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Abhinav Srivastava

Researcher at Indian Institute of Technology, Jodhpur

Publications -  6
Citations -  96

Abhinav Srivastava is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology, Jodhpur. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dynamical heterogeneity & Lipid bilayer. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 59 citations.

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Solvent Assisted Tuning of Morphology of a Peptide-Perylenediimide Conjugate: Helical Fibers to Nano-Rings and their Differential Semiconductivity

TL;DR: The self-assembly mechanism of a peptide-perylenediimide (P-1) conjugate in mixed solvent systems of THF/water is studied and the semiconducting properties are correlated with the morphology.
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Hydration dynamics of a lipid membrane: Hydrogen bond networks and lipid-lipid associations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the dynamics of hydration layers of a dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (DMPC) bilayer using an all atom molecular dynamics simulation.
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Heterogeneity in structure and dynamics of water near bilayers using TIP3P and TIP4P/2005 water models

TL;DR: In this article, the structure and dynamics of both lipids and water near membranes using simulations as in experiments is a challenging task, which is why it is difficult to capture structure and dynamic properties of both lipid and water.
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Quantification of spatio-temporal scales of dynamical heterogeneity of water near lipid membranes above supercooling

TL;DR: The analyses provide a measure towards the spatio-temporal scale of dynamical heterogeneity of confined water near membranes and the heterogeneity length-scale is comparable to the wave-length of the small and weak undulations of the membrane calculated by Fourier transforms of lipid tilts.
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Dynamic coupling of a hydration layer to a fluid phospholipid membrane: intermittency and multiple time-scale relaxations

TL;DR: Spatially resolved interface water dynamics can act as a sensitive reflector of regional membrane dynamics occurring at sub ps to hundreds of ps time-scales for several important biological functions at physiological temperature in the future.