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Dive into the research topics where Paola Gallo is active.

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Featured researches published by Paola Gallo.


Chemical Reviews | 2016

Water: A Tale of Two Liquids

Paola Gallo; Katrin Amann-Winkel; C. A. Angell; M. A. Anisimov; Frédéric Caupin; Charusita Chakravarty; Erik Lascaris; Thomas Loerting; Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos; John Russo; Jonas A. Sellberg; H. E. Stanley; Hajime Tanaka; Carlos Vega; Limei Xu; Lars G. M. Pettersson

Water is the most abundant liquid on earth and also the substance with the largest number of anomalies in its properties. It is a prerequisite for life and as such a most important subject of current research in chemical physics and physical chemistry. In spite of its simplicity as a liquid, it has an enormously rich phase diagram where different types of ices, amorphous phases, and anomalies disclose a path that points to unique thermodynamics of its supercooled liquid state that still hides many unraveled secrets. In this review we describe the behavior of water in the regime from ambient conditions to the deeply supercooled region. The review describes simulations and experiments on this anomalous liquid. Several scenarios have been proposed to explain the anomalous properties that become strongly enhanced in the supercooled region. Among those, the second critical-point scenario has been investigated extensively, and at present most experimental evidence point to this scenario. Starting from very low temperatures, a coexistence line between a high-density amorphous phase and a low-density amorphous phase would continue in a coexistence line between a high-density and a low-density liquid phase terminating in a liquid–liquid critical point, LLCP. On approaching this LLCP from the one-phase region, a crossover in thermodynamics and dynamics can be found. This is discussed based on a picture of a temperature-dependent balance between a high-density liquid and a low-density liquid favored by, respectively, entropy and enthalpy, leading to a consistent picture of the thermodynamics of bulk water. Ice nucleation is also discussed, since this is what severely impedes experimental investigation of the vicinity of the proposed LLCP. Experimental investigation of stretched water, i.e., water at negative pressure, gives access to a different regime of the complex water diagram. Different ways to inhibit crystallization through confinement and aqueous solutions are discussed through results from experiments and simulations using the most sophisticated and advanced techniques. These findings represent tiles of a global picture that still needs to be completed. Some of the possible experimental lines of research that are essential to complete this picture are explored.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Layer analysis of the structure of water confined in vycor glass

Paola Gallo; Maria Antonietta Ricci; Mauro Rovere

A molecular dynamics simulation of the microscopic structure of water confined in a silica pore is presented. A single cavity in the silica glass has been modeled as to reproduce the main features of the pores of real Vycor glass. A layer analysis of the site–site radial distribution functions evidences the presence in the pore of two subsets of water molecules with different microscopic structure. Molecules which reside in the inner layer, close to the center of the pore, have the same structure as bulk water but at a temperature of 30 K higher. On the contrary the structure of the water molecules in the outer layer, close to the substrate, is strongly influenced by the water–substrate hydrophilic interaction and sensible distortions of the H-bond network and of the orientational correlations between neighboring molecules show up. Lowering the hydration has little effect on the structure of water in the outer layer. The consequences on experimental determinations of the structural properties of water in ...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2000

Glass transition and layering effects in confined water: A computer simulation study

Paola Gallo; Mauro Rovere; Eckhard Spohr

Single particle dynamics of water confined in a nanopore is studied through computer molecular dynamics. The pore is modeled to represent the average properties of a pore of Vycor glass. Dynamics is analyzed at different hydration levels and upon supercooling. At all hydration levels and all temperatures investigated a layering effect is observed due to the strong hydrophilicity of the substrate. The time density correlators show, already at ambient temperature, strong deviations from the Debye and the stretched exponential behavior. Both on decreasing hydration level and upon supercooling we find features that can be related to the cage effect typical of a supercooled liquid undergoing a kinetic glass transition. Nonetheless the behavior predicted by mode coupling theory can be observed only by carrying out a proper shell analysis of the density correlators. Water molecules within the first two layers from the substrate are in a glassy state already at ambient temperature (bound water). The remaining sub...


Physical Review Letters | 2000

Supercooled confined water and the mode coupling crossover temperature

Paola Gallo; Mauro Rovere; Eckhard Spohr

We present a molecular dynamics study of the single-particle dynamics of supercooled water confined in a silica pore. Two dynamical regimes are found. Close to the hydrophilic substrate molecules are below the mode coupling crossover temperature, T(C), already at ambient temperature. The water closer to the center of the pore (free water) approaches upon supercooling T(C) as predicted by mode coupling theories. For free water the crossover temperature and crossover exponent gamma are extracted from power-law fits to both the diffusion coefficient and the relaxation time of the late alpha region.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2010

