Dr. ir. B. (Bernd) Ensing

Associate professor, van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences
Director of the AI4Science Laboratory

Why does solid ice float on liquid water? Why are some batteries rechargeable and others not? How can plants turn their leaves to the sun? The remarkable behaviour of materials somehow emerges from their smallest constituents, the molecules, atoms, and electrons. But how this comes about is often shrouded in mystery and difficult to probe with experiments. Computer simulations and quantum chemical models are powerful tools to visualize the motions of the smallest particles, provide an interpretation to the experimental observations, and improve chemical and physical theories. Fundamental understanding of the dynamics of the microscopic details and how they yield the macroscopic properties is essential, for example to design better electro-catalysts to make sustainable fuels or capture CO2, to improve the performance of biodegradable plastics, and to develop specific drugs against diseases, to name but a few fields of application.

We use molecular simulations to answer fundamental questions on reaction mechanisms, properties of materials, and emergent behaviour in various (bio-) systems. We employ accurate quantum chemistry (DFT) based molecular dynamics simulations to study electron transfer and chemical reactivity, but also atomistic and coarse-grained forcefield simulations to investigate liquids, biomolecules, and soft materials on a larger scale. Recent research topics include (1) understanding the superior activity of hydrogenase enzymes compared to biomimetic catalysts for hydrogen fuel production, and subsequent development of catalyst design rules, (2) improving models for electro-catalytic water splitting, (3) understanding solvent behaviour in electron and proton transfer reactions, and (4) unravelling the photo-activation mechanism of light-sensing proteins.

Our arsenal of modelling tools includes a range of powerful algorithms and software that have been developed in the group throughout the years. Examples are PathCV and PathMap techniques to determine reaction mechanisms and compute reaction free energy landscapes, Hybrid-MD for adaptive resolution simulations, the Proton-Tracker-CV to model proton conductivity and determine acidity constants, and the FABULOUS method for finding reaction coordinates. Since recent years, we take advantage of machine learning developments that we adapt and exploit for data analysis (e.g. in FABULOUS) and surrogate modelling. 

Research interests

Catalytic complexes based on the active center of the di-iron hydrogenase enzyme are also able to convert protons into hydrogen fuel. DFT-MD simulations show that the enzymatic process can use two mechanisms, depending on the pH.

Bio-inspired catalysts for sustainable fuels and materials

Chemists have a central role in making our society sustainable and building a circular economy. Producing sustainable fuels, storing wind and solar energy, capturing CO2, and fixing nitrogen are all chemical processes that require better (electro-) catalysts. We use molecular simulations to learn design rules for new catalysts from natures most efficient enzymes.

Further reading:

Free energy landscape showing the reaction pathways (red arrows) of the competing E2 (upwards path) and SN2 (right to left) reaction channels of CH3CH2F and F. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., USA 102 , 6755 – 6759 (2005).

Path-metadynamics and PathMaps for free energy landscape exploration

We develop and apply enhanced sampling algorithms and software to simulate activated molecular processes that take place on long time scales, so-called rare events. Path-metadynamics, for example, is a technique to compute the reaction pathway and the free energy profile of chemical reactions, conformational transitions in biomolecules, etc. We develop machine learning algorithms to analyse complex transitions.

Further reading:

Hybrid atomistic/coarse-grain simulation is a multi-scale method that partitions the system in a specific region in atomistic detail and a surrounding environment in a reduced molecular representation. As particles can diffuse between the coarse-grain and atomistic regions, their resolution should adapt on the fly. This involves introducing atomistic degrees of freedom into the CG particles, which is a challenging problem known as reverse mapping.

Multiscale modeling of soft advanced materials

Soft materials, such as biopolymers, coatings, polyelectrolytes, and fibres, display fascinating behavior at micro, meso, and macroscopic time and length scales. Polymers that adapt to external stimuli, known as smart materials, can be used in sensors or actuators. We use atomistic and coarse-grained simulations to model the behaviour of polymers and polymer surfaces and study how polymer systems can be tailored with tunable functionalities, such as durability, anti-fouling, self-healing, or biodegradability. We develop hybrid atomistic/coarse-grain simulation techniques to model large systems in chemical detail.

Further reading:

DFT-based molecular dynamics simulation of spontaneous electron transfer between two metal ions in water solvent.

