Title: Chapter 20: Coulombs Law of Electrostatic Forces
1Chapter 20Coulombs Law of Electrostatic Forces
- BME 531
- Nathan Baker
- baker_at_biochem.wustl.edu
2Why care about electrostatics?
- Longest-range interactions
- Cannot be accurately truncated
- Diverge at origin and infinity
- Important for all charged particles
- Solvated ions
- Biomolecules
- Plasmas
- Ionic liquids
- Defects in solids
3Biomolecular charge distributions proteins
- Amphoteric range of titratable groups
- Range of isoelectric points (calculated)
- End result zwitterionic with a wide range of
charge densities
4Biomolecular charge distributions nucleic acids
- dsDNA
- Approx. linear form
- Close phosphate spacing
- B-form phosphate spacing 3.4 Å
- RNA
- Structural diversity
- Dense phosphate packing
11 bp B-form DNA (1AGH)
23s rRNA (1FFZ)
5Biomolecular charge distributions other
molecules
- Sugars
- Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)
- Cellular matrix
- Cell surface co-receptors
- Potentially high charge density
- Proteoglycans GAGs attached to proteins by
glycosylation - Membranes
- Phospholipids
- Zwitterionic (phosphatidyl-choline,
phosphatidyl-ethanolamine, sphingo-myelin) - Anionic (phosphatidyl-serine)
- Other components
Dermatan sulfate. (Picture from Alberts et al)
Electrostatic potential of POPC membrane.
6History of electrostatics
- Basic principles established for macroscopic
objects in late 1700s - Analysis of interactions between charged objects
- Phenomenological model
- Applicable over 25 orders of magnitude in length
- Earths magnetic field (107 m)
- Coulomb experiments (100 m)
- a particle scattering (Rutherford, 10-13 m)
- Electron-positron scattering (QED, 10-18 m)
Schematic of Cavendish apparatus used by Coulomb.
Picture from http//www.fas.harvard.edu/scdiroff
/lds/NewtonianMechanics/CavendishExperiment/Cavend
ishExperiment.html
7Coulombs law
- Every model uses Coulombs law (somewhere)
- Phenomenological model circa 1785 for
charge-charge interactions in a vacuum - Relates potential to charge for homogeneous
dielectric materials - Provides superposition of potentials
- Assumptions
- Vacuum
- Point charges
- No mobile ions
- Infinite boundaries
8Electrostatics uses a bewildering number of unit
conventions
- Please use SI units
- Basic unit system can be identified by looking
for the 4pe0
Charge (C)
Energy (J)
Vacuum permittivity (8.85410-12 C2 J-1 m-1)
Distance (m)
9SI units
- Charge C
- Energy J
- Distance m
- Potential V J C-1
- Capacitance F C V-1
10Charge interactions are long-ranged
r-1, r-6, r-12, e-r
- Decays much more slowly than other interactions
- The Coulomb potential cannot be integrated over
an infinite domain - Sums related to electrostatic interactions (see
next example) are conditionally convergent
11Electrostatic interactions in NaCl crystals
- Assume ions are in rigid lattice with spacing a
2.81 Å - Sum Na interactions over the first row
- Sum Na interactions over the 4 adjacent rows
- Energy not decreasing very rapidly!
