the building up of a new population of hydrogen-bonded oscillators centered around 3,120 cm−1, the contribution of which progressively dominates the spectra as one enters into the deeply supercooled regime. We determined that the fractional weight of this spectral component reaches 50% just at the temperature, TL ≈ 225 K, where the confined water shows a fragile-to-strong dynamic cross-over phenomenon [Ito, K., Moynihan, C. T., Angell, C. A. (1999) Nature 398:492–494]. Furthermore, the fact that the corresponding OH stretching spectral peak position of the low-density-amorphous solid water occurs exactly at 3,120 cm−1 [Sivakumar, T. C., Rice, S. A., Sceats, M. G. (1978) J. Chem. Phys. 69:3468–3476.] strongly suggests that these oscillators originate from existence of the low-density-liquid phase derived from the occurrence of the first-order liquid–liquid (LL) phase transition and the associated LL critical point in supercooled water proposed earlier by a computer molecular dynamics simulation [Poole, P. H., Sciortino, F., Essmann, U., Stanley, H. E. (1992) Nature 360:324–328].


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

The violation of the Stokes–Einstein relation in supercooled water

Sow-Hsin Chen; Francesco Mallamace; Chung-Yuan Mou; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; Antonio Faraone; Li Liu

By confining water in nanopores, so narrow that the liquid cannot freeze, it is possible to explore its properties well below its homogeneous nucleation temperature TH≈ 235 K. In particular, the dynamical parameters of water can be measured down to 180 K, approaching the suggested glass transition temperature Tg≈ 165 K. Here we present experimental evidence, obtained from Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Quasi-Elastic Neutron Scattering spectroscopies, of a well defined decoupling of transport properties (the self-diffusion coefficient and the average translational relaxation time), which implies the breakdown of the Stokes–Einstein relation. We further show that such a non-monotonic decoupling reflects the characteristics of the recently observed dynamic crossover, at ≈225 K, between the two dynamical behaviors known as fragile and strong, which is a consequence of a change in the hydrogen bond structure of liquid water.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

The fragile-to-strong dynamic crossover transition in confined water: nuclear magnetic resonance results.

Francesco Mallamace; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; A. Faraone; U.N. Wanderlingh; Li Liu; Chung-Yuan Mou; S. H. Chen

By means of a nuclear magnetic resonance experiment, we give evidence of the existence of a fragile-to-strong dynamic crossover transition (FST) in confined water at a temperature T(L)=223+/-2 K. We have studied the dynamics of water contained in 1D cylindrical nanoporous matrices (MCM-41-S) in the temperature range 190-280 K, where experiments on bulk water were so far hampered by crystallization. The FST is clearly inferred from the T dependence of the inverse of the self-diffusion coefficient of water (1D) as a crossover point from a non-Arrhenius to an Arrhenius behavior. The combination of the measured self-diffusion coefficient D and the average translational relaxation time tau(T), as measured by neutron scattering, shows the predicted breakdown of Stokes-Einstein relation in deeply supercooled water.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The anomalous behavior of the density of water in the range 30 K < T < 373 K

Francesco Mallamace; C. Branca; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; Chung-Yuan Mou; Sow-Hsin Chen

The temperature dependence of the density of water, ρ(T), is obtained by means of optical scattering data, Raman and Fourier transform infrared, in a very wide temperature range, 30 < T < 373 K. This interval covers three regions: the thermodynamically stable liquid phase, the metastable supercooled phase, and the low-density amorphous solid phase, at very low T. From analyses of the profile of the OH stretching spectra, we determine the fractional weight of the two main spectral components characterized by two different local hydrogen bond structures. They are, as predicted by the liquid–liquid phase transition hypothesis of liquid water, the low- and the high-density liquid phases. We evaluate contributions to the density of these two phases and thus are able to calculate the absolute density of water as a function of T. We observe in ρ(T) a complex thermal behavior characterized not only by the well known maximum in the stable liquid phase at T = 277 K, but also by a well defined minimum in the deeply supercooled region at 203 ± 5 K, in agreement with suggestions from molecular dynamics simulations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

NMR evidence of a sharp change in a measure of local order in deeply supercooled confined water

Francesco Mallamace; Carmelo Corsaro; Matteo Broccio; C. Branca; N. González-Segredo; Jeroen Spooren; Sow-Hsin Chen; H. E. Stanley

Using NMR, we measure the proton chemical shift δ, of supercooled nanoconfined water in the temperature range 195 K < T < 350 K. Because δ is directly connected to the magnetic shielding tensor, we discuss the data in terms of the local hydrogen bond geometry and order. We argue that the derivative −(∂ ln δ/∂T)P should behave roughly as the constant pressure specific heat CP(T), and we confirm this argument by detailed comparisons with literature values of CP(T) in the range 290–370 K. We find that −(∂ ln δ/∂T)P displays a pronounced maximum upon crossing the locus of maximum correlation length at ≈240 K, consistent with the liquid-liquid critical point hypothesis for water, which predicts that CP(T) displays a maximum on crossing the Widom line.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2010

Size-dependent neurotoxicity of β-amyloid oligomers

Paulius Cizas; Rima Budvytyte; Ramune Morkuniene; Radu Moldovan; Matteo Broccio; Mathias Lösche; Gediminas Niaura; Gintaras Valincius; Vilmante Borutaite

