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1 \documentclass[aps,pre,twocolumn,amssymb,showpacs]{revtex4}
2 %\documentclass[aps,pre,preprint,amssymb,showpacs]{revtex4}
3 \usepackage{graphicx}
4
5 \begin{document}
6 \renewcommand{\thefootnote}{\fnsymbol{footnote}}
7 \renewcommand{\theequation}{\arabic{section}.\arabic{equation}}
8
9 %\bibliographystyle{aps}
10
11 \title{Spontaneous Corrugation of Dipolar Membranes}
12 \author{Xiuquan Sun and J. Daniel Gezelter}
13 \email[E-mail:]{gezelter@nd.edu}
14 \affiliation{Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
15 University of Notre Dame, \\
16 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
17
18 \date{\today}
19
20 \begin{abstract}
21 We present a simple model for dipolar membranes that gives
22 lattice-bound point dipoles complete orientational freedom as well as
23 translational freedom along one coordinate (out of the plane of the
24 membrane). There is an additional harmonic surface tension which
25 binds each of the dipoles to the six nearest neighbors on either
26 triangular or distorted lattices. The translational freedom
27 of the dipoles allows triangular lattices to find states that break out
28 of the normal orientational disorder of frustrated configurations and
29 which are stabilized by long-range antiferroelectric ordering. In
30 order to break out of the frustrated states, the dipolar membranes
31 form corrugated or ``rippled'' phases that make the lattices
32 effectively non-triangular. We observe three common features of the
33 corrugated dipolar membranes: 1) the corrugated phases develop easily
34 when hosted on triangular lattices, 2) the wave vectors for the surface
35 ripples are always found to be perpendicular to the dipole director
36 axis, and 3) on triangular lattices, the dipole director axis is found
37 to be parallel to any of the three equivalent lattice directions.
38 \end{abstract}
39
40 \pacs{68.03.Hj, 82.20.Wt}
41 \maketitle
42
43
44 \section{Introduction}
45 \label{Int}
46 There has been intense recent interest in the phase behavior of
47 dipolar
48 fluids.\cite{Tlusty00,Teixeira00,Tavares02,Duncan04,Holm05,Duncan06}
49 Due to the anisotropic interactions between dipoles, dipolar fluids
50 can present anomalous phase behavior. Examples of condensed-phase
51 dipolar systems include ferrofluids, electro-rheological fluids, and
52 even biological membranes. Computer simulations have provided useful
53 information on the structural features and phase transition of the
54 dipolar fluids. Simulation results indicate that at low densities,
55 these fluids spontaneously organize into head-to-tail dipolar
56 ``chains''.\cite{Teixeira00,Holm05} At low temperatures, these chains
57 and rings prevent the occurrence of a liquid-gas phase transition.
58 However, Tlusty and Safran showed that there is a defect-induced phase
59 separation into a low-density ``chain'' phase and a higher density
60 Y-defect phase.\cite{Tlusty00} Recently, inspired by experimental
61 studies on monolayers of dipolar fluids, theoretical models using
62 two-dimensional dipolar soft spheres have appeared in the literature.
63 Tavares {\it et al.} tested their theory for chain and ring length
64 distributions in two dimensions and carried out Monte Carlo
65 simulations in the low-density phase.\cite{Tavares02} Duncan and Camp
66 performed dynamical simulations on two-dimensional dipolar fluids to
67 study transport and orientational dynamics in these
68 systems.\cite{Duncan04} They have recently revisited two-dimensional
69 systems to study the kinetic conditions for the defect-induced
70 condensation into the Y-defect phase.\cite{Duncan06}
71
72 Although they are not traditionally classified as 2-dimensional
73 dipolar fluids, hydrated lipids aggregate spontaneously to form
74 bilayers which exhibit a variety of phases depending on their
75 temperatures and compositions. At high temperatures, the fluid
76 ($L_{\alpha}$) phase of Phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids closely
77 resembles a dipolar fluid. However, at lower temperatures, packing of
78 the molecules becomes important, and the translational freedom of
79 lipid molecules is thought to be substantially restricted. A
80 corrugated or ``rippled'' phase ($P_{\beta'}$) appears as an
81 intermediate phase between the gel ($L_\beta$) and fluid
82 ($L_{\alpha}$) phases for relatively pure phosphatidylcholine (PC)
83 bilayers. The $P_{\beta'}$ phase has attracted substantial
84 experimental interest over the past 30 years. Most structural
85 information of the ripple phase has been obtained by the X-ray
86 diffraction~\cite{Sun96,Katsaras00} and freeze-fracture electron
87 microscopy (FFEM).~\cite{Copeland80,Meyer96} Recently, Kaasgaard {\it
88 et al.} used atomic force microscopy (AFM) to observe ripple phase
89 morphology in bilayers supported on mica.~\cite{Kaasgaard03} The
90 experimental results provide strong support for a 2-dimensional
91 triangular packing lattice of the lipid molecules within the ripple
92 phase. This is a notable change from the observed lipid packing
93 within the gel phase.~\cite{Cevc87}
94
95 Although the results of dipolar fluid simulations can not be directly
96 mapped onto the phases of lipid bilayers, the rich behaviors exhibited
97 by simple dipolar models can give us some insight into the corrugation
98 phenomenon of the $P_{\beta'}$ phase. There have been a number of
99 theoretical approaches (and some heroic simulations) undertaken to try
100 to explain this phase, but to date, none have looked specifically at
101 the contribution of the dipolar character of the lipid head groups
102 towards this corrugation. Before we present our simple model, we will
103 briefly survey the previous theoretical work on this topic.