Electron and proton transfer in solution

Protons and electrons are very light particles that can move with a high velocity, but in practice their transfer kinetics is strongly affected by the medium, which can e.g. be a solvent, a protein assembly, or an electrode-electrolyte interface. The conductivity in a solvent is governed by the solvent fluctuations. Confinement of the solvent in one or more dimensions affects the transfer mechanism. The solvent reorganization free energy is an important part of both the redox potential and the acidity constants of acceptor solutes.

Further reading

The Photoactive Yellow Protein (PYP) binds a coumarin acid that functions as the chromophore. When the chromophore absorbs a blue light photon (1), it undergoes a cis-trans isomerization (2), which triggers a proton transfer (3) and a rearrangement of the local hydrogen-bond network. This leads to the unfolding of a helix (4) and the subsequent opening and solvent exposure of the photoactive site, which characterises the PYP signalling state.

Signal transduction in photoactive proteins

All organisms have sensor proteins that allow them to respond to changes in their environment. These proteins can sense for example pressure, temperature, or chemical compounds and they are grouped in protein families that share similar structures (or folds) and can bind to similar output domains. Light sensing proteins are particularly interesting for studying their mechanisms, because they can be triggered with a flash of laser light and then probed for internal changes. Using enhanced DFT (QM), forcefield (MM), and mixed QM/MM simulations, we see how such photoactive proteins undergo chemical and conformational changes when exposed to light. Our simulations help with interpreting spectroscopic experiments and with understanding for example why some protein family members have much longer signalling times than others.

Further reading

PhD thesis Bernd Ensing
PhD thesis on the solvent effects on several organic reactions and transition metal catalyzed oxidation reactions (Fenton chemistry) in water, using Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations. Download PDF

Publications

2024

94) Learning Neural Free-Energy Functionals with Pair-Correlation Matching.
Jacobus Dijkman, Marjolein Dijkstra, René van Roij, Max Welling, Jan-Willem van de Meent, and Bernd Ensing
arXiv [cond-mat.soft] 2403.15007 (2024)

93) Redox Properties of Flavin in BLUF and LOV Photoreceptor Proteins from Hybrid QM/MM Molecular Dynamics Simulation.
Murat Kılıç and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. B accepted,   (2024)
Open-access preprint: ChemRxiv. Cambridge  (2023)

92) Enhancing LC×LC separations through multi-task Bayesian optimization.
Jim Boelrijk, Stef R.A. Molenaar, Tijmen S. Bos, Tina A. Dahlseid, Bernd Ensing, Dwight R. Stoll, Patrick Forré, and Bob W.J. Pirok
ChemRxiv. Cambridge 10.26434/chemrxiv-2024-5mmvj (2024)

2023

91) Stochastic Optimal Control for Collective Variable Free Sampling of Molecular Transition Paths.
Lars Holdijk, Yuanqi Du, Ferry Hooft, Priyank Jaini, Bernd Ensing, and Max Welling
Thirty-seventh Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) (2023)
Open-access preprint: arXiv: 2207.02149 (2022)

90) Predicting RP-LC retention indices of structurally unknown chemicals from mass spectrometry data.
Jim Boelrijk, Denice van Herwerden, Saer Samanipour, Bernd Ensing, and Patrick Forré
J. Cheminform. 15, 28 (2023)
Open-access preprint: ChemRxiv. Cambridge  (2022)

89) Free energies of the Gln tautomerization and rotation mechanism of dark-state recovery in blue light-using flavin proteins.
Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Carme Rovira, and Bernd Ensing
bioRxiv: 10.1101/2023.08.11.551373 (2023)

88) Simulation of solid-state phase transition in DL-methionine.
Saba Ghasemlou, Bernd Ensing, and Herma M. Cuppen
CrystEngComm 25, 3618 – 3627 (2023)

87) Closed-loop automatic gradient design for liquid chromatography using Bayesian optimization.
Jim Boelrijk, Bernd Ensing, Patrick Forré, and Bob Pirok
Analytica Chimica Acta 1242, 340789 (2023)
Open-access preprint: ChemRxiv. Cambridge  (2022)

2022

86) Multi-objective optimization via equivariant deep hypervolume approximation.
Jim Boelrijk, Bernd Ensing, and Patrick Forré
ICLR, The Eleventh International Conference on Learning Representations (2023)
Open-access preprint: arXiv: 2210.02177 (2022)

