Surface viscosity, diffusion, and intermonolayer friction: Simulating sheared amphiphilic bilayers

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Abstract

The flow properties of an amphiphilic bilayer are studied in molecular dynamics simulations, by exposing a coarse grained model bilayer to two shear flows directed along the bilayer surface. The first field, with a vorticity perpendicular to the bilayer, induces a regular shear deformation, allowing a direct calculation of the surface viscosity. In experiments this property is measured indirectly, by relating it to the diffusion coefficient of a tracer particle through the Saffman-Einstein expression. The current calculations provide an independent test of this relation. The second flow field, with a vorticity parallel to the bilayer, causes the two constituent monolayers to slide past one another, yielding the interlayer friction coefficient. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Shkulipa, S. A., Den Otter, W. K., & Briels, W. J. (2005). Surface viscosity, diffusion, and intermonolayer friction: Simulating sheared amphiphilic bilayers. Biophysical Journal, 89(2), 823–829. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.105.062653

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