A route to explain water anomalies from results on an aqueous solution of salt

D Corradini; Mauro Rovere; Paola Gallo

In this paper we investigate the possibility to detect the hypothesized liquid-liquid critical point of water in supercooled aqueous solutions of salts. Molecular dynamics computer simulations are conducted on bulk TIP4P water and on an aqueous solution of sodium chloride in TIP4P water, with concentration c=0.67 mol/kg. The liquid-liquid critical point is found both in the bulk and in the solution. Its position in the thermodynamic plane shifts to higher temperature and lower pressure for the solution. Comparison with available experimental data allowed us to produce the phase diagrams of both bulk water and the aqueous solution as measurable in experiments. Given the position of the liquid-liquid critical point in the solution as obtained from our simulations, the experimental determination of the hypothesized liquid-liquid critical point of water in aqueous solutions of salts appears possible.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Confined water in the low hydration regime

Paola Gallo; M. Rapinesi; Mauro Rovere

Molecular dynamics results on water confined in a silica pore in the low hydration regime are presented. Strong layering effects are found due to the hydrophilic character of the substrate. The local properties of water are studied as function of both temperature and hydration level. The interaction of the thin films of water with the silica atoms induces a strong distortion of the hydrogen bond network. The residence time of the water molecules is dependent on the distance from the surface. Its behavior shows a transition from a Brownian to a non-Brownian regime approaching the substrate in agreement with results found in studies of water at contact with globular proteins.


Journal of Molecular Liquids | 2000

Modifications of the hydrogen bond network of liquid water in a cylindrical SiO2 pore

Christoph Hartnig; W. Witschel; Eckhard Spohr; Paola Gallo; Maria Antonietta Ricci; Mauro Rovere

Abstract We present results of molecular dynamics simulations of water confined in a silica pore. A cylindrical cavity is created inside a vitreous silica cell with geometry and size similar to the pores of real Vycor glass. The simulations are performed at different hydration levels. At all hydration levels water adsorbs strongly on the Vycor surface; a double layer structure is evident at higher hydrations. At almost full hydration the modifications of the confinement-induced site-site pair distribution functions are in qualitative agreement with neutron diffraction experiment. A decrease in the number of hydrogen bonds between water molecules is observed along the pore radius, due to the tendency of the molecules close to the substrate to form hydrogen-bonds with the hydrophilic pore surface. As a consequence we observe a substrate induced distortion of the H-bond tetrahedral network of water molecules in the regions close to the surface.


Journal of Molecular Liquids | 1999

Water in porous glasses. A computer simulation study

Eckhard Spohr; Christoph Hartnig; Paola Gallo; Mauro Rovere

We report molecular dynamics simulations of water confined in a cylindrical silica pore. The pore geometry and size is similar to that of typical pores in porous Vycor glass. In the present study we focus on the dependence of microscopical structural and dynamical properties on the degree of hydration of the pore. We have performed five simulations of systems between 19 and 96 % hydration. In all cases, water adsorbs strongly on the pore surface, clearly demonstrating the hydrophilic nature of the Vycor surface. Two layers of water molecules are affected strongly by the interactions with the glass surface. With decreasing degree of hydration an increasing volume in the center of the pore is devoid of water molecules. At 96 % hydration the center is a continuous and homogeneous region that has, however, a lower density than bulk water at ambient conditions. A well-pronounced mobility profile exists, where molecules in the center of the pores have substantially higher self diffusion coefficients than molecules on the pore surface. The spectral densities of center of mass and hydrogen atom motion show the signature of confinement for the molecules close to the pore surface, while the spectral densities in the center of the pore are similar to those in bulk water. The molecular dynamics results are in good agreement with recent experiments. Our data indicate that the dependence of experimental data on the level of hydration of the Vycor sample is due to the different relative contribution of molecules adsorbed on the pore surface and bulk-like molecules in the interior of the pore to the experimental averages.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Microscopic mechanism of protein cryopreservation in an aqueous solution with trehalose

D Corradini; Elena G. Strekalova; H. Eugene Stanley; Paola Gallo

In order to investigate the cryoprotective mechanism of trehalose on proteins, we use molecular dynamics computer simulations to study the microscopic dynamics of water upon cooling in an aqueous solution of lysozyme and trehalose. We find that the presence of trehalose causes global retardation of the dynamics of water. Comparing aqueous solutions of lysozyme with/without trehalose, we observe that the dynamics of water in the hydration layers close to the protein is dramatically slower when trehalose is present in the system. We also analyze the structure of water and trehalose around the lysozyme and find that the trehalose molecules form a cage surrounding the protein that contains very slow water molecules. We conclude that the transient cage of trehalose molecules that entraps and slows the water molecules prevents the crystallisation of protein hydration water upon cooling.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2000

Water in Confined Geometries: Experiments and Simulations

Maria Antonietta Ricci; Fabio Bruni; Paola Gallo; Mauro Rovere; A. K. Soper

This paper presents the state-of-the-art in studies of structure and dynamics of water confined in a prototype hydrophilic substrate: porous Vycor glass. Experimental data and molecular dynamics simulations are compared.

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S. H. Chen

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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P. Tartaglia

Sapienza University of Rome

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G. Ruocco

Sapienza University of Rome

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Eckhard Spohr

University of Duisburg-Essen

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C. Fusco

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Alberto Petri

Sapienza University of Rome

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