85) Chemometric strategies for fully automated interpretive method development in liquid chromatography.
Tijmen Bos, Jim Boelrijk, Stef Molenaar, Brian van ‘t Veer, Leon Niezen, Denice van Herwerden, Saer Samanipour, Dwight Stoll, Patrick Forré, Bernd Ensing, Govert Somsen, and Bob Pirok
Anal. Chem. 94 16060 – 16068 (2022)
Open-access preprint: ChemRxiv. Cambridge  (2022)

84) Sequence dependence of transient Hoogsteen base pairing in DNA.
A. Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Jocelyne Vreede, and B. Ensing
PLOS Comp. Biol. 18, e1010113 (2022)

83) Fast proton transport in FeFe hydrogenase via a flexible channel and a proton hole mechanism.
Rakesh Puthenkalathil and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. B 126, 403 – 411 (2021)

2021

82) Linear scaling relationships to predict pKa’s and reduction potentials for bio-inspired hydrogenase catalysis.
Rakesh Puthenkalathil and Bernd Ensing
Inorg. Chem. 61, 113 – 120 (2021)

81) Simultaneous sampling of multiple transition channels using adaptive paths of collective variables.
Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz and Bernd Ensing
arXiv [cond-mat.stat-mech] 2112.04061 (2021)

80) Bayesian Optimization of Comprehensive Two-dimensional Liquid Chromatography Separations.
Jim Boelrijk, Bob Pirok, Bernd Ensing, and Patrick Forré
J. Chromatogr. A 1659, 462628 (2021)

79) Computational study of electron transport in [FeFe] hydrogenase enzymes.
Rakesh Puthenkalathil and Bernd Ensing
ChemRxiv. Cambridge (2021)

78) QM/MM study of proton transport process in [FeFe] hydrogenase enzyme.
Rakesh Puthenkalathil and Bernd Ensing
ChemRxiv. Cambridge  (2021)

77) Sequence dependence of transient Hoogsteen base-pairing in DNA.
Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Jocelyne Vreede and Bernd Ensing
bioRxiv preprint 2021.08.04.454872 (2021)

76) Discovering collective variables of molecular transitions via genetic algorithms and neural networks.
Ferry Hooft, Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, and Bernd Ensing
J. Chem. Theory Comput. 17, 2294 – 2306 (2021)

75) Strong reduction of the chain rigidity of hyaluronan by selective binding of Ca2+ ions.
G. Giubertoni, A. Pérez de Alba Ortíz, F. Bano, D. Green, P. DeAngelis, G.H. Koenderink, R. Richter, B. Ensing, and H.J. Bakker
Macromolecules 54, 1137 – 1146 (2021)

2020

74) Frontiers in Multiscale Modelling of Photoreceptor Proteins.
Maria-Andrea Mroginski et al.
Photochem. Photobiol. 97, 243 – 269 (2020)

73) Hydration interactions beyond the first solvation shell in aqueous phenolate solution.
Roberto Cota, Ambuj Tiwari, Bernd Ensing, Huib J. Bakker, and Sander Woutersen
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 22 , 19940 – 19947 (2020)

72) Mechanistic Insight into the Hydrogen Activation by Frustrated Lewis Pairs.
Mojgan Heshmat, Lei Liu, and Bernd Ensing
Book chapter in Frustrated Lewis Pairs, Book series: Molecular Catalysis, J.C. Slootweg and A. Jupp. (eds), Springer International Publishing (2021), 167 – 208 

71) Optimizing the Energetics of FLP-Type H2 Activation by Modulating Electronic and Structural Properties of the Lewis Acids: A DFT Study.
Mojgan Heshmat and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. A 124 , 6399 – 6410 (2020)

70) Peptide side-COOH groups have two distinct conformations under bio-relevant conditions.
Oleksandr Sofronov, Giulia Giubertoni, Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Bernd Ensing, Huib Bakker
J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 11 , 3466 – 3472 (2020)

69) Unraveling the mechanism of biomimetic hydrogen fuel production – A first principles molecular dynamics study.
Rakesh C. Puthenkalathil, Mihajlo Etinski, and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 22, 10447 – 10454 (2020)

