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1 %\documentclass[aps,pre,twocolumn,amssymb,showpacs,floatfix]{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 elastic 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 term which binds each of
25 the dipoles to the six nearest neighbors on either triangular or
26 distorted lattices. The translational freedom of the dipoles allows
27 triangular lattices to find states that break out of the normal
28 orientational disorder of frustrated configurations and which are
29 stabilized by long-range anti-ferroelectric ordering. In order to
30 break out of the frustrated states, the dipolar membranes form
31 corrugated or ``rippled'' phases that make the lattices effectively
32 non-triangular. We observe three common features of the corrugated
33 dipolar membranes: 1) the corrugated phases develop easily when hosted
34 on triangular lattices, 2) the wave vectors for the surface ripples
35 are always found to be perpendicular to the dipole director axis, and
36 3) on triangular lattices, the dipole director axis is found to be
37 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
47 The properties of polymeric membranes are known to depend sensitively
48 on the details of the internal interactions between the constituent
49 monomers. A flexible membrane will always have a competition between
50 the energy of curvature and the in-plane stretching energy and will be
51 able to buckle in certain limits of surface tension and
52 temperature.\cite{Safran94} The buckling can be non-specific and
53 centered at dislocation~\cite{Seung1988} or grain-boundary
54 defects,\cite{Carraro1993} or it can be directional and cause long
55 ``roof-tile'' or tube-like structures to appear in
56 partially-polymerized phospholipid vesicles.\cite{Mutz1991}
57
58 One would expect that anisotropic local interactions could lead to
59 interesting properties of the buckled membrane. We report here on the
60 buckling behavior of a membrane composed of harmonically-bound, but
61 freely-rotating electrostatic dipoles. The dipoles have strongly
62 anisotropic local interactions and the membrane exhibits coupling
63 between the buckling and the long-range ordering of the dipoles.
64
65 Buckling behavior in liquid crystalline and biological membranes is a
66 well-known phenomenon. Relatively pure phosphatidylcholine (PC)
67 bilayers form a corrugated or ``rippled'' phase ($P_{\beta'}$) which
68 appears as an intermediate phase between the gel ($L_\beta$) and fluid
69 ($L_{\alpha}$) phases. The $P_{\beta'}$ phase has attracted
70 substantial experimental interest over the past 30 years. Most
71 structural information of the ripple phase has been obtained by the
72 X-ray diffraction~\cite{Sun96,Katsaras00} and freeze-fracture electron
73 microscopy (FFEM).~\cite{Copeland80,Meyer96} Recently, Kaasgaard {\it
74 et al.} used atomic force microscopy (AFM) to observe ripple phase
75 morphology in bilayers supported on mica.~\cite{Kaasgaard03} The
76 experimental results provide strong support for a 2-dimensional
77 triangular packing lattice of the lipid molecules within the ripple
78 phase. This is a notable change from the observed lipid packing
79 within the gel phase.~\cite{Cevc87} There have been a number of
80 theoretical
81 approaches~\cite{Marder84,Goldstein88,McCullough90,Lubensky93,Misbah98,Heimburg00,Kubica02,Bannerjee02}
82 (and some heroic
83 simulations~\cite{Ayton02,Jiang04,Brannigan04a,deVries05,deJoannis06})
84 undertaken to try to explain this phase, but to date, none have looked
85 specifically at the contribution of the dipolar character of the lipid
86 head groups towards this corrugation. Lipid chain interdigitation
87 certainly plays a major role, and the structures of the ripple phase
88 are highly ordered. The model we investigate here lacks chain
89 interdigitation (as well as the chains themselves!) and will not be
90 detailed enough to rule in favor of (or against) any of these
91 explanations for the $P_{\beta'}$ phase.
92
93 Membranes containing electrostatic dipoles can also exhibit the
94 flexoelectric effect,\cite{Todorova2004,Harden2006,Petrov2006} which
95 is the ability of mechanical deformations to result in electrostatic
96 organization of the membrane. This phenomenon is a curvature-induced
97 membrane polarization which can lead to potential differences across a
98 membrane. Reverse flexoelectric behavior (in which applied currents
99 effect membrane curvature) has also been observed. Explanations of
100 the details of these effects have typically utilized membrane
101 polarization perpendicular to the face of the
102 membrane,\cite{Petrov2006} and the effect has been observed in both
103 biological,\cite{Raphael2000} bent-core liquid
104 crystalline,\cite{Harden2006} and polymer-dispersed liquid crystalline
105 membranes.\cite{Todorova2004}
106
107 The problem with using atomistic and even coarse-grained approaches to
108 study membrane buckling phenomena is that only a relatively small
109 number of periods of the corrugation (i.e. one or two) can be
110 realistically simulated given current technology. Also, simulations
111 of lipid bilayers are traditionally carried out with periodic boundary
112 conditions in two or three dimensions and these have the potential to
113 enhance the periodicity of the system at that wavelength. To avoid
114 this pitfall, we are using a model which allows us to have
115 sufficiently large systems so that we are not causing artificial
116 corrugation through the use of periodic boundary conditions.
117
118 The simplest dipolar membrane is one in which the dipoles are located
119 on fixed lattice sites. Ferroelectric states (with long-range dipolar
120 order) can be observed in dipolar systems with non-triangular
121 packings. However, {\em triangularly}-packed 2-D dipolar systems are
122 inherently frustrated and one would expect a dipolar-disordered phase
123 to be the lowest free energy
124 configuration.\cite{Toulouse1977,Marland1979} Dipolar lattices already
125 have rich phase behavior, but in order to allow the membrane to
126 buckle, a single degree of freedom (translation normal to the membrane
127 face) must be added to each of the dipoles. It would also be possible
128 to allow complete translational freedom. This approach
129 is similar in character to a number of elastic Ising models that have
130 been developed to explain interesting mechanical properties in
131 magnetic alloys.\cite{Renard1966,Zhu2005,Zhu2006,Jiang2006}
132
133 What we present here is an attempt to find the simplest dipolar model
134 which will exhibit buckling behavior. We are using a modified XYZ
135 lattice model; details of the model can be found in section
136 \ref{sec:model}, results of Monte Carlo simulations using this model
137 are presented in section
138 \ref{sec:results}, and section \ref{sec:discussion} contains our conclusions.
139
140 \section{2-D Dipolar Membrane}
141 \label{sec:model}
142
143 The point of developing this model was to arrive at the simplest
144 possible theoretical model which could exhibit spontaneous corrugation
145 of a two-dimensional dipolar medium. Since molecules in polymerized
146 membranes and in the $P_{\beta'}$ ripple phase have limited
147 translational freedom, we have chosen a lattice to support the dipoles
148 in the x-y plane. The lattice may be either triangular (lattice
149 constants $a/b =
150 \sqrt{3}$) or distorted. However, each dipole has 3 degrees of
151 freedom. They may move freely {\em out} of the x-y plane (along the
152 $z$ axis), and they have complete orientational freedom ($0 <= \theta
153 <= \pi$, $0 <= \phi < 2
154 \pi$). This is essentially a modified X-Y-Z model with translational
155 freedom along the z-axis.
156
157 The potential energy of the system,
158 \begin{eqnarray}
159 V = \sum_i & & \left( \sum_{j>i} \frac{|\mu|^2}{4\pi \epsilon_0 r_{ij}^3} \left[
160 {\mathbf{\hat u}_i} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat u}_j} -
161 3({\mathbf{\hat u}_i} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat
162 r}_{ij}})({\mathbf{\hat u}_j} \cdot {\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}})\right]
163 \right. \nonumber \\
164 & & \left. + \sum_{j \in NN_i}^6 \frac{k_r}{2}\left(
165 r_{ij}-\sigma \right)^2 \right)
166 \label{eq:pot}
167 \end{eqnarray}
168
169 In this potential, $\mathbf{\hat u}_i$ is the unit vector pointing
170 along dipole $i$ and $\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}$ is the unit vector
171 pointing along the inter-dipole vector $\mathbf{r}_{ij}$. The entire
172 potential is governed by three parameters, the dipolar strength
173 ($\mu$), the harmonic spring constant ($k_r$) and the preferred
174 intermolecular spacing ($\sigma$). In practice, we set the value of
175 $\sigma$ to the average inter-molecular spacing from the planar
176 lattice, yielding a potential model that has only two parameters for a
177 particular choice of lattice constants $a$ (along the $x$-axis) and
178 $b$ (along the $y$-axis). We also define a set of reduced parameters
179 based on the length scale ($\sigma$) and the energy of the harmonic
180 potential at a deformation of 2 $\sigma$ ($\epsilon = k_r \sigma^2 /
181 2$). Using these two constants, we perform our calculations using
182 reduced distances, ($r^{*} = r / \sigma$), temperatures ($T^{*} = 2
183 k_B T / k_r \sigma^2$), densities ($\rho^{*} = N \sigma^2 / L_x L_y$),
184 and dipole moments ($\mu^{*} = \mu / \sqrt{4 \pi \epsilon_0 \sigma^5
185 k_r / 2}$). It should be noted that the density ($\rho^{*}$) depends
186 only on the mean particle spacing in the $x-y$ plane; the lattice is
187 fully populated.
