Litcius/Paper detail

Nonequilibrium Wet–Dry Cycling Acts as a Catalyst for Chemical Reactions

Ivar S. Haugerud, Pranay Jaiswal, Christoph A. Weber

2024The Journal of Physical Chemistry B10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recent experimental studies suggest that wet-dry cycles and coexisting phases can each strongly alter chemical processes. The mechanisms of why and to what degree chemical processes are altered when subjected to evaporation and condensation are unclear. To close this gap, we developed a theoretical framework for nondilute chemical reactions subject to nonequilibrium conditions of evaporation and condensation. We find that such conditions can change the half-time of the product's yield by more than an order of magnitude, depending on the substrate-solvent interaction. We show that the cycle frequency strongly affects the chemical turnover when the system is maintained out of equilibrium by wet-dry cycles. There exists a resonance behavior in the cycle frequency where the turnover is maximal. This resonance behavior enables wet-dry cycles to select specific chemical reactions, suggesting a potential mechanism for chemical evolution in prebiotic soups at early Earth.

Topics & Concepts

Chemical reactionNon-equilibrium thermodynamicsChemical equilibriumChemistryCondensationEvaporationYield (engineering)Chemical physicsCyclingSubstrate (aquarium)ThermodynamicsPhysical chemistryPhysicsOrganic chemistryEcologyHistoryBiologyArchaeologyOrigins and Evolution of LifeAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical MechanicsProtein Structure and Dynamics