68) A DFT study of structure and electrochemical properties of diiron-hydrogenase models with benzenedithiolato and benzenediselenato ligands.
Mihajlo Etinski, Ivana M. Stankovic, Rakesh C. Puthenkalathil, and Bernd Ensing
New J. Chem. 44, 932 – 941 (2020)

2019

67) Accurate calculation of zero point energy from molecular dynamics simulations of liquids and their mixtures.
Ambuj Tiwari, Coen Honingh, and Bernd Ensing
J. Chem. Phys. 151, 244124 (2019)

66) Microscopic Picture of the Solvent Reorganization During Electron Transfer to Flavin in Water.
Murat Kılıç and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. B 123, 9751 – 9761 (2019)

65) The PLUMED consortium: A community effort to promote openness, transparency and reproducibility in molecular simulations.
The PLUMED consortium*
Nature Methods 16, 670 – 673 (2019)

64) On the origin of the extremely different solubilities of polyethers in water.
Bernd Ensing, Martijn Tros, Ambuj Tiwari, Johannes Hunger, Sergio Rosa Domingos, Christobal Perez, Gertien Smits, Mischa Bonn, Daniel Bonn, and Sander Woutersen
Nature Communications 10, 2893 (2019)

63) Cooperative Role of Water Molecules During the Initial Stage of Water-induced Zeolite Dealumination.
Katarina Stanciakova, Bernd Ensing, Florian Gӧltl, Rosa Bulo, and Bert Weckhuysen
ACS Catalysis 9, 5119 – 5135 (2019)

62) Double Helical Conformation and Extreme Rigidity in a Rodlike Polyelectrolyte.
Ying Wang, Yadong He, Zhou Yu, Jianwei Gao, Stephanie T. Brinck, Carla Slebodnick, Gregory B. Fahs, Curt J. Zanelotti, Maruti Hegde, Robert B. Moore, Bernd Ensing, Theo J. Dingemans, Rui Qiao, and Louis A. Madsen
Nature Communications 10, 801 (2019)

61) Reaction Mechanism of Hydrogen Activation by Frustrated Lewis Pairs.
Lei Liu, Binit Lukose, Pablo Jaque, Bernd Ensing
Green Energy & Environment 4, 20 – 28 (2019)

60) The Adaptive Path Collective Variable: A Versatile Biasing Approach to Compute the Average Transition Path and Free Energy of Molecular Transitions.
Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Jocelyne Vreede, Bernd Ensing
Book chapter in Biomolecular Simulations. Methods in Molecular Biology, Bonomi M., Camilloni C. (eds), Humana, New York, NY 2022 (2019), 255 – 290

2018

59) The Puzzle of the Intramolecular Hydrogen Bond of Dibenzoylmethane Resolved by Molecular Dynamics Simulations.
Mihajlo Etinski and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. A 122, 5945 – 5954 (2018)

58) Advances in enhanced sampling along adaptive paths of collective variables.
Alberto Pérez de Alba Ortíz, Ambuj Tiwari, Rakesh C. Puthenkalathil, and Bernd Ensing
J. Chem. Phys. 149, 072320 (2018)

57) Mechanisms behind the enhancement of thermal properties of graphene nanofluids.
Maria del Rocio Rodríguez-Laguna, Alejandro Castro-Alvarez, Marinanna Sledzinska, Jeremie Maire, Francesca Costanzo, Bernd Ensing, Miguel Pruneda, Pablo Ordejón, Clivia M. Sotomayor Torres, Pedro Gómez-Romero and Emigdio Chávez-Ángel
Nanoscale 10, 15402 – 15409 (2018)

56) Impact of Ligand Flexibility and Solvent on the O-O bond formation step in a highly active Ru Water Oxidation Catalyst.
Nitish Govindarajan, Ambuj Tiwari, Bernd Ensing, and Evert Jan Meijer
Communication in Inorg. Chem. 57, 13063 – 13066 (2018)

55) A liquid-liquid transition in supercooled aqueous solution related to the HDA-LDA transition.
Sander Woutersen, Bernd Ensing, Michiel Hilbers, Zuofeng Zhao, and C. Austen Angell
Science 359, 1127-1131 (2018)

54) A free energy landscape of CO2 capture by frustrated Lewis pairs.
Lei Liu, Binit Lukose, and Bernd Ensing
ACS Catalysis 8, 3376-3381 (2018)

