Computational modeling of biological nanopores
Kherim Willems

TL;DR
This paper presents computational methods for modeling biological nanopores, aiming to understand their electrostatics, trapping behavior, and transport properties with near-atomistic precision.
Contribution
It introduces new computational methodologies for accurate modeling and analysis of biological nanopores, advancing understanding of their physical mechanisms.
Findings
Developed methodologies for nanopore modeling
Analyzed equilibrium electrostatics of nanopores
Mapped transport properties of nanopores
Abstract
Throughout our history, we, humans, have sought to better control and understand our environment. To this end, we have extended our natural senses with a host of sensors-tools that enable us to detect both the very large, such as the merging of two black holes at a distance of 1.3 billion light-years from Earth, and the very small, such as the identification of individual viral particles from a complex mixture. This dissertation is devoted to studying the physical mechanisms that govern a tiny, yet highly versatile sensor: the biological nanopore. Biological nanopores are protein molecules that form nanometer-sized apertures in lipid membranes. When an individual molecule passes through this aperture (i.e., "translocates"), the temporary disturbance of the ionic current caused by its passage reveals valuable information on its identity and properties. Despite this seemingly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Carbon Nanotubes in Composites · Ion-surface interactions and analysis