104
105 The theoretical models that have been put forward to explain the
106 formation of the $P_{\beta'}$ phase have presented a number of
107 conflicting but intriguing explanations. Marder {\it et al.} used a
108 curvature-dependent Landau-de Gennes free-energy functional to predict
109 a rippled phase.~\cite{Marder84} This model and other related
110 continuum models predict higher fluidity in convex regions and that
111 concave portions of the membrane correspond to more solid-like
112 regions. Carlson and Sethna used a packing-competition model (in
113 which head groups and chains have competing packing energetics) to
114 predict the formation of a ripple-like phase. Their model predicted
115 that the high-curvature portions have lower-chain packing and
116 correspond to more fluid-like regions. Goldstein and Leibler used a
117 mean-field approach with a planar model for {\em inter-lamellar}
118 interactions to predict rippling in multilamellar
119 phases.~\cite{Goldstein88} McCullough and Scott proposed that the {\em
120 anisotropy of the nearest-neighbor interactions} coupled to
121 hydrophobic constraining forces which restrict height differences
122 between nearest neighbors is the origin of the ripple
123 phase.~\cite{McCullough90} Lubensky and MacKintosh introduced a Landau
124 theory for tilt order and curvature of a single membrane and concluded
125 that {\em coupling of molecular tilt to membrane curvature} is
126 responsible for the production of ripples.~\cite{Lubensky93} Misbah,
127 Duplat and Houchmandzadeh proposed that {\em inter-layer dipolar
128 interactions} can lead to ripple instabilities.~\cite{Misbah98}
129 Heimburg presented a {\em coexistence model} for ripple formation in
130 which he postulates that fluid-phase line defects cause sharp
131 curvature between relatively flat gel-phase regions.~\cite{Heimburg00}
132 Kubica has suggested that a lattice model of polar head groups could
133 be valuable in trying to understand bilayer phase
134 formation.~\cite{Kubica02} Bannerjee used Monte Carlo simulations of
135 lamellar stacks of triangular lattices to show that large headgroups
136 and molecular tilt with respect to the membrane normal vector can
137 cause bulk rippling.~\cite{Bannerjee02}
138
139 Large-scale molecular dynamics simulations have also been performed on
140 rippled phases using united atom as well as molecular scale
141 models. De~Vries {\it et al.} studied the structure of lecithin ripple
142 phases via molecular dynamics and their simulations seem to support
143 the coexistence models (i.e. fluid-like chain dynamics was observed in
144 the kink regions).~\cite{deVries05} A similar coarse-grained approach
145 has been used to study the line tension of bilayer
146 edges.\cite{Jiang04,deJoannis06} Ayton and Voth have found significant
147 undulations in zero-surface-tension states of membranes simulated via
148 dissipative particle dynamics, but their results are consistent with
149 purely thermal undulations.~\cite{Ayton02} Brannigan, Tamboli and
150 Brown have used a molecular scale model to elucidate the role of
151 molecular shape on membrane phase behavior and
152 elasticity.~\cite{Brannigan04b} They have also observed a buckled
153 hexatic phase with strong tail and moderate alignment
154 attractions.~\cite{Brannigan04a}
155
156 The problem with using atomistic and even coarse-grained approaches to
157 study this phenomenon is that only a relatively small number of
158 periods of the corrugation (i.e. one or two) can be realistically
159 simulated given current technology. Also, simulations of lipid
160 bilayers are traditionally carried out with periodic boundary
161 conditions in two or three dimensions and these have the potential to
162 enhance the periodicity of the system at that wavelength. To avoid
163 this pitfall, we are using a model which allows us to have
164 sufficiently large systems so that we are not causing artificial
165 corrugation through the use of periodic boundary conditions.