53) Designing effective solid catalysts for biomass conversion: Aerobic oxidation of ethyl lactate to ethyl pyruvate.
Wei Zhang, Bernd Ensing, Gadi Rothenberg and Raveendran N Shiju
Advance Article in Green Chemistry 20, 1866-1873 (2018)

52) Highly selective oxidation of ethyl lactate to ethyl pyruvate catalysed by mesoporous vanadia–titania.
Wei Zhang, Giada Innocenti, Paula Oulego, Vitaly Gitis, Hai-Hong Wu; Bernd Ensing, Fabrizio Cavani, Gadi Rothenberg, N. Raveendran Shiju
ACS Catalysis 8, 2365–2374 (2018)

2017

51) Hydrogen activation by frustrated Lewis pairs revisited by metadynamics simulations.
Lei Liu, Binit Lukose and Bernd Ensing
J. Phys. Chem. C 121, 2046 – 2051 (2017)

2016

50) Reactive trajectories of the Ru2+/3+ self-exchange reaction and the connection to Marcus’ theory.
Ambuj Tiwari and Bernd Ensing
Cover article in Faraday Discuss. 195, 291 – 310 (2016)

49) Acidity constant (pKa) calculation of large solvated dye molecules: evaluation of two advanced molecular dynamics methods.
Thierry De Meyer, Bernd Ensing, Sven M. J. Rogge, Karen De Clerck, Evert Jan Meijer and Veronique Van Speybroeck
ChemPhysChem 17, 3447 – 3459 (2016)

48) Energy barriers and mechanisms in solid-solid polymorphic transitions exhibiting cooperative motion.
Joost A. van den Ende, Bernd Ensing, and Herma M. Cuppen
CrystEngComm 18, 4420-4430 (2016)

47) Insight in the effect of water on the methanol-to-olefins conversion in H-SAPO-34 from molecular simulations and in-situ micro-spectroscopy.
Kristof De Wispelaere, Caterina S. Wondergem, Bernd Ensing, Karen Hemelsoet, Evert Jan Meijer, Bert M. Weckhuysen, Veronique Van Speybroeck, and Javier Ruiz-Martínez
ACS Catalysis 6, 1991-2002 (2016)

2015

46) On the slowdown mechanism of water dynamics around small amphiphiles.
Wagner H. Brandeburgo, Sietse T. van der Post, Evert Jan Meijer, and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 17, 24968 – 24977 (2015)

45) Complex reaction environments and competing reaction mechanisms in zeolite catalysis: insights from advanced molecular dynamics.
Kristof De Wispelaere, Bernd Ensing, An Ghysels, Evert Jan Meijer, and Veronique Van Speybroeck
Chem. Eur. J. 21, 9385 – 9396 (2015)

44) Do solid-to-solid polymorphic transitions in DL-norleucine proceed through nucleation?
Joost A. van den Ende, Mireille M. H. Smets, Daniël T. de Jong, Sander J. T. Brugman, Bernd Ensing, Paul T. Tinnemans, Hugo Meekes, and Herma M. Cuppen
Faraday Discuss. 179, 421 – 436 (2015)

43) Understanding DABCO nanorotor dynamics in isostructural metal-organic frameworks.
Nicholas Burtch, Ariana Torres-Knoop, Guo Shiou Foo, Johannes Leisen, Carsten Sievers, Bernd Ensing, David Dubbeldam, Krista Walton
J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 6, 812 – 816 (2015)

2014

42) Local orientational ordering in liquids revealed by resonant vibrational energy transfer.
Matthijs R. Panman, Daniel J. Shaw, Bernd Ensing, and Sander Woutersen
Phys. Rev. Lett. 113,  (2014), 207801

41) Acidity constants of lumiflavin from first principles molecular dynamics simulations.
Murat Kılıç and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 16,  (2014), 18993 – 19000

40) Interaction of H2 with a double walled armchair nanotube by first principles calculations.
Francesca Costanzo, Bernd Ensing, Roberto Scipioni, Francesco Ancilotto, and Pier Luigi Silvestrelli
J. Phys. Chem. C 118, 15816 – 15824 (2014)

