Dynamics of hydrated soft matters studied by broadband dielectric spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations

Authors

  • Keisuke TOMINAGA ⋅ JP Center for Life Photonic Innovation, Kobe University

Abstract

Our group has been studying the temperature dependence of complex permittivity spectra from sub-GHz to THz of hydrated soft matter, especially biopolymers such as proteins and lipid bilayers, by varying the level of hydration in order to investigate the effects of hydration and thermal excitation on the low-frequency vibrations of these materials. Measurements have been made on globular proteins (lysozyme), membrane proteins (bacteriorhodopsin), and lipid bilayers (DMPC). In this presentation, we will report on the results of these hydrated broadband dielectric spectroscopy measurements and compare them with experimental results obtained by molecular dynamics simulations. Calculations were performed on lysozyme to see if the changes in the complex permittivity spectrum can be reproduced, and the coupling between hydrated water and proteins will be discussed. We will also discuss the results of similar measurements made by neutron scattering.

About the Speaker

  • Keisuke TOMINAGA, Center for Life Photonic Innovation, Kobe University

    Keisuke TOMINAGA received BSc (1985), MSc (1987), and DSc (1990) degrees from Kyoto University. He was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Minnesota (1990), a research associate at the Institute for Molecular Science (1992), an associate professor at Kobe University (1998), and a professor at the Molecular Photoscience Research Center, Kobe University (2001). His research focuses on time-resolved spectroscopy of condensed phases. 

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Published

2026-06-23

How to Cite

[1]
K TOMINAGA, Dynamics of hydrated soft matters studied by broadband dielectric spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations, in Proceedings of the 44th Samahang Pisika ng Pilipinas Physics Conference (Philippines, 2026), SPP-2026-INV-PS-31. URL: https://proceedings.spp-online.org/article/view/SPP-2026-INV-PS-31