12Electrostatic interactions in NaCl crystals
- Continue this process to the next-nearest
neighbors, etc. - Result Madelung constant
- Use Madelung constant to calculate lattice energy
- Underestimate of 96 kJ mol-1 due to several
factors, including - Assumption of incompressibility
- Assumption of fixed lattice spacing
13Electrostatic interactions are strong
- Electrostatic interactions are much stronger than
most other non-bonded interactions e.g.,
gravitational - Charge imbalance has serious energetic penalties
- Lightning
- Static electric shock 1000 charges
- Solution charge imbalance
- 1000 charges
- 1 part in 1021
- Electroneutrality of a macroscopic solution is a
reasonable assumption
14Electrostatics in dielectric media
- A continuum dielectric medium
- Has no atomic detail
- Is related to polarization of the medium
redistribution of charges - Responds linearly and locally to dampen an
applied field - Is characterized by a dielectric tensor
- Reduces the strength of electrostatic
interactions relative to a vacuum
15Electrostatics in dielectric media
- An isotropic dielectric continuum exhibits the
same response in all directions - The dielectric tensor can be reduced to a scalar
- For a homogeneous isotropic Coulombs law takes a
very simple, scaled form
Dielectric coefficient (unitless)
16Dielectric coefficients
- Several contributions to polarizability
- Reorientation of permanent dipole moment
- Molecular electronic and nuclear polarizability
- Hydrogen bonding networks
17Bjerrum length fundamental length scale for
Coulombs law
- What is the distance at which two unit charges
interact with kT of energy? Bjerrum length - A useful length scale for determining when
electrostatic interactions are on the same order
as thermal energy - Provides simpler form for Coulombs law
- Approximately 7 Å for water (D 80) at 298 K
18Electrostatic energy of NaCl in water
- Same situation as before
- Interionic distance 2.81 Å
- 1 e charges
- Bjerrum length changes dramatically in water
- Ion pair interaction energy decreases
- Crystal is significantly less stable salt
dissociates in water but not in lower dielectrics
19Electrostatic forces
- Force is the negative gradient of the potential
- Assume all other terms are constant (homogeneous
medium) - Force is vector-valued
Force on charge B due to charge A.
20Electrostatic superposition
- For a homogeneous system
- Total electrostatic potential is the sum of
individual electrostatic potentials - Total electrostatic force is the sum of
individual electrostatic forces - This works for arbitrary charge distributions
- This is because Coulombs law is a Green
function for a particular partial differential
equation (coming up)
21Electrostatic fields and potentials
- Potential
- What is the energy of placing a unit charge at
position x? - A scalar-valued function
- Factoring charge (C) out of energy (J) gives
units of V J C-1 - Field
- What is the force experienced by a unit charge at
position x? - A vector-valued function
- Factoring charge (C) out of force (N J m-1)
gives units of N C-1 - Superposition applies potentials and forces can
be added - Purpose a good way to represent the
electrostatics of a charge distribution
22Electrostatic fields
23Electric field flux
- Flux the amount of stuff passing through
surface - Concentration
- Fluid flow
- Electric field
- Fluxes arise from
- Sources positive charges
- Sinks negative charges
- Electric field flux integral of electric
displacement over a surface
Jacobian points in surface normal direction
Electric displacement
Boundary surface of volume O
24Field flux point charge in a sphere
- Point charge has spherically-symmetric field
- Field is constant on sphere surface
- Flux is independent of sphere diameter
25Field flux point charge in a balloon
- Consider another outer surface that surrounds
an inner sphere - The outer surface can have any shape
- The fluxes through any (arbitrarily small)
portion of the outer and inner surfaces can be
calculated - These surface portions can be related
- The fluxes through the two surfaces are the same!
26Gauss law
- The integral of field flux through a closed,
simple surface is equal to the total charge
inside the surface - This is true for both homogeneous and
inhomogeneous dielectric media - This generalizes to other charge distributions
27Field from a line charge
- Suppose we have
- Homogeneous medium
- Line of length L, where L is very big (radial
symmetry) - Linear charge density of ?
- What is the field at distance r from the source?
- Compute the flux through a cylindrical surface
- Calculate the enclosed charge
- Use Gauss Law
28Field around DNA
- Assume B-DNA shape
- 2 phosphates every 3.4 Å
- Water dielectric of 80
- What is the field 40 Å away from a very long
B-DNA molecule?
Image from Stryer Biochemistry
29Field from a charged plane
- Suppose we have
- Homogeneous medium
- Surface of area A, where A is very big (one
dimensional) - Surface charge density of s
- What is the field at distance r from the source?
- Compute the flux through a pillbox
- Calculate the enclosed charge
- Use Gauss Law
30Field around a membrane
- POPS membrane
- -1 e charge per lipid
- 1 lipid per 55 Å2
- What is the field 20 Å away from the membrane (in
water)? - Bigger than DNA!
Mukhopadhyay P, et al. Biophys J 86 (3) 1601-9,
2004.