166
167 At the other extreme in density from the traditional simulations of
168 dipolar fluids is the behavior of dipoles locked on regular lattices.
169 Ferroelectric states (with long-range dipolar order) can be observed
170 in dipolar systems with non-triangular packings. However, {\em
171 triangularly}-packed 2-D dipolar systems are inherently frustrated and
172 one would expect a dipolar-disordered phase to be the lowest free
173 energy configuration. Therefore, it would seem unlikely that a
174 frustrated lattice in a dipolar-disordered state could exhibit the
175 long-range periodicity in the range of 100-600 \AA (as exhibited in
176 the ripple phases studied by Kaasgard {\it et
177 al.}).~\cite{Kaasgaard03}
178
179 Is there an intermediate model between the low-density dipolar fluids
180 and the rigid lattice models which has the potential to exhibit the
181 corrugation phenomenon of the $P_{\beta'}$ phase? What we present
182 here is an attempt to find a simple dipolar model which will exhibit
183 this behavior. We are using a modified XYZ lattice model; details of
184 the model can be found in section
185 \ref{sec:model}, results of Monte Carlo simulations using this model
186 are presented in section
187 \ref{sec:results}, and section \ref{sec:discussion} contains our conclusions.
188
189 \section{2-D Dipolar Membrane}
190 \label{sec:model}
191
192 The point of developing this model was to arrive at the simplest
193 possible theoretical model which could exhibit spontaneous corrugation
194 of a two-dimensional dipolar medium. Since molecules in the ripple
195 phase have limited translational freedom, we have chosen a lattice to
196 support the dipoles in the x-y plane. The lattice may be either
197 triangular (lattice constants $a/b = \sqrt{3}$) or distorted.
198 However, each dipole has 3 degrees of freedom. They may move freely
199 {\em out} of the x-y plane (along the $z$ axis), and they have
200 complete orientational freedom ($0 <= \theta <= \pi$, $0 <= \phi < 2
201 \pi$). This is essentially a modified X-Y-Z model with translational
202 freedom along the z-axis.
203
204 The potential energy of the system,
205 \begin{eqnarray}
206 V = \sum_i & & \left( \sum_{j>i} \frac{|\mu|^2}{4\pi \epsilon_0 r_{ij}^3} \left[
207 {\mathbf{\hat u}_i} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat u}_j} -
208 3({\mathbf{\hat u}_i} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat
209 r}_{ij}})({\mathbf{\hat u}_j} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}})\right]
210 \right. \nonumber \\
211 & & \left. + \sum_{j \in NN_i}^6 \frac{k_r}{2}\left(
212 r_{ij}-\sigma \right)^2 \right)
213 \label{eq:pot}
214 \end{eqnarray}
215
216
217 In this potential, $\mathbf{\hat u}_i$ is the unit vector pointing
218 along dipole $i$ and $\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}$ is the unit vector
219 pointing along the inter-dipole vector $\mathbf{r}_{ij}$. The entire
220 potential is governed by three parameters, the dipolar strength
221 ($\mu$), the harmonic spring constant ($k_r$) and the preferred
222 intermolecular spacing ($\sigma$). In practice, we set the value of
223 $\sigma$ to the average inter-molecular spacing from the planar
224 lattice, yielding a potential model that has only two parameters for a
225 particular choice of lattice constants $a$ (along the $x$-axis) and
226 $b$ (along the $y$-axis). We also define a set of reduced parameters
227 based on the length scale ($\sigma$) and the energy of the harmonic
228 potential at a deformation of 2 $\sigma$ ($\epsilon = k_r \sigma^2 /
229 2$). Using these two constants, we perform our calculations using
230 reduced distances, ($r^{*} = r / \sigma$), temperatures ($T^{*} = 2
231 k_B T / k_r \sigma^2$), densities ($\rho^{*} = N \sigma^2 / L_x L_y$),
232 and dipole moments ($\mu^{*} = \mu / \sqrt{4 \pi \epsilon_0 \sigma^5
233 k_r / 2}$).
