Assessing the Validity of NMR Relaxation Rates Obtained from Coarse-Grained Simulations of PEG–Water Mixtures
Simon Gravelle, David Beyer, Mariano E. Brito, Alexander Schlaich, Christian Holm
Abstract
NMR relaxometry is a powerful and well-established experimental approach for characterizing dynamic processes in soft matter systems. All-atom (AA) resolved simulations are typically employed to gain further microscopic insights while reproducing the relaxation rates R 1 . However, such approaches are limited to time and length scales that prevent to model systems such as long polymer chains or hydrogels. Coarse graining (CG) can overcome this barrier at the cost of losing atomistic details that impede the calculation of NMR relaxation rates. Here, we address this issue by performing a systematic characterization of dipolar relaxation rates R 1 on a PEG–H 2 O mixture at two different levels of details: AA and CG. Remarkably, we show that NMR relaxation rates R 1 obtained at the CG level obey the same trends when compared to AA calculations but with a systematic offset. This offset is due to, on the one hand, the lack of an intramonomer component and, on the other hand, the inexact positioning of the spin carriers. We show that the offset can be corrected for quantitatively by reconstructing a posteriori the atomistic details for the CG trajectories.