188
189 To investigate the phase behavior of this model, we have performed a
190 series of Metropolis Monte Carlo simulations of moderately-sized (34.3
191 $\sigma$ on a side) patches of membrane hosted on both triangular
192 ($\gamma = a/b = \sqrt{3}$) and distorted ($\gamma \neq \sqrt{3}$)
193 lattices. The linear extent of one edge of the monolayer was $20 a$
194 and the system was kept roughly square. The average distance that
195 coplanar dipoles were positioned from their six nearest neighbors was
196 1 $\sigma$ (on both triangular and distorted lattices). Typical
197 system sizes were 1360 dipoles for the triangular lattices and
198 840-2800 dipoles for the distorted lattices. Two-dimensional periodic
199 boundary conditions were used, and the cutoff for the dipole-dipole
200 interaction was set to 4.3 $\sigma$. This cutoff is roughly 2.5 times
201 the typical real-space electrostatic cutoff for molecular systems.
202 Since dipole-dipole interactions decay rapidly with distance, and
203 since the intrinsic three-dimensional periodicity of the Ewald sum can
204 give artifacts in 2-d systems, we have chosen not to use it in these
205 calculations. Although the Ewald sum has been reformulated to handle
206 2-D systems,\cite{Parry75,Parry76,Heyes77,deLeeuw79,Rhee89} these
207 methods are computationally expensive,\cite{Spohr97,Yeh99} and are not
208 necessary in this case. All parameters ($T^{*}$, $\mu^{*}$, and
209 $\gamma$) were varied systematically to study the effects of these
210 parameters on the formation of ripple-like phases.
211
212 \section{Results and Analysis}
213 \label{sec:results}
214
215 \subsection{Dipolar Ordering and Coexistence Temperatures}
216 The principal method for observing the orientational ordering
217 transition in dipolar systems is the $P_2$ order parameter (defined as
218 $1.5 \times \lambda_{max}$, where $\lambda_{max}$ is the largest
219 eigenvalue of the matrix,
220 \begin{equation}
221 {\mathsf{S}} = \frac{1}{N} \sum_i \left(
222 \begin{array}{ccc}
223 u^{x}_i u^{x}_i-\frac{1}{3} & u^{x}_i u^{y}_i & u^{x}_i u^{z}_i \\
224 u^{y}_i u^{x}_i & u^{y}_i u^{y}_i -\frac{1}{3} & u^{y}_i u^{z}_i \\
225 u^{z}_i u^{x}_i & u^{z}_i u^{y}_i & u^{z}_i u^{z}_i -\frac{1}{3}
226 \end{array} \right).
227 \label{eq:opmatrix}
228 \end{equation}
229 Here $u^{\alpha}_i$ is the $\alpha=x,y,z$ component of the unit vector
230 for dipole $i$. $P_2$ will be $1.0$ for a perfectly-ordered system
231 and near $0$ for a randomized system. Note that this order parameter
232 is {\em not} equal to the polarization of the system. For example,
233 the polarization of the perfect anti-ferroelectric system is $0$, but
234 $P_2$ for an anti-ferroelectric system is $1$. The eigenvector of
235 $\mathsf{S}$ corresponding to the largest eigenvalue is familiar as
236 the director axis, which can be used to determine a privileged dipolar
237 axis for dipole-ordered systems. The top panel in Fig. \ref{phase}
238 shows the values of $P_2$ as a function of temperature for both
239 triangular ($\gamma = 1.732$) and distorted ($\gamma=1.875$)
240 lattices.
241
242 \begin{figure}
243 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{phase}
244 \caption{\label{phase} Top panel: The $P_2$ dipolar order parameter as
245 a function of temperature for both triangular ($\gamma = 1.732$) and
246 distorted ($\gamma = 1.875$) lattices. Bottom Panel: The phase
247 diagram for the dipolar membrane model. The line denotes the division
248 between the dipolar ordered (anti-ferroelectric) and disordered phases.
