Chirality Switches Piezoelectricity

Reflecting work in the Ghosh Lab

Published here June 19, 2026

Cosolvent-Modulated Supramolecular Chirality Unveils Pronounced Piezoelectric Response in Peptide-Based Nanomaterials

Aparna Ramesh, Sarbajit Layek, Tarak Nath Das, Neelanjana Sengupta, Goutam Ghosh

Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2026, e3135255. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.3135255

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Piezoelectric materials convert mechanical stress into electrical signals and back, a property that underpins self-powered biosensors, implantable energy harvesters, and flexible bioelectronic devices. Synthetic polymers such as polyvinylidene fluoride, PVDF, and inorganic oxides like ZnO dominate current applications, but their limited biocompatibility and poor molecular programmability motivate the search for alternatives. Peptide assemblies offer an attractive route: their intrinsically dipolar backbones, tunable noncovalent interactions, and well-defined one-dimensional nanostructures can, in principle, support the non-centrosymmetric dipolar alignment that piezoelectricity requires. The challenge has been achieving and controlling that alignment, because morphological order alone does not guarantee functional activity.

Researchers in the Ghosh Group at the Centre for Nano and Soft Matter Sciences, Bengaluru, and the Sengupta Group at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, IISER, Kolkata, published in Angewandte Chemie International Edition, designed a pyrene-conjugated tetrapeptide, PEP-A, incorporating aspartic acid and phenylalanine residues and assembled it under varied solvent conditions. They characterized the resulting structures by UV-Vis, photoluminescence, circular dichroism, FT-IR, atomic force microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy, then correlated those structural findings with piezoresponse force microscopy measurements. Atomistic molecular dynamics simulations in pure water and in 1:9 cosolvent/water mixtures provided mechanistic insight into how solvent composition reshapes intermolecular packing and dipolar organization.

In pure water, PEP-A forms elongated, micrometre-long entangled nanofibers roughly 1.5 nm in height and 30 nm in width, stabilized by cooperative π–π stacking and hydrogen bonding. Denaturation analysis fit to the nucleation-elongation model returned a Gibbs free energy of assembly, in water, of −50 kJ mol⁻¹ at 0.1 mM, confirming high thermodynamic stability. Yet despite strong aggregation, these fibers show no Cotton effect in circular dichroism and no measurable piezoelectric response by piezoresponse force microscopy: a flat phase-voltage trace and featureless amplitude loop. Molecular dynamics simulations rationalized this inactivity: the parallel-stacked arrangement is statistically dominant relative to the antiparallel alternative due to strong internal stabilization, but its dipole fluctuations are large and the local curvature difference between the pyrene-facing and amide-facing sides of the stack oscillates without converging to a stable value.

Introducing as little as 1% DMSO or 1% DMF transforms both properties simultaneously. Circular dichroism spectra acquire a strong negative Cotton effect, signaling transfer of molecular chirality to the supramolecular level through ordered helical packing. Piezoresponse force microscopy reveals a butterfly-shaped amplitude loop and a ~180° phase shift, the hallmarks of a piezoelectrically active, non-centrosymmetric assembly. The piezoelectric coefficient d33 reaches 29.5 ± 1.4 pm V⁻¹ at 1% DMSO, comparable to benchmark values for PVDF and ZnO. Both the circular dichroism signal and the piezoresponse persist up to 20% cosolvent, then decline as the assembly begins to dissolve beyond 30%. Molecular dynamics simulations of the cosolvent system show that DMSO suppresses dipole-moment fluctuations by roughly 38%, lowers the effective dielectric constant by approximately 45%, and stabilizes local curvature asymmetry, consistent with the helical, non-centrosymmetric arrangement responsible for the measured piezoresponse. The DMF system reproduces all key metrics, with d33 of 28.8 ± 1.2 pm V⁻¹ at 1% DMF, confirming that the effect is a general consequence of polar aprotic cosolvent action rather than a property specific to DMSO.

This work establishes supramolecular chirality as a prerequisite for piezoelectric functionality in peptide assemblies and demonstrates that cosolvent composition is a practical dial for switching that functionality on or off without altering fibrillar morphology. The finding that trace amounts of a polar aprotic cosolvent suffice to activate a piezoresponse approaching that of established synthetic materials opens a design route toward fully biocompatible, molecularly programmable piezoelectric nanomaterials. Potential applications include soft sensors, implantable mechanical-to-electrical energy converters, and next-generation bioelectronic interfaces where biodegradability and structural tunability are required alongside competitive electromechanical performance.


Author

Sarbajit Layek is a Prime Minister's Research Fellow, PMRF, and PhD scholar at Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, IISER, Kolkata, working under the supervision of Prof. Neelanjana Sengupta. His research lies at the interface of computational chemistry, biomolecular simulations, and supramolecular materials, with a focus on protein folding, nano-bio interfaces, hydration dynamics, and peptide-based functional biomaterials. He has authored several high-quality research publications.

Author

Tarak Nath Das is currently pursuing his PhD under the guidance of Prof. Tapas K. Maji at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, JNCASR,, Bengaluru, India. His research focuses on the development of metallo-supramolecular materials for optoelectronic, piezoelectric, and catalytic applