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. 2024 Oct 23;29(21):5012.
doi: 10.3390/molecules29215012.

Adsorption and Permeation Events in Molecular Diffusion

Affiliations

Adsorption and Permeation Events in Molecular Diffusion

Denis S Grebenkov. Molecules. .

Abstract

How many times can a diffusing molecule permeate across a membrane or be adsorbed on a substrate? We employ an encounter-based approach to find the statistics of adsorption or permeation events for molecular diffusion in a general confining medium. Various features of these statistics are illustrated for two practically relevant cases: a flat boundary and a spherical confinement. Some applications of these fundamental results are discussed.

Keywords: Brownian motion; biochemistry; confinement; diffusion; encounter-based approach; geometric complexity; heterogeneous catalysis; permeation; reversible reactions; surface reaction.

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Conflict of interest statement

The author declares no conflicts of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
(a) A simulated trajectory of a molecule diffusing inside a disk Ω with an adsorbing circular boundary Γ=Ω. A triangle indicates the starting point x0, while three filled squares show three positions, at which the molecule was adsorbed to the boundary. (b) The associated boundary local time t (obtained along the same simulation) crosses three random thresholds ^1, ^1+^2, and ^1+^2+^3 (horizontal lines) at random times T1, T2, and T3 (vertical lines). Each such crossing corresponds to an adsorption on the boundary. Colors distinguish successive time periods between adsorption events.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Statistics of adsorption events at the origin for diffusion on a half-line with a constant reactivity q=1. (a) Qn(t|0) as a function of n for 64 values of t, chosen equidistantly on a logarithmic scale, from t=101 (dark blue) to t=103 (dark red), with D=1. (b) Qn(t|0) as a function of n for t=10. Filled circles present the exact solution (50), the solid line shows the approximation (52), whereas the dash-dotted line indicates the asymptotic relation (53).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Statistics of adsorption events at the origin for diffusion on a half-line for the adsorption mechanism with a fixed threshold 0=1. (a) Qn(t|0) as a function of n for 64 values of t, chosen equidistantly on logarithmic scale, from t=101 (dark blue) to t=103 (dark red), with D=1. (b) The effective reactivity κ(t|x0) defined in Equation (25), with N1(t|x0) given by Equation (56) and L(t|x0) given by Equation (54).
Figure 4
Figure 4
Statistics of adsorption events on the adsorbing sphere of radius R=1 with a constant reactivity q=1 (top panels) and with the Mittag–Leffler adsorption model with α=0.5 and 0=1 (bottom panels). (a,c) Qn(t|R) as a function of n for 64 values of t, chosen equidistantly on logarithmic scale, from t=101 (dark blue) to t=102 (dark red), with D=1. (b,d) The same probabilities with n rescaled by the mean number of adsorptions.

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References

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