249 An enlarged view near the triangular lattice is shown inset.}
250 \end{figure}
251
252 There is a clear order-disorder transition in evidence from this data.
253 Both the triangular and distorted lattices have dipolar-ordered
254 low-temperature phases, and orientationally-disordered high
255 temperature phases. The coexistence temperature for the triangular
256 lattice is significantly lower than for the distorted lattices, and
257 the bulk polarization is approximately $0$ for both dipolar ordered
258 and disordered phases. This gives strong evidence that the dipolar
259 ordered phase is anti-ferroelectric. We have verified that this
260 dipolar ordering transition is not a function of system size by
261 performing identical calculations with systems twice as large. The
262 transition is equally smooth at all system sizes that were studied.
263 Additionally, we have repeated the Monte Carlo simulations over a wide
264 range of lattice ratios ($\gamma$) to generate a dipolar
265 order/disorder phase diagram. The bottom panel in Fig. \ref{phase}
266 shows that the triangular lattice is a low-temperature cusp in the
267 $T^{*}-\gamma$ phase diagram.
268
269 This phase diagram is remarkable in that it shows an
270 anti-ferroelectric phase near $\gamma=1.732$ where one would expect
271 lattice frustration to result in disordered phases at all
272 temperatures. Observations of the configurations in this phase show
273 clearly that the system has accomplished dipolar ordering by forming
274 large ripple-like structures. We have observed anti-ferroelectric
275 ordering in all three of the equivalent directions on the triangular
276 lattice, and the dipoles have been observed to organize perpendicular
277 to the membrane normal (in the plane of the membrane). It is
278 particularly interesting to note that the ripple-like structures have
279 also been observed to propagate in the three equivalent directions on
280 the lattice, but the {\em direction of ripple propagation is always
281 perpendicular to the dipole director axis}. A snapshot of a typical
282 anti-ferroelectric rippled structure is shown in
283 Fig. \ref{fig:snapshot}.
284
285 \begin{figure}
286 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{snapshot}
287 \caption{\label{fig:snapshot} Top and Side views of a representative
288 configuration for the dipolar ordered phase supported on the
289 triangular lattice. Note the anti-ferroelectric ordering and the long
290 wavelength buckling of the membrane. Dipolar ordering has been
291 observed in all three equivalent directions on the triangular lattice,
292 and the ripple direction is always perpendicular to the director axis
293 for the dipoles.}
294 \end{figure}
295
296 Although the snapshot in Fig. \ref{fig:snapshot} gives the appearance
297 of three-row stair-like structures, these appear to be transient. On
298 average, the corrugation of the membrane is a relatively smooth,
299 long-wavelength phenomenon, with occasional steep drops between
300 adjacent lines of anti-aligned dipoles.
301
302 The height-dipole correlation function ($C_{\textrm{hd}}(r, \cos
303 \theta)$) makes the connection between dipolar ordering and the wave
304 vector of the ripple even more explicit. $C_{\textrm{hd}}(r, \cos
305 \theta)$ is an angle-dependent pair distribution function. The angle
306 ($\theta$) is the angle between the intermolecular vector
307 $\vec{r}_{ij}$ and direction of dipole $i$,
308 \begin{equation}
309 C_{\textrm{hd}} = \frac{\langle \frac{1}{n(r)} \sum_{i}\sum_{j>i}
310 h_i \cdot h_j \delta(r - r_{ij}) \delta(\cos \theta_{ij} -
311 \cos \theta)\rangle} {\langle h^2 \rangle}
312 \end{equation}
313 where $\cos \theta_{ij} = \hat{\mu}_{i} \cdot \hat{r}_{ij}$ and
314 $\hat{r}_{ij} = \vec{r}_{ij} / r_{ij}$. $n(r)$ is the number of
315 dipoles found in a cylindrical shell between $r$ and $r+\delta r$ of
316 the central particle. Fig. \ref{fig:CrossCorrelation} shows contours
317 of this correlation function for both anti-ferroelectric, rippled
318 membranes as well as for the dipole-disordered portion of the phase
319 diagram.