234
235 To investigate the phase behavior of this model, we have performed a
236 series of Metropolis Monte Carlo simulations of moderately-sized (34.3
237 $\sigma$ on a side) patches of membrane hosted on both triangular
238 ($\gamma = a/b = \sqrt{3}$) and distorted ($\gamma \neq \sqrt{3}$)
239 lattices. The linear extent of one edge of the monolayer was $20 a$
240 and the system was kept roughly square. The average distance that
241 coplanar dipoles were positioned from their six nearest neighbors was
242 1 $\sigma$ (on both triangular and distorted lattices). Typical
243 system sizes were 1360 dipoles for the triangular lattices and
244 840-2800 dipoles for the distorted lattices. Two-dimensional periodic
245 boundary conditions were used, and the cutoff for the dipole-dipole
246 interaction was set to 4.3 $\sigma$. Since dipole-dipole interactions
247 decay rapidly with distance, and since the intrinsic three-dimensional
248 periodicity of the Ewald sum can give artifacts in 2-d systems, we
249 have chosen not to use it in these calculations. Although the Ewald
250 sum has been reformulated to handle 2-D
251 systems,\cite{Parry75,Parry76,Heyes77,deLeeuw79,Rhee89} these methods
252 are computationally expensive,\cite{Spohr97,Yeh99} and are not
253 necessary in this case. All parameters ($T^{*}$, $\mu^{*}$, and
254 $\gamma$) were varied systematically to study the effects of these
255 parameters on the formation of ripple-like phases.
256
257 \section{Results and Analysis}
258 \label{sec:results}
259
260 \subsection{Dipolar Ordering and Coexistence Temperatures}
261 The principal method for observing the orientational ordering
262 transition in dipolar systems is the $P_2$ order parameter (defined as
263 $1.5 \times \lambda_{max}$, where $\lambda_{max}$ is the largest
264 eigenvalue of the matrix,
265 \begin{equation}
266 {\mathsf{S}} = \frac{1}{N} \sum_i \left(
267 \begin{array}{ccc}
268 u^{x}_i u^{x}_i-\frac{1}{3} & u^{x}_i u^{y}_i & u^{x}_i u^{z}_i \\
269 u^{y}_i u^{x}_i & u^{y}_i u^{y}_i -\frac{1}{3} & u^{y}_i u^{z}_i \\
270 u^{z}_i u^{x}_i & u^{z}_i u^{y}_i & u^{z}_i u^{z}_i -\frac{1}{3}
271 \end{array} \right).
272 \label{eq:opmatrix}
273 \end{equation}
274 Here $u^{\alpha}_i$ is the $\alpha=x,y,z$ component of the unit vector
275 for dipole $i$. $P_2$ will be $1.0$ for a perfectly-ordered system
276 and near $0$ for a randomized system. Note that this order parameter
277 is {\em not} equal to the polarization of the system. For example,
278 the polarization of the perfect antiferroelectric system is $0$, but
279 $P_2$ for an antiferroelectric system is $1$. The eigenvector of
280 $\mathsf{S}$ corresponding to the largest eigenvalue is familiar as
281 the director axis, which can be used to determine a privileged dipolar
282 axis for dipole-ordered systems. The top panel in Fig. \ref{phase}
283 shows the values of $P_2$ as a function of temperature for both
284 triangular ($\gamma = 1.732$) and distorted ($\gamma=1.875$)
285 lattices.
286
287 \begin{figure}
288 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{phase.pdf}
289 \caption{\label{phase} Top panel: The $P_2$ dipolar order parameter as
290 a function of temperature for both triangular ($\gamma = 1.732$) and
291 distorted ($\gamma = 1.875$) lattices. Bottom Panel: The phase
292 diagram for the dipolar membrane model. The line denotes the division
293 between the dipolar ordered (antiferroelectric) and disordered phases.
294 An enlarged view near the triangular lattice is shown inset.}
295 \end{figure}
296
297 There is a clear order-disorder transition in evidence from this data.
298 Both the triangular and distorted lattices have dipolar-ordered
299 low-temperature phases, and orientationally-disordered high
300 temperature phases. The coexistence temperature for the triangular
301 lattice is significantly lower than for the distorted lattices, and
302 the bulk polarization is approximately $0$ for both dipolar ordered
303 and disordered phases. This gives strong evidence that the dipolar
304 ordered phase is antiferroelectric. We have verified that this
305 dipolar ordering transition is not a function of system size by
306 performing identical calculations with systems twice as large. The
307 transition is equally smooth at all system sizes that were studied.
308 Additionally, we have repeated the Monte Carlo simulations over a wide
309 range of lattice ratios ($\gamma$) to generate a dipolar
310 order/disorder phase diagram. The bottom panel in Fig. \ref{phase}
311 shows that the triangular lattice is a low-temperature cusp in the
312 $T^{*}-\gamma$ phase diagram.
