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Membrane Transport, Molecular Machines, and Maxwell's Demon

Stefan Borsley

2024ChemSystemsChem11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The spontaneous generation of transmembrane gradients is an important fundamental research goal for artificial nanotechnology. The active transport processes that give rise to such gradients directly mirror the famous Maxwell's Demon thought experiment, where a Demon partitions particles between two chambers to generate a nonequilibrium state. Despite these similarities, discussion of Maxwell's Demon is absent in the literature on artificial membrane transport. By contrast, the emergence of rational design principles for nonequilibrium artificial molecular motors can trace its intellectual roots directly to this famous thought experiment. This perspective highlights the links between Maxwell's Demon and nonequilibrium machines, and argues that understanding the implications of this 19 th century thought experiment is crucial to the future development of transmembrane active transport processes.

Topics & Concepts

Maxwell's demonDemonPhysicsPhilosophyEpistemologyThermodynamicsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchSupramolecular Chemistry and ComplexesOrigins and Evolution of Life