Life's Solutions are Complex Fluids. A Mathematical Challenge
Bob Eisenberg

TL;DR
This paper proposes viewing biological and chemical systems as complex fluids, emphasizing the importance of interactions, boundary conditions, and flows in understanding life's processes and reactions.
Contribution
It advocates for applying complex fluid theory to ionic solutions and biological reactions, highlighting the role of interactions and inhomogeneities in biochemical processes.
Findings
Complex fluids effectively model biological systems.
Interactions influence enzyme activity and catalysis.
Electron movements are coupled with electric fields in reactions.
Abstract
Classical thermodynamics and statistical mechanics describe systems in which nothing interacts with nothing. Even the highly refined theory of simple fluids does not deal very well with electrical interactions, boundary conditions, or flows, if at all. Electrical interactions, boundary conditions, and flows are essential features of living systems. Life without flow is death and so a different approach is needed to study biology alive. The theory of complex fluids deals with interactions, boundary conditions, and flows quite well as can be seen in its successful treatment of liquid crystals. I advocate treating ionic solutions in general as complex fluids, with microelements that are the solutes and components of the solution. Enzyme active sites are a special case where some solutes are reactants. Solutes are crowded into active sites of enzyme by the high density of protein charges.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtein Structure and Dynamics · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Origins and Evolution of Life