The link between the size of soluble amyloid beta (Abeta) oligomers and their toxicity to rat cerebellar granule cells (CGC) was investigated. Variation in conditions during in vitro oligomerization of Abeta(1-42) resulted in peptide assemblies with different particle size as measured by atomic force microscopy and confirmed by dynamic light scattering and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Small oligomers of Abeta(1-42) with a mean particle z-height of 1-2 nm exhibited propensity to bind to phospholipid vesicles and they were the most toxic species that induced rapid neuronal necrosis at submicromolar concentrations whereas the bigger aggregates (z-height above 4-5 nm) did not bind vesicles and did not cause detectable neuronal death. A similar neurotoxic pattern was also observed in primary cultures of cortex neurons whereas Abeta(1-42) oligomers, monomers and fibrils were non-toxic to glial cells in CGC cultures or macrophage J774 cells. However, both oligomeric forms of Abeta(1-42) induced reduction of neuronal cell densities in the CGC cultures.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Role of the solvent in the dynamical transitions of proteins: The case of the lysozyme-water system

Francesco Mallamace; Sow-Hsin Chen; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; V. Crupi; D. Majolino; Valentina Venuti; Piero Baglioni; Emiliano Fratini; Chiara Vannucci; H. Eugene Stanley

We study the dynamics of hydration water in the protein lysozyme in the temperature range 180 K<T<360 K using Fourier-transform-infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopies. By analyzing the thermal evolution of spectra of the OH-stretching vibration modes and the NMR self-diffusion (DS) and spin-lattice relaxation time (T1), we demonstrate the existence of two dynamical transitions in the protein hydration water. Below the first transition, at about 220 K, the hydration water displays an unambiguous fragile-to-strong dynamic crossover, resulting in the loss of the protein conformational flexibility. Above the second transition, at about 346 K, where the protein unfolds, the dynamics of the hydration water appears to be dominated by the non-hydrogen-bonded fraction of water molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Clustering Dynamics in Water/Methanol Mixtures : A Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study at 205 K < T < 295 K

Carmelo Corsaro; Jeroen Spooren; C. Branca; Nancy Leone; Matteo Broccio; Chan-Soo Kim; Sow-Hsin Chen; H. Eugene Stanley; Francesco Mallamace

Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) experiments have been performed to measure the spin-lattice, T1, and spin-spin, T2, relaxation times of the three functional groups in water/methanol mixtures at different methanol molar fractions (XMeOH=0, 0.04, 0.1, 0.24, 0.5, 1) as a function of temperature in the range 205 K<T<295 K. The measured relaxation times in the mixtures, at all the methanol molar fractions, are faster than those of pure water and methanol because of strong interactions, resulting in a complex hydrogen bonding dynamics that determines their thermodynamic properties. In particular, we observe how the interplay between hydrophobicity and hydrophilicity changes with temperature and influences the peculiar thermal behavior of the NMR relaxation times of the solution. The obtained results are interpreted in terms of the existence of stable water-methanol clusters at high temperature whereas, upon cooling to low temperature, clusters of single species are present in the mixture.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

The structural properties of a two-Yukawa fluid: Simulation and analytical results.

Matteo Broccio; Dino Costa; Yun Liu; Sow-Hsin Chen

Standard Monte Carlo simulations are carried out to assess the accuracy of theoretical predictions for the structural properties of a model fluid interacting through a hard-core two-Yukawa potential composed of a short-range attractive well next to a hard repulsive core, followed by a smooth, long-range repulsive tail. Theoretical calculations are performed in the framework provided by the Ornstein-Zernike equation, solved either analytically with the mean spherical approximation (MSA) or iteratively with the hypernetted-chain (HNC) closure. Our analysis shows that both theories are generally accurate in a thermodynamic region corresponding to a dense vapor phase around the critical point. For a suitable choice of potential parameters, namely, when the attractive well is deep and/or large enough, the static structure factor displays a secondary low-Q peak. In this case HNC predictions closely follow the simulation results, whereas MSA results progressively worsen the more pronounced this low-Q peak is. We discuss the appearance of such a peak, also experimentally observed in colloidal suspensions and protein solutions, in terms of the formation of equilibrium clusters in the homogeneous fluid.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2006

Dynamical properties of confined supercooled water: an NMR study

Francesco Mallamace; Matteo Broccio; Carmelo Corsaro; Antonio Faraone; Li Liu; Chung-Yuan Mou; Sow-Hsin Chen

We report a set of dynamical data of confined water measured in a very deeply supercooled regime (290?190?K). Water is contained in silica matrices (MCM-41-S) which consist of 1D cylindrical pores with diameters d = 14,18 and 24??. When confined in these tubular pores, water does not crystallize, and can be supercooled well below 200?K. We use the NMR technique to obtain the characteristic proton relaxation time-constants (the spin?lattice relaxation time-constant T1 and the spin?spin relaxation time-constant T2) and a direct measurement of the self-diffusion coefficient in the whole temperature range. We give evidence of the existence of a fragile-to-strong dynamic crossover (FSC) at TL = 225?K from the temperature dependence of the self-diffusion coefficient. A combination of the NMR self-diffusion coefficient with the average translational relaxation time, as measured by quasi-elastic neutron scattering, shows a well defined decoupling of transport coefficients, i.e.? the breakdown of the Stokes?Einstein relation, on approaching the crossover temperature TL.

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Sow-Hsin Chen

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Mathias Lösche

Carnegie Mellon University

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Chung-Yuan Mou

National Taiwan University

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C. Branca

University of Messina

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Antonio Faraone

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Li Liu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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S. H. Chen

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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