320
321 \begin{figure}
322 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{hdc}
323 \caption{\label{fig:CrossCorrelation} Contours of the height-dipole
324 correlation function as a function of the dot product between the
325 dipole ($\hat{\mu}$) and inter-dipole separation vector ($\hat{r}$)
326 and the distance ($r$) between the dipoles. Perfect height
327 correlation (contours approaching 1) are present in the ordered phase
328 when the two dipoles are in the same head-to-tail line.
329 Anti-correlation (contours below 0) is only seen when the inter-dipole
330 vector is perpendicular to the dipoles. In the dipole-disordered
331 portion of the phase diagram, there is only weak correlation in the
332 dipole direction and this correlation decays rapidly to zero for
333 intermolecular vectors that are not dipole-aligned.}
334 \end{figure}
335
336 The height-dipole correlation function gives a map of how the topology
337 of the membrane surface varies with angular deviation around a given
338 dipole. The upper panel of Fig. \ref{fig:CrossCorrelation} shows that
339 in the anti-ferroelectric phase, the dipole heights are strongly
340 correlated for dipoles in head-to-tail arrangements, and this
341 correlation persists for very long distances (up to 15 $\sigma$). For
342 portions of the membrane located perpendicular to a given dipole, the
343 membrane height becomes anti-correlated at distances of 10 $\sigma$.
344 The correlation function is relatively smooth; there are no steep
345 jumps or steps, so the stair-like structures in
346 Fig. \ref{fig:snapshot} are indeed transient and disappear when
347 averaged over many configurations. In the dipole-disordered phase,
348 the height-dipole correlation function is relatively flat (and hovers
349 near zero). The only significant height correlations are for axial
350 dipoles at very short distances ($r \approx
351 \sigma$).
352
353 \subsection{Discriminating Ripples from Thermal Undulations}
354
355 In order to be sure that the structures we have observed are actually
356 a rippled phase and not simply thermal undulations, we have computed
357 the undulation spectrum,
358 \begin{equation}
359 h(\vec{q}) = A^{-1/2} \int d\vec{r}
360 h(\vec{r}) e^{-i \vec{q}\cdot\vec{r}}
361 \end{equation}
362 where $h(\vec{r})$ is the height of the membrane at location $\vec{r}
363 = (x,y)$.~\cite{Safran94,Seifert97} In simple (and more complicated)
364 elastic continuum models, it can shown that in the $NVT$ ensemble, the
365 absolute value of the undulation spectrum can be written,
366 \begin{equation}
367 \langle | h(q) |^2 \rangle_{NVT} = \frac{k_B T}{k_c q^4 +
368 \gamma q^2},
369 \label{eq:fit}
370 \end{equation}
371 where $k_c$ is the bending modulus for the membrane, and $\gamma$ is
372 the mechanical surface tension.~\cite{Safran94} The systems studied in
373 this paper have essentially zero bending moduli ($k_c$) and relatively
374 large mechanical surface tensions ($\gamma$), so a much simpler form
375 can be written,
376 \begin{equation}
377 \langle | h(q) |^2 \rangle_{NVT} = \frac{k_B T}{\gamma q^2},
378 \label{eq:fit2}
379 \end{equation}
380
381 The undulation spectrum is computed by superimposing a rectangular
382 grid on top of the membrane, and by assigning height ($h(\vec{r})$)
383 values to the grid from the average of all dipoles that fall within a
384 given $\vec{r}+d\vec{r}$ grid area. Empty grid pixels are assigned
385 height values by interpolation from the nearest neighbor pixels. A
386 standard 2-d Fourier transform is then used to obtain $\langle |
387 h(q)|^2 \rangle$. Alternatively, since the dipoles sit on a Bravais
388 lattice, one could use the heights of the lattice points themselves as
389 the grid for the Fourier transform (without interpolating to a square
390 grid). However, if lateral translational freedom is added to this
391 model (a likely extension), an interpolated grid method for computing
392 undulation spectra will be required.