313
314 This phase diagram is remarkable in that it shows an antiferroelectric
315 phase near $\gamma=1.732$ where one would expect lattice frustration
316 to result in disordered phases at all temperatures. Observations of
317 the configurations in this phase show clearly that the system has
318 accomplished dipolar orderering by forming large ripple-like
319 structures. We have observed antiferroelectric ordering in all three
320 of the equivalent directions on the triangular lattice, and the dipoles
321 have been observed to organize perpendicular to the membrane normal
322 (in the plane of the membrane). It is particularly interesting to
323 note that the ripple-like structures have also been observed to
324 propagate in the three equivalent directions on the lattice, but the
325 {\em direction of ripple propagation is always perpendicular to the
326 dipole director axis}. A snapshot of a typical antiferroelectric
327 rippled structure is shown in Fig. \ref{fig:snapshot}.
328
329 \begin{figure}
330 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{snapshot.pdf}
331 \caption{\label{fig:snapshot} Top and Side views of a representative
332 configuration for the dipolar ordered phase supported on the
333 triangular lattice. Note the antiferroelectric ordering and the long
334 wavelength buckling of the membrane. Dipolar ordering has been
335 observed in all three equivalent directions on the triangular lattice,
336 and the ripple direction is always perpendicular to the director axis
337 for the dipoles.}
338 \end{figure}
339
340 Although the snapshot in Fig. \ref{fig:snapshot} gives the appearance
341 of three-row stair-like structures, these appear to be transient. On
342 average, the corrugation of the membrane is a relatively smooth,
343 long-wavelength phenomenon, with occasional steep drops between
344 adjacent lines of anti-aligned dipoles.
345
346 The height-dipole correlation function ($C(r, \cos \theta)$) makes the
347 connection between dipolar ordering and the wave vector of the ripple
348 even more explicit. $C(r, \cos \theta)$ is an angle-dependent pair
349 distribution function. The angle ($\theta$) is defined by the
350 intermolecular vector $\vec{r}_{ij}$ and direction of dipole $i$,
351 \begin{equation}
352 C(r, \cos \theta) = \frac{\langle \sum_{i}
353 \sum_{j} h_i \cdot h_j \delta(r - r_{ij}) \delta(\cos \theta_{ij} -
354 \cos \theta)\rangle} {\langle h^2 \rangle}
355 \end{equation}
356 where $\cos \theta_{ij} = \hat{\mu}_{i} \cdot \hat{r}_{ij}$ and
357 $\hat{r}_{ij} = \vec{r}_{ij} / r_{ij}$. Fig. \ref{fig:CrossCorrelation}
358 shows contours of this correlation function for both anti-ferroelectric, rippled
359 membranes as well as for the dipole-disordered portion of the phase diagram.
360
361 \begin{figure}
362 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{height-dipole-correlation.pdf}
363 \caption{\label{fig:CrossCorrelation} Contours of the height-dipole
364 correlation function as a function of the dot product between the
365 dipole ($\hat{\mu}$) and inter-dipole separation vector ($\hat{r}$)
366 and the distance ($r$) between the dipoles. Perfect height
367 correlation (contours approaching 1) are present in the ordered phase
368 when the two dipoles are in the same head-to-tail line.
369 Anti-correlation (contours below 0) is only seen when the inter-dipole
370 vector is perpendicular to the dipoles. In the dipole-disordered
371 portion of the phase diagram, there is only weak correlation in the
372 dipole direction and this correlation decays rapidly to zero for
373 intermolecular vectors that are not dipole-aligned.}
374 \end{figure}
375
376 \subsection{Discriminating Ripples from Thermal Undulations}
377
378 In order to be sure that the structures we have observed are actually
379 a rippled phase and not simply thermal undulations, we have computed
380 the undulation spectrum,
381 \begin{equation}
382 h(\vec{q}) = A^{-1/2} \int d\vec{r}
383 h(\vec{r}) e^{-i \vec{q}\cdot\vec{r}}
384 \end{equation}
385 where $h(\vec{r})$ is the height of the membrane at location $\vec{r}
386 = (x,y)$.~\cite{Safran94,Seifert97} In simple (and more complicated)
387 elastic continuum models, it can shown that in the $NVT$ ensemble, the
388 absolute value of the undulation spectrum can be written,
389 \begin{equation}
390 \langle | h(q) |^2 \rangle_{NVT} = \frac{k_B T}{k_c q^4 +
391 \gamma q^2},
392 \label{eq:fit}
393 \end{equation}
394 where $k_c$ is the bending modulus for the membrane, and $\gamma$ is
395 the mechanical surface tension.~\cite{Safran94} The systems studied in
396 this paper have essentially zero bending moduli ($k_c$) and relatively
397 large mechanical surface tensions ($\gamma$), so a much simpler form
398 can be written,
399 \begin{equation}
400 \langle | h(q) |^2 \rangle_{NVT} = \frac{k_B T}{\gamma q^2},
401 \label{eq:fit2}
402 \end{equation}
403
404 The undulation spectrum is computed by superimposing a rectangular
405 grid on top of the membrane, and by assigning height ($h(\vec{r})$)
406 values to the grid from the average of all dipoles that fall within a
407 given $\vec{r}+d\vec{r}$ grid area. Empty grid pixels are assigned
408 height values by interpolation from the nearest neighbor pixels. A
409 standard 2-d Fourier transform is then used to obtain $\langle |
410 h(q)|^2 \rangle$. Alternatively, since the dipoles sit on a Bravais
411 lattice, one could use the heights of the lattice points themselves as
412 the grid for the Fourier transform (without interpolating to a square
413 grid). However, if lateral translational freedom is added to this
414 model (a likely extension), an interpolated grid method for computing
415 undulation spectra will be required.
