
Mark ThachukAssociate Professor
Office: Wesbrook 20
Office Phone: (604) 822-2448
Lab(s): Wesbrook 14
Lab Phone(s): (604) 822-4876
FAX: (604) 822-2847
Email: thachuk@chem.ubc.ca
Curriculum Vitae: B. Sc., Western Ontario (1986); Ph.D., Waterloo (F.R.W. McCourt, 1991); Postdoctoral, Northwestern (G.C. Schatz, 1991-1993) and Queen's, Kingston (D.M. Wardlaw, 1993-1996).
Theoretical:
Scattering theory; mathematical and computer simulation of gas phase molecular reaction dynamics, dynamics in complex systems.
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Research/Teaching Interests
My research interests involve the study of the dynamics of chemical
reactions/processes using mathematical and computational techniques. Currently, there are two main themes in my research group: studying collision-induced alignment of gas-phase ions, and examining the dissociation mechanism for gas-phase protein complexes
Collision-Induced Alignment
When ions or molecules move through a gas preferentially in one direction, they
develop a preferred alignment. This motion can be induced by putting a charged
ion in a bath gas with an external electric field, or by expanding a seed
molecule in a molecular beam expansion, or even by injecting gas phase ions
with high velocities directly into a bath gas. My group uses molecular dynamics
simulations to model these kinds of experiments, with the goal of understanding
the underlying mechanism for collision-induced alignment, and its dependence
upon molecular parameters, such as charge and mass distribution.
Current projects include studying collision-induced alignment in non-linear ions, and determining whether this mechanism can be used to produce experimentally-tuned and isolated aligned
molecules in the gas phase. In a similar vein, we are also examining the
transition in the description of diffusion and mobility on moving from a
Boltzmann regime (in which only uncorrelated binary collisions are important)
to a hydrodynamic regime.
Dissocation of Gas-Phase Protein Complexes
Recent experiments examining the dissocation of non-covalent, gas-phase
protein complex ions have discovered that under certain conditions, charge
asymmetry can occur in the fragment ions. For example, a dimer of cytochrome c
with a charge of 11+ yields predominantly on dissociation monomers with charges
of 8+ and 3+ rather than the more symmetric 6+ and 5+ combination. It has been
proposed that in the dissociation mechanism, one of the monomers in the complex
unfolds, and this leads to the charge asymmetry. One active project involves
using molecular dynamics simulations to examine this dissociation mechanism.
Beyond this though, we would like to develop simple models to treat this
phenomenon, including extending reaction path models, and/or coarse-graining
techniques to treat complex systems. One would like to capture the essential
physics of this process without resorting to atomistic level simulations.
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