Differential geometry-based solvation and electrolyte transport models for biomolecular modeling: a review
Guo Wei Wei, Nathan A. Baker

TL;DR
This review discusses differential geometry-based models for biomolecular solvation and electrolyte transport, emphasizing their mathematical foundations, multiphysics integration, and validation against experimental data.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent advances in differential geometry methods applied to biomolecular solvation and introduces a new quantum model for electrolyte transport.
Findings
Validated models on hundreds of molecules including proteins and ion channels.
Compared model predictions with experimental solvation energies and electrostatic data.
Proposed a novel quantum approach for electrolyte transport modeling.
Abstract
This chapter reviews the differential geometry-based solvation and electrolyte transport for biomolecular solvation that have been developed over the past decade. A key component of these methods is the differential geometry of surfaces theory, as applied to the solvent-solute boundary. In these approaches, the solvent-solute boundary is determined by a variational principle that determines the major physical observables of interest, for example, biomolecular surface area, enclosed volume, electrostatic potential, ion density, electron density, etc. Recently, differential geometry theory has been used to define the surfaces that separate the microscopic (solute) domains for biomolecules from the macroscopic (solvent) domains. In these approaches, the microscopic domains are modeled with atomistic or quantum mechanical descriptions, while continuum mechanics models (including fluid…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies · DNA and Nucleic Acid Chemistry