393
394 As mentioned above, the best fits to our undulation spectra are
395 obtained by setting the value of $k_c$ to 0. In Fig. \ref{fig:fit} we
396 show typical undulation spectra for two different regions of the phase
397 diagram along with their fits from the Landau free energy approach
398 (Eq. \ref{eq:fit2}). In the high-temperature disordered phase, the
399 Landau fits can be nearly perfect, and from these fits we can estimate
400 the tension in the surface. In reduced units, typical values of
401 $\gamma^{*} = \gamma / \epsilon = 2500$ are obtained for the
402 disordered phase ($\gamma^{*} = 2551.7$ in the top panel of
403 Fig. \ref{fig:fit}).
404
405 Typical values of $\gamma^{*}$ in the dipolar-ordered phase are much
406 higher than in the dipolar-disordered phase ($\gamma^{*} = 73,538$ in
407 the lower panel of Fig. \ref{fig:fit}). For the dipolar-ordered
408 triangular lattice near the coexistence temperature, we also observe
409 long wavelength undulations that are far outliers to the fits. That
410 is, the Landau free energy fits are well within error bars for most of
411 the other points, but can be off by {\em orders of magnitude} for a
412 few low frequency components.
413
414 We interpret these outliers as evidence that these low frequency modes
415 are {\em non-thermal undulations}. We take this as evidence that we
416 are actually seeing a rippled phase developing in this model system.
417
418 \begin{figure}
419 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{logFit}
420 \caption{\label{fig:fit} Evidence that the observed ripples are {\em
421 not} thermal undulations is obtained from the 2-d Fourier transform
422 $\langle |h^{*}(\vec{q})|^2 \rangle$ of the height profile ($\langle
423 h^{*}(x,y) \rangle$). Rippled samples show low-wavelength peaks that
424 are outliers on the Landau free energy fits by an order of magnitude.
425 Samples exhibiting only thermal undulations fit Eq. \ref{eq:fit}
426 remarkably well.}
427 \end{figure}
428
429 \subsection{Effects of Potential Parameters on Amplitude and Wavelength}
430
431 We have used two different methods to estimate the amplitude and
432 periodicity of the ripples. The first method requires projection of
433 the ripples onto a one dimensional rippling axis. Since the rippling
434 is always perpendicular to the dipole director axis, we can define a
435 ripple vector as follows. The largest eigenvector, $s_1$, of the
436 $\mathsf{S}$ matrix in Eq. \ref{eq:opmatrix} is projected onto a
437 planar director axis,
438 \begin{equation}
439 \vec{d} = \left(\begin{array}{c}
440 \vec{s}_1 \cdot \hat{i} \\
441 \vec{s}_1 \cdot \hat{j} \\
442 0
443 \end{array} \right).
444 \end{equation}
445 ($\hat{i}$, $\hat{j}$ and $\hat{k}$ are unit vectors along the $x$,
446 $y$, and $z$ axes, respectively.) The rippling axis is in the plane of
447 the membrane and is perpendicular to the planar director axis,
448 \begin{equation}
449 \vec{q}_{\mathrm{rip}} = \vec{d} \times \hat{k}
450 \end{equation}
451 We can then find the height profile of the membrane along the ripple
452 axis by projecting heights of the dipoles to obtain a one-dimensional
453 height profile, $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$. Ripple wavelengths can be
454 estimated from the largest non-thermal low-frequency component in the
455 Fourier transform of $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$. Amplitudes can be
456 estimated by measuring peak-to-trough distances in
457 $h(q_{\mathrm{rip}})$ itself.
458
459 A second, more accurate, and simpler method for estimating ripple
460 shape is to extract the wavelength and height information directly
461 from the largest non-thermal peak in the undulation spectrum. For
462 large-amplitude ripples, the two methods give similar results. The
463 one-dimensional projection method is more prone to noise (particularly
464 in the amplitude estimates for the distorted lattices). We report
465 amplitudes and wavelengths taken directly from the undulation spectrum
466 below.
467
468 In the triangular lattice ($\gamma = \sqrt{3}$), the rippling is
469 observed for temperatures ($T^{*}$) from $61-122$. The wavelength of
470 the ripples is remarkably stable at 21.4~$\sigma$ for all but the
471 temperatures closest to the order-disorder transition. At $T^{*} =
472 122$, the wavelength drops to 17.1~$\sigma$.
473
474 The dependence of the amplitude on temperature is shown in the top
475 panel of Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}. The rippled structures shrink
476 smoothly as the temperature rises towards the order-disorder
477 transition. The wavelengths and amplitudes we observe are
478 surprisingly close to the $\Lambda / 2$ phase observed by Kaasgaard
479 {\it et al.} in their work on PC-based lipids.\cite{Kaasgaard03}
480 However, this is coincidental agreement based on a choice of 7~\AA~as
481 the mean spacing between lipids.