416
417 As mentioned above, the best fits to our undulation spectra are
418 obtained by setting the value of $k_c$ to 0. In Fig. \ref{fig:fit} we
419 show typical undulation spectra for two different regions of the phase
420 diagram along with their fits from the Landau free energy approach
421 (Eq. \ref{eq:fit2}). In the high-temperature disordered phase, the
422 Landau fits can be nearly perfect, and from these fits we can estimate
423 the tension in the surface. In reduced units, typical values of
424 $\gamma^{*} = \gamma / \epsilon = 2500$ are obtained for the
425 disordered phase ($\gamma^{*} = 2551.7$ in the top panel of
426 Fig. \ref{fig:fit}).
427
428 Typical values of $\gamma^{*}$ in the dipolar-ordered phase are much
429 higher than in the dipolar-disordered phase ($\gamma^{*} = 73,538$ in
430 the lower panel of Fig. \ref{fig:fit}). For the dipolar-ordered
431 triangular lattice near the coexistence temperature, we also observe
432 long wavelength undulations that are far outliers to the fits. That
433 is, the Landau free energy fits are well within error bars for most of
434 the other points, but can be off by {\em orders of magnitude} for a
435 few low frequency components.
436
437 We interpret these outliers as evidence that these low frequency modes
438 are {\em non-thermal undulations}. We take this as evidence that we
439 are actually seeing a rippled phase developing in this model system.
440
441 \begin{figure}
442 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{logFit.pdf}
443 \caption{\label{fig:fit} Evidence that the observed ripples are {\em
444 not} thermal undulations is obtained from the 2-d fourier transform
445 $\langle |h^{*}(\vec{q})|^2 \rangle$ of the height profile ($\langle
446 h^{*}(x,y) \rangle$). Rippled samples show low-wavelength peaks that
447 are outliers on the Landau free energy fits by an order of magnitude.
448 Samples exhibiting only thermal undulations fit Eq. \ref{eq:fit}
449 remarkably well.}
450 \end{figure}
451
452 \subsection{Effects of Potential Parameters on Amplitude and Wavelength}
453
454 We have used two different methods to estimate the amplitude and
455 periodicity of the ripples. The first method requires projection of
456 the ripples onto a one dimensional rippling axis. Since the rippling
457 is always perpendicular to the dipole director axis, we can define a
458 ripple vector as follows. The largest eigenvector, $s_1$, of the
459 $\mathsf{S}$ matrix in Eq. \ref{eq:opmatrix} is projected onto a
460 planar director axis,
461 \begin{equation}
462 \vec{d} = \left(\begin{array}{c}
463 \vec{s}_1 \cdot \hat{i} \\
464 \vec{s}_1 \cdot \hat{j} \\
465 0
466 \end{array} \right).
467 \end{equation}
468 ($\hat{i}$, $\hat{j}$ and $\hat{k}$ are unit vectors along the $x$,
469 $y$, and $z$ axes, respectively.) The rippling axis is in the plane of
470 the membrane and is perpendicular to the planar director axis,
471 \begin{equation}
472 \vec{q}_{\mathrm{rip}} = \vec{d} \times \hat{k}
473 \end{equation}
474 We can then find the height profile of the membrane along the ripple
475 axis by projecting heights of the dipoles to obtain a one-dimensional
476 height profile, $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$. Ripple wavelengths can be
477 estimated from the largest non-thermal low-frequency component in the
478 fourier transform of $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$. Amplitudes can be
479 estimated by measuring peak-to-trough distances in
480 $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$ itself.
481
482 A second, more accurate, and simpler method for estimating ripple
483 shape is to extract the wavelength and height information directly
484 from the largest non-thermal peak in the undulation spectrum. For
485 large-amplitude ripples, the two methods give similar results. The
486 one-dimensional projection method is more prone to noise (particularly
487 in the amplitude estimates for the distorted lattices). We report
488 amplitudes and wavelengths taken directly from the undulation spectrum
489 below.