39) Comment on Communication: Benzene dimer – The free energy landscape [J. Chem. Phys. 139, 201102 (2013)].
Ad van der Avoird, Rafal Podeszwa, Bernd Ensing and Krzysztof Szalewicz
J. Chem. Phys. 140, 227101 (2014)

2013

38) First and second one-electron reduction of lumiflavin in water – A first principles molecular dynamics study.
Murat Kılıç and Bernd Ensing
J. Chem. Theory Comput. 9, 3889 – 3899 (2013)

37) On the “tertiary Structure” of poly-Carbenes; self-assembly of sp3-carbon based polymers into liquid-crystalline aggregates.
Nicole M. G. Franssen, Bernd Ensing, Maruti Hegde, Theo Dingemans, Ben Norder, Stephen J. Picken, Gert O. R. Alberda van Ekenstein, Ernst van Eck, Johannes A. A. W. Elemans, Mark Vis, Joost N. H. Reek and Bas de Bruin
Cover article in Chem. Eur. J. 19, 11577 – 11589 (2013)

36) Hamiltonian adaptive hybrid atomistic/coarse-grain molecular dynamics.
Bernd Ensing, Alessandro Laio, and Steven O. Nielsen
Publication series of the John von Neumann Institute for Computing 46, 95 – 110 (2013)

2012

35) On the polarity of buckminsterfullerene with a water molecule inside.
Bernd Ensing, Francesca Costanzo, and Pier Luigi Silvestrelli
J. Phys. Chem. A 116, 12184 – 12188 (2012)

34) Path finding on high-dimensional free energy landscapes.
Grisell Díaz Leines and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 020601 (2012)

2011

33) Quantitative assessment of force fields on both low-energy conformational basins and transition-state regions of the (φ, ψ) space.
Zhiwei Liu, Bernd Ensing, and Preston B. Moore
J. Chem. Theory. Comput. 7, 402 – 419 (2011)

32) A Reply to the Comment by M. Praprotnik et al.
Steven O. Nielsen, Preston B. Moore, Bernd Ensing
Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 099802 (2011)

2010

31) Recent progress in multiscale molecular dynamics simulation of soft matter.
Steven O. Nielsen, Rosa E. Bulo, Preston B. Moore, Bernd Ensing
Invited Perspective and cover article Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 12, 12401 – 12412 (2010)

30) Adaptive multiscale molecular dynamics of macromolecular fluids.
Steven O. Nielsen, Preston B. Moore, and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 237802 (2010)

29) Smooth capping of short-range repulsive forces in hybrid atomistic/coarse-grain molecular dynamics simulation.
Bernd Ensing
Proceedings of Multiscale Materials Modeling 5, 47 – 53 (2010)

28) Non-linear reaction coordinate analysis in the reweighted path ensemble.
Wolfgang Lechner, Jutta Rogal, Jarek Juraszek, Bernd Ensing, and Peter Bolhuis
J. Chem. Phys. 133, 174110 (2010)

27) The reweighted path ensemble.
Jutta Rogal, Wolfgang Lechner, Jarek Juraszek, Bernd Ensing, and Peter Bolhuis
J. Chem. Phys. 133, 174109 (2010)

26) Multiscale molecular dynamics and the reverse mapping problem.
Bernd Ensing and Steven O. Nielsen
Book chapter in Trends in Computational Nanomechanics (Challenges and Advances in Computational Chemistry and Physics, Volume 9) edited by T. Dumitrica (Springer, 2010), p. 25 – 60

25) Hydrolysis of cisplatin – a first-principles metadyamics study.
Justin Kai-Chi Lau and Bernd Ensing
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 12, 10348-10355 (2010)

24) A simple coarse-grained model for self-assembling silk-like protein fibers.
Marieke Schor, Bernd Ensing, and Peter G. Bolhuis
Faraday Discuss. 144, 127-141 (2010)

2009

23) Toward a practical method for adaptive QM/MM simulations.
Rosa E. Bulo, Bernd Ensing, Jetze Sikkema, and Lucas Visscher
J. Chem. Theory Comput. 5, 2212 – 2221 (2009)

2007

22) Energy conservation in adaptive hybrid atomistic/coarse-grain molecular dynamics.
Bernd Ensing, Steven O. Nielsen, Preston B. Moore, Michael L. Klein, and Michele Parrinello
J. Chem. Theory Comput. 3, 1100 – 1105 (2009)