482
483 \begin{figure}
484 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{properties_sq}
485 \caption{\label{fig:Amplitude} a) The amplitude $A^{*}$ of the ripples
486 vs. temperature for a triangular lattice. b) The amplitude $A^{*}$ of
487 the ripples vs. dipole strength ($\mu^{*}$) for both the triangular
488 lattice (circles) and distorted lattice (squares). The reduced
489 temperatures were kept fixed at $T^{*} = 94$ for the triangular
490 lattice and $T^{*} = 106$ for the distorted lattice (approximately 2/3
491 of the order-disorder transition temperature for each lattice).}
492 \end{figure}
493
494 The ripples can be made to disappear by increasing the internal
495 elastic tension (i.e. by increasing $k_r$ or equivalently, reducing
496 the dipole moment). The amplitude of the ripples depends critically
497 on the strength of the dipole moments ($\mu^{*}$) in Eq. \ref{eq:pot}.
498 If the dipoles are weakened substantially (below $\mu^{*}$ = 20) at a
499 fixed temperature of 94, the membrane loses dipolar ordering
500 and the ripple structures. The ripples reach a peak amplitude of
501 3.7~$\sigma$ at a dipolar strength of 25. We show the dependence
502 of ripple amplitude on the dipolar strength in
503 Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}.
504
505 \subsection{Distorted lattices}
506
507 We have also investigated the effect of the lattice geometry by
508 changing the ratio of lattice constants ($\gamma$) while keeping the
509 average nearest-neighbor spacing constant. The anti-ferroelectric state
510 is accessible for all $\gamma$ values we have used, although the
511 distorted triangular lattices prefer a particular director axis due to
512 the anisotropy of the lattice.
513
514 Our observation of rippling behavior was not limited to the triangular
515 lattices. In distorted lattices the anti-ferroelectric phase can
516 develop nearly instantaneously in the Monte Carlo simulations, and
517 these dipolar-ordered phases tend to be remarkably flat. Whenever
518 rippling has been observed in these distorted lattices
519 (e.g. $\gamma = 1.875$), we see relatively short ripple wavelengths
520 (14 $\sigma$) and amplitudes of 2.4~$\sigma$. These ripples are
521 weakly dependent on dipolar strength (see Fig. \ref{fig:Amplitude}),
522 although below a dipolar strength of $\mu^{*} = 20$, the membrane
523 loses dipolar ordering and displays only thermal undulations.
524
525 The ripple phase does {\em not} appear at all values of $\gamma$. We
526 have only observed non-thermal undulations in the range $1.625 <
527 \gamma < 1.875$. Outside this range, the order-disorder transition in
528 the dipoles remains, but the ordered dipolar phase has only thermal
529 undulations. This is one of our strongest pieces of evidence that
530 rippling is a symmetry-breaking phenomenon for triangular and
531 nearly-triangular lattices.
532
533 \subsection{Effects of System Size}
534 To evaluate the effect of finite system size, we have performed a
535 series of simulations on the triangular lattice at a reduced
536 temperature of 122, which is just below the order-disorder transition
537 temperature ($T^{*} = 139$). These conditions are in the
538 dipole-ordered and rippled portion of the phase diagram. These are
539 also the conditions that should be most susceptible to system size
540 effects.
541
542 \begin{figure}
543 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{SystemSize}
544 \caption{\label{fig:systemsize} The ripple wavelength (top) and
545 amplitude (bottom) as a function of system size for a triangular
546 lattice ($\gamma=1.732$) at $T^{*} = 122$.}
547 \end{figure}
548
549 There is substantial dependence on system size for small (less than
550 29~$\sigma$) periodic boxes. Notably, there are resonances apparent
551 in the ripple amplitudes at box lengths of 17.3 and 29.5 $\sigma$.
552 For larger systems, the behavior of the ripples appears to have
553 stabilized and is on a trend to slightly smaller amplitudes (and
554 slightly longer wavelengths) than were observed from the 34.3 $\sigma$
555 box sizes that were used for most of the calculations.
556
557 It is interesting to note that system sizes which are multiples of the
558 default ripple wavelength can enhance the amplitude of the observed
559 ripples, but appears to have only a minor effect on the observed
560 wavelength. It would, of course, be better to use system sizes that
561 were many multiples of the ripple wavelength to be sure that the
562 periodic box is not driving the phenomenon, but at the largest system
563 size studied (70 $\sigma$ $\times$ 70 $\sigma$), the number of dipoles
564 (5440) made long Monte Carlo simulations prohibitively expensive.