490
491 In the triangular lattice ($\gamma = \sqrt{3}$), the rippling is
492 observed for temperatures ($T^{*}$) from $61-122$. The wavelength of
493 the ripples is remarkably stable at 21.4~$\sigma$ for all but the
494 temperatures closest to the order-disorder transition. At $T^{*} =
495 122$, the wavelength drops to 17.1~$\sigma$.
496
497 The dependence of the amplitude on temperature is shown in the top
498 panel of Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}. The rippled structures shrink
499 smoothly as the temperature rises towards the order-disorder
500 transition. The wavelengths and amplitudes we observe are
501 surprisingly close to the $\Lambda / 2$ phase observed by Kaasgaard
502 {\it et al.} in their work on PC-based lipids.\cite{Kaasgaard03}
503 However, this is coincidental agreement based on a choice of 7~\AA~as
504 the mean spacing between lipids.
505
506 \begin{figure}
507 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{properties_sq.pdf}
508 \caption{\label{fig:Amplitude} a) The amplitude $A^{*}$ of the ripples
509 vs. temperature for a triangular lattice. b) The amplitude $A^{*}$ of
510 the ripples vs. dipole strength ($\mu^{*}$) for both the triangular
511 lattice (circles) and distorted lattice (squares). The reduced
512 temperatures were kept fixed at $T^{*} = 94$ for the triangular
513 lattice and $T^{*} = 106$ for the distorted lattice (approximately 2/3
514 of the order-disorder transition temperature for each lattice).}
515 \end{figure}
516
517 The ripples can be made to disappear by increasing the internal
518 surface tension (i.e. by increasing $k_r$ or equivalently, reducing
519 the dipole moment). The amplitude of the ripples depends critically
520 on the strength of the dipole moments ($\mu^{*}$) in Eq. \ref{eq:pot}.
521 If the dipoles are weakened substantially (below $\mu^{*}$ = 20) at a
522 fixed temperature of 94, the membrane loses dipolar ordering
523 and the ripple structures. The ripples reach a peak amplitude of
524 3.7~$\sigma$ at a dipolar strength of 25. We show the dependence
525 of ripple amplitude on the dipolar strength in
526 Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}.
527
528 \subsection{Distorted lattices}
529
530 We have also investigated the effect of the lattice geometry by
531 changing the ratio of lattice constants ($\gamma$) while keeping the
532 average nearest-neighbor spacing constant. The antiferroelectric state
533 is accessible for all $\gamma$ values we have used, although the
534 distorted triangular lattices prefer a particular director axis due to
535 the anisotropy of the lattice.
536
537 Our observation of rippling behavior was not limited to the triangular
538 lattices. In distorted lattices the antiferroelectric phase can
539 develop nearly instantaneously in the Monte Carlo simulations, and
540 these dipolar-ordered phases tend to be remarkably flat. Whenever
541 rippling has been observed in these distorted lattices
542 (e.g. $\gamma = 1.875$), we see relatively short ripple wavelengths
543 (14 $\sigma$) and amplitudes of 2.4~$\sigma$. These ripples are
544 weakly dependent on dipolar strength (see Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}),
545 although below a dipolar strength of $\mu^{*} = 20$, the membrane
546 loses dipolar ordering and displays only thermal undulations.
547
548 The ripple phase does {\em not} appear at all values of $\gamma$. We
549 have only observed non-thermal undulations in the range $1.625 <
550 \gamma < 1.875$. Outside this range, the order-disorder transition in
551 the dipoles remains, but the ordered dipolar phase has only thermal
552 undulations. This is one of our strongest pieces of evidence that
553 rippling is a symmetry-breaking phenomenon for triangular and
554 nearly-triangular lattices.
555
556 \subsection{Effects of System Size}
557 To evaluate the effect of finite system size, we have performed a
558 series of simulations on the triangular lattice at a reduced
559 temperature of 122, which is just below the order-disorder transition
560 temperature ($T^{*} = 139$). These conditions are in the
561 dipole-ordered and rippled portion of the phase diagram. These are
562 also the conditions that should be most susceptible to system size
563 effects.
564
565 \begin{figure}
566 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{SystemSize.pdf}
567 \caption{\label{fig:systemsize} The ripple wavelength (top) and
568 amplitude (bottom) as a function of system size for a triangular
569 lattice ($\gamma=1.732$) at $T^{*} = 122$.}
570 \end{figure}
571
572 There is substantial dependence on system size for small (less than
573 29~$\sigma$) periodic boxes. Notably, there are resonances apparent
574 in the ripple amplitudes at box lengths of 17.3 and 29.5 $\sigma$.
