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http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/22803| Title: | AGGREGATION OF HYDROPHOBIC COLLOIDS AND PROTEINS: SIZE DEPENDENT BEHAVIOR AND CROSSOVER TO INSTABILITY |
| Authors: | V. K., NEHA |
| Keywords: | HYDROPHOBIC PROTEIN AGGREGATION NON-DLVO MODEL INTERACTION POTENTIAL SIZE-DEPENDENT CROSSOVER INTERACTION FORCE-PARTICLE SIZE SCALING |
| Issue Date: | May-2026 |
| Series/Report no.: | TD-8730; |
| Abstract: | In this study, the aggregation properties of mainly hydrophobic proteins and colloids are explored by using an extended DLVO model that included an extra short-range interaction. Two different interaction regimes are studied to isolate the effect of hydrophobic interactions on protein aggregation. In the first interaction regime, van der Waals attraction, electrostatic double-layer repulsion, and short-range surface interactions are considered, and the interaction curves are described by finite energy barriers that kinetically stabilize protein dispersions over a broad size (R = 5-100 nm) and hydrophobicity (hf = 0-20 %) range. In the second interaction regime, hydrophobic attraction is described by an exponential potential, causing the electrostatic barrier to collapse beyond a critical size, and resulting in a diffusion limited, irreversible protein aggregation. The maximum interaction force (Fmax) - size scaling analysis shows, Fmax ~ R±α, with α = 0.5 for the first interaction regime, whereas in the second (hydrophobicity-dominated) interaction regime, this scaling linearly decreases with size (α = -0.5), indicating the lack of finite energy barriers and the dominance of short-range attraction. These results demonstrate that hydrophobic interactions by themselves are capable of inducing aggregation in electrostatically balanced systems. As a test, aggregation pattern in two predominantly hydrophobic proteins, elastin and zein, are discussed within the framework of Model-2 with satisfactory outcomes. Overall, this study clearly shows a size-dependent crossover from attraction-dominated behavior at small sizes to an unstable interaction regime at larger sizes, a conclusion that can be extended to colloidal, intrinsically disordered proteins and nanoparticle systems where surface hydrophobicity is profound. |
| URI: | http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/22803 |
| Appears in Collections: | M Sc |
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NEHA V. K. Msc.pdf | 3.01 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open | |
| NEHA V. K. plag.pdf | 7.71 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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