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Graphene nanochannels are relevant for their possible applications, as in water purification, and for the challenge of understanding how they change the properties of confined liquids. Here, we use all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to investigate water confined in an open graphene slit-pore as a function of its width $w$, down to sub-nm scale. We find that the water translational and rotational dynamics exhibits an oscillatory dependence on $w$, due to water layering. The oscillations in dynamics correlate with those in hydration pressure, which can be negative (hydrophobic attraction), or as high as $sim 1$ GPa, as seen in the experiments. At pore widths commensurable with full layers (around $7.0$ AA and $9.5$ AA for one and two layers, respectively), the free energy of the system has minima, and the hydration pressure vanishes. These are the separations at which the dynamics of confined water slows down. Nevertheless, the hydration pressure vanishes also where the free energy has maxima, i.e., for those pore-widths which are incommensurable with the formation of well-separated layers, as $wsimeq 8.0$ AA. Around these values of $w$, the dynamics is faster than in bulk, with water squeezed out from the pore. This behavior has not been observed for simple liquids under confinement, either for water in closed nano-pores. The decomposition of the free energy clarifies the origins of the dynamics speedups and slowdowns. In particular, we find that the nature of the slowdown depends on the number of water layers: for two layers, it is due to the internal energy contribution, as in simple liquids, while for one layer, it has an entropic origin possibly due to the existence of a hydrogen-bond network in water. Our results shed light on the mechanisms ruling the dynamics and thermodynamics of confined water and are a guide for future experiments.
Water shapes and defines the properties of biological systems. Therefore, understanding the nature of the mutual interaction between water and biological systems is of primary importance for a proper assessment of biological activity and the developm
We report extensive simulations of the relaxation dynamics of a self-avoiding polymer confined inside a cylindrical pore. In particular, we concentrate on examining how confinement influences the scaling behavior of the global relaxation time of the
Many active matter systems are known to perform L{e}vy walks during migration or foraging. Such superdiffusive transport indicates long-range correlated dynamics. These behavior patterns have been observed for microswimmers such as bacteria in microf
Using Langevin dynamics simulations, we investigate the dynamics of a flexible polymer translocation into a confined area under a driving force through a nanopore. We choose an ellipsoidal shape for the confinement and consider the dependence of the
The effects of static electric field on the dynamics of lysozyme and its hydration water have been investigated by means of incoherent quasi-elastic neutron scattering (QENS). Measurements were performed on lysozyme samples, hydrated respectively wit