21) Proton shuttles and phosphatase activity in soluble epoxide hydrolase.
Marco De Vivo, Bernd Ensing, Matteo Dal Peraro, German A. Gomez, David W. Christianson, and Michael L. Klein
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 129, 387 – 394 (2007)

20) Coarse grained-to-atomistic mapping algorithm: a tool for multiscale simulations.
Steven O. Nielsen, Bernd Ensing, Preston B. Moore, and Michael L. Klein
Book chapter in Multiscale Simulation Methods for Nanomaterials, R. B. Ross and S. Mohanty, Editors. 2007, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, USA

2006

19) Self-assembling cyclic peptides: molecular dynamics studies of dimers in polar and nonpolar solvents.
Ekta Khurana, Steven O. Nielsen, Bernd Ensing, and Michael L. Klein
J. Phys. Chem. B 110, 18965 – 18972 (2006)

18) Formamide hydrolysis in alkaline aqueous solution: Insights from ab-initio metadynamics calculations.
Jochen Blumberger, Bernd Ensing, and Michael L. Klein
Communication in Angewandte Chemie Int. Edit. 45, 2893 – 2897 (2006)

17) Metadynamics as a tool for exploring the free energy landscape of chemical reactions.
Bernd Ensing, Marco De Vivo, Zhiwei Liu, Preston Moore, and Michael L. Klein
Acc. Chem. Res. 39, 73 – 81 (2006)

2005

16) Perspective on the reactions between F- and CH3CH2F: the free energy landscape of the E2 and SN2 reaction channels.
Bernd Ensing and Michael L. Klein
Cover article in Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 102, 6755 – 6759 (2005)

15) A recipe for the computation of the free energy barrier and lowest free energy path of concerted reactions.
Bernd Ensing, Alessandro Laio, Michele Parrinello and Michael L. Klein
J. Phys. Chem. B 109, 6676 – 6687 (2005)

14) Lipid bilayer perturbations around a transmembrane nanotube: a coarse grain molecular dynamics study.
Steve O. Nielsen, Bernd Ensing, Vanessa Ortiz, Preston B. Moore, and Michael L. Klein
Cover article in Biophys. J. 88, 3822 – 3828 (2005)

13) Structure and dynamics of model pore insertion into a membrane.
Carlos F. Lopez, Steve O. Nielsen, Bernd Ensing, Preston B. Moore, and Michael L. Klein
Cover article in Biophys. J. 88, 3083 – 3094 (2005)

2004

12) Computational study of phosphatase activity in soluble epoxide hydrolase: high efficiency through a water bridge mediated proton shuttle.
Marco De Vivo, Bernd Ensing, and Michael L. Klein
Communication in J. Am. Chem. Soc. 127, 11226 – 11227 (2004)

11) A minimum free energy reaction path for the E2 reaction between fluoro ethane and a fluoride ion.
Bernd Ensing, Alessandro Laio, Francesco L. Gervasio, Michele Parrinello, and Michael L. Klein
Communication in J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126, 9492 – 9493 (2004)

10) Methane to methanol oxidation by the hydrated iron(IV)oxo species in aqueous solution; a combined DFT and Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics study.
Bernd Ensing, Francesco Buda, Michiel C.M. Gribnau, and Evert Jan Baerends
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126, 4355 – 4365 (2004)

2003

9) O-2 evolution in the Fenton reaction.
Francesco Buda, Bernd Ensing, Michiel C.M. Gribnau, and Evert Jan Baerends
Chem.Eur. J. 9, 3436 – 3444 (2003)

8) Fenton-like chemistry in water: Oxidation catalysis by Fe(III) and H2O2.
Bernd Ensing, Francesco Buda, and Evert Jan Baerends
J. Phys. Chem. A. 107, 5722 – 5731 (2003)

2002

7) Reaction path sampling of the reaction between iron(II) and hydrogen peroxide in aqueous solution.
Bernd Ensing and Evert Jan Baerends
J. Phys. Chem. A. 106, 7902 – 7910 (2002)

6) A Car-Parrinello study of the formation of oxidizing intermediates from Fentons reagent in aqueous solution.
Bernd Ensing, Francesco Buda, Peter E. Bloechl, and Evert Jan Baerends
Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 4, 3619 – 3627 (2002)

