An Isosymmetric High-Pressure Phase Transition in α-Glycylglycine: A Combined Experimental and Theoretical Study
Author(s) -
Samantha M. Clarke,
Brad A. Steele,
Matthew P. Kroonblawd,
Dongzhou Zhang,
IFeng W. Kuo,
Elissaios Stavrou
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b07313
Subject(s) - monoclinic crystal system , orthorhombic crystal system , phase transition , crystallography , glycylglycine , chemistry , hydrogen bond , crystal structure , hydrostatic pressure , enthalpy , polymorphism (computer science) , thermodynamics , chemical physics , molecule , organic chemistry , glycine , biochemistry , physics , amino acid , gene , genotype
We investigated the effects of hydrostatic pressure on α-glycylglycine (α-digly) using a combined experimental and theoretical approach. The results of powder X-ray diffraction show a change in compressibility of the axes above 6.7 GPa, but also indicate that the structure remains in the same monoclinic space group, suggesting an isosymmetric phase transition. A noticeable change in the Raman spectra between 6 and 7.5 GPa further supports the observed phase transition. First-principles-based calculations combined with the crystal structure prediction code USPEX predict a number of possible polymorphs at high pressure. An orthorhombic structure with a bent peptide backbone is the lowest enthalpy polymorph above 6.4 GPa; however, it is not consistent with experimental observations. A second monoclinic structure isosymmetric to α-digly, α'-digly, is predicted to become more stable above 11.4 GPa. The partial atomic charges in α'-digly differ from α-digly, and the molecule is bent, possibly indicating different reactivity of α'-digly. The similarity in the lattice parameters predicted from calculations and the axial changes observed experimentally support that the α'-digly phase is likely observed at high pressure. A possible explanation for the isosymmetric phase transition is discussed in terms of relaxing strained hydrogen bonding interactions. Such combined experimental and modeling efforts provide atomic-level insight into how pressure-driven conformational changes alter hydrogen-bonding networks in complicated molecular crystals.
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