565
566 \section{Discussion}
567 \label{sec:discussion}
568
569 We have been able to show that a simple dipolar lattice model which
570 contains only molecular packing (from the lattice), anisotropy (in the
571 form of electrostatic dipoles) and a weak elastic tension (in the form
572 of a nearest-neighbor harmonic potential) is capable of exhibiting
573 stable long-wavelength non-thermal surface corrugations. The best
574 explanation for this behavior is that the ability of the dipoles to
575 translate out of the plane of the membrane is enough to break the
576 symmetry of the triangular lattice and allow the energetic benefit
577 from the formation of a bulk anti-ferroelectric phase. Were the weak
578 elastic tension absent from our model, it would be possible for the
579 entire lattice to ``tilt'' using $z$-translation. Tilting the lattice
580 in this way would yield an effectively non-triangular lattice which
581 would avoid dipolar frustration altogether. With the elastic tension
582 in place, bulk tilt causes a large strain, and the least costly way to
583 release this strain is between two rows of anti-aligned dipoles.
584 These ``breaks'' will result in rippled or sawtooth patterns in the
585 membrane, and allow small stripes of membrane to form
586 anti-ferroelectric regions that are tilted relative to the averaged
587 membrane normal.
588
589 Although the dipole-dipole interaction is the major driving force for
590 the long range orientational ordered state, the formation of the
591 stable, smooth ripples is a result of the competition between the
592 elastic tension and the dipole-dipole interactions. This statement is
593 supported by the variation in $\mu^{*}$. Substantially weaker dipoles
594 relative to the surface tension can cause the corrugated phase to
595 disappear.
596
597 The packing of the dipoles into a nearly-triangular lattice is clearly
598 an important piece of the puzzle. The dipolar head groups of lipid
599 molecules are sterically (as well as electrostatically) anisotropic,
600 and would not pack in triangular arrangements without the steric
601 interference of adjacent molecular bodies. Since we only see rippled
602 phases in the neighborhood of $\gamma=\sqrt{3}$, this implies that
603 even if this dipolar mechanism is the correct explanation for the
604 ripple phase in realistic bilayers, there would still be a role played
605 by the lipid chains in the in-plane organization of the triangularly
606 ordered phases which could support ripples. The present model is
607 certainly not detailed enough to answer exactly what drives the
608 formation of the $P_{\beta'}$ phase in real lipids, but suggests some
609 avenues for further experiments.
610
611 The most important prediction we can make using the results from this
612 simple model is that if dipolar ordering is driving the surface
613 corrugation, the wave vectors for the ripples should always found to
614 be {\it perpendicular} to the dipole director axis. This prediction
615 should suggest experimental designs which test whether this is really
616 true in the phosphatidylcholine $P_{\beta'}$ phases. The dipole
617 director axis should also be easily computable for the all-atom and
618 coarse-grained simulations that have been published in the literature.
619
620 Our other observation about the ripple and dipolar directionality is
621 that the dipole director axis can be found to be parallel to any of
622 the three equivalent lattice vectors in the triangular lattice.
623 Defects in the ordering of the dipoles can cause the dipole director
624 (and consequently the surface corrugation) of small regions to be
625 rotated relative to each other by 120$^{\circ}$. This is a similar
626 behavior to the domain rotation seen in the AFM studies of Kaasgaard
627 {\it et al.}\cite{Kaasgaard03}
628
629 Although our model is simple, it exhibits some rich and unexpected
630 behaviors. It would clearly be a closer approximation to the reality
631 if we allowed greater translational freedom to the dipoles and
632 replaced the somewhat artificial lattice packing and the harmonic
633 elastic tension with more realistic molecular modeling potentials.
634 What we have done is to present a simple model which exhibits bulk
635 non-thermal corrugation, and our explanation of this rippling
636 phenomenon will help us design more accurate molecular models for
637 corrugated membranes and experiments to test whether rippling is
638 dipole-driven or not.
639
640 \begin{acknowledgments}
641 Support for this project was provided by the National Science
642 Foundation under grant CHE-0134881. The authors would like to thank
643 the reviewers for helpful comments.
644 \end{acknowledgments}
645
646 \bibliography{ripple}
647 \end{document}