2001

5) Chemical involvement of solvent water molecules in elementary steps of the Fenton oxidation reaction.
Bernd Ensing, Francesco Buda, Peter E. Bloechl, and Evert Jan Baerends
Communication in Angewandte Chemie Int. Edit. 40, 2893 – 2895 (2001)

4) DFT study of the active intermediate in the Fenton reaction.
Francesco Buda, Bernd Ensing, Michiel C.M. Gribnau, and Evert Jan Baerends
Chem. Eur. J. 7, 2775 – 2783 (2001)

3) Solvation effects on the SN2 reaction between CH3Cl and Cl- in water.
Bernd Ensing, Evert Jan Meijer, Peter E. Bloechl, and Evert Jan Baerends
J. Phys. Chem. A 105, 3300 – 3310 (2001)

2000

2) Comparison of the accurate Kohn-Sham solution with the generalized gradient approximations (GGAs) for the SN2 reaction F- + CH3F -> FCH3 + F-: A qualitative rule to predict success or failure of GGAs.
Oleg V. Gritsenko, Bernd Ensing, Pieter R.T. Schipper, and Evert Jan Baerends
J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 8558 – 8565 (2000)

1998

1) A combined molecular dynamics-ab initio study of hydrogen molecule adsorption on ideal, relaxed and temperature-reconstructed MgO (111) surfaces.
Micael Baudin, Kersti Hermansson, Bernd Ensing, Maria Alfredsson, and Mark Wojcik
J. Chem. Phys. 109, 7515 – 7521 (1998)

Student research projects

If you are a UvA/VU bachelor or master student and you are interested in doing your research project in our group, please feel free to contact us for possibilities. We have almost always student projects ready related to the ongoing research lines in the group (see for examples the Research Interests above). If you like to work on machine learning and/or simulation method development, then a basic programming knowledge is definitely a pre. If you like to work on DFT-MD simulations of catalysis, electrochemistry, or enzymatic chemistry, then a good understanding of quantum chemistry is needed. In general, projects involving (classical) MD require an adequate grasp of thermodynamics and/or statistical mechanics.

Contact any of the group members:

Group photos

In the news

  • March 2019
    Highlights in Science Daily and in Phys.org about our discovery with Lou Madsen and co-workers of the double helix structure in a synthetic macromolecule. Also MRS Bulletin published a news article about our work.
  • 28 July 2013
    Highlight in ChemViews Magazine on our paper about sp3-Carbon-Based Liquid Crystals
    [Chem. Eur. J. 19 (2013), 11577]. Our computer simulations showed that syndiotactic polycarbene polymers self-assemble into triple-helix structures, which explains the surprising liquid-crystal behavior of this unique material.

Biography

Bernd Ensing is a computational chemist who works on molecular modeling algorithms to simulate and understand material behavior and (bio-) molecular processes. He is associate professor at the University of Amsterdam, director of the AI4Science Laboratory, and member of the Amsterdam Center for Multiscale Modeling. After his chemical engineering degree at the Technical University of Twente, Ensing received in 2003 his PhD in theoretical chemistry in the group of Prof. Baerends at the VU University Amsterdam and held subsequently postdoctoral positions in the groups of Prof. Klein at the University of Pennsylvania and Prof. Parrinello at the ETHZ. His current research interests include electro- and bio-mimetic catalysts for renewable fuels, enzyme and photoreceptor proteins, and multiscale behavior in soft matter systems.

AI4Science Laboratory

The AI4Science Laboratory is an interdisciplinary research group working on artificial intelligence and machine learning applied to all sorts of scientific research. The group is located in the LAB42 building and is connected to the different institutes of the Faculty of Science. Take a look at the AI4Science activities at the AI4science website.

Software

Our group develops various algorithms and computational tools to carry out advanced molecular simulations and to analyse simulation results. When we feel that a software implementation can be useful to others (and has some minimal stability, user-friendliness, and documentation), we have the habit to make it freely available to the community via our GitHub website.

Contact

Contact
Science Park Room C2.223 (address details)
Orcid page
0000-0002-4913-3571
Google Scholar
scholar.google.nl/BerndEnsing
Mastodon
@mstdn.science/@BerndEnsing
Twitter
twitter.com/BerndEnsing
Github
github.com/Ensing-Laboratory