575 For larger systems, the behavior of the ripples appears to have
576 stabilized and is on a trend to slightly smaller amplitudes (and
577 slightly longer wavelengths) than were observed from the 34.3 $\sigma$
578 box sizes that were used for most of the calculations.
579
580 It is interesting to note that system sizes which are multiples of the
581 default ripple wavelength can enhance the amplitude of the observed
582 ripples, but appears to have only a minor effect on the observed
583 wavelength. It would, of course, be better to use system sizes that
584 were many multiples of the ripple wavelength to be sure that the
585 periodic box is not driving the phenomenon, but at the largest system
586 size studied (70 $\sigma$ $\times$ 70 $\sigma$), the number of dipoles
587 (5440) made long Monte Carlo simulations prohibitively expensive.
588
589 \section{Discussion}
590 \label{sec:discussion}
591
592 We have been able to show that a simple dipolar lattice model which
593 contains only molecular packing (from the lattice), anisotropy (in the
594 form of electrostatic dipoles) and a weak surface tension (in the form
595 of a nearest-neighbor harmonic potential) is capable of exhibiting
596 stable long-wavelength non-thermal surface corrugations. The best
597 explanation for this behavior is that the ability of the dipoles to
598 translate out of the plane of the membrane is enough to break the
599 symmetry of the triangular lattice and allow the energetic benefit from
600 the formation of a bulk antiferroelectric phase. Were the weak
601 surface tension absent from our model, it would be possible for the
602 entire lattice to ``tilt'' using $z$-translation. Tilting the lattice
603 in this way would yield an effectively non-triangular lattice which
604 would avoid dipolar frustration altogether. With the surface tension
605 in place, bulk tilt causes a large strain, and the simplest way to
606 release this strain is along line defects. Line defects will result
607 in rippled or sawtooth patterns in the membrane, and allow small
608 ``stripes'' of membrane to form antiferroelectric regions that are
609 tilted relative to the averaged membrane normal.
610
611 Although the dipole-dipole interaction is the major driving force for
612 the long range orientational ordered state, the formation of the
613 stable, smooth ripples is a result of the competition between the
614 surface tension and the dipole-dipole interactions. This statement is
615 supported by the variation in $\mu^{*}$. Substantially weaker dipoles
616 relative to the surface tension can cause the corrugated phase to
617 disappear.
618
619 The packing of the dipoles into a nearly-triangular lattice is clearly
620 an important piece of the puzzle. The dipolar head groups of lipid
621 molecules are sterically (as well as electrostatically) anisotropic,
622 and would not be able to pack in triangular arrangements without the
623 steric interference of adjacent molecular bodies. Since we only see
624 rippled phases in the neighborhood of $\gamma=\sqrt{3}$, this implies
625 that there is a role played by the lipid chains in the organization of
626 the triangularly ordered phases which support ripples in realistic
627 lipid bilayers.
628
629 The most important prediction we can make using the results from this
630 simple model is that if dipolar ordering is driving the surface
631 corrugation, the wave vectors for the ripples should always found to
632 be {\it perpendicular} to the dipole director axis. This prediction
633 should suggest experimental designs which test whether this is really
634 true in the phosphatidylcholine $P_{\beta'}$ phases. The dipole
635 director axis should also be easily computable for the all-atom and
636 coarse-grained simulations that have been published in the literature.
637
638 Our other observation about the ripple and dipolar directionality is
639 that the dipole director axis can be found to be parallel to any of
640 the three equivalent lattice vectors in the triangular lattice.
641 Defects in the ordering of the dipoles can cause the dipole director
642 (and consequently the surface corrugation) of small regions to be
643 rotated relative to each other by 120$^{\circ}$. This is a similar
644 behavior to the domain rotation seen in the AFM studies of Kaasgaard
645 {\it et al.}\cite{Kaasgaard03}
646
647 Although our model is simple, it exhibits some rich and unexpected
648 behaviors. It would clearly be a closer approximation to the reality
649 if we allowed greater translational freedom to the dipoles and
650 replaced the somewhat artificial lattice packing and the harmonic
651 ``surface tension'' with more realistic molecular modeling
652 potentials. What we have done is to present an extremely simple model
653 which exhibits bulk non-thermal corrugation, and our explanation of
654 this rippling phenomenon will help us design more accurate molecular
655 models for corrugated membranes and experiments to test whether
656 rippling is dipole-driven or not.
657
658 \begin{acknowledgments}
659 Support for this project was provided by the National Science
660 Foundation under grant CHE-0134881. The authors would like to thank
661 the reviewers for helpful comments.
662 \end{acknowledgments}
663
664 \bibliography{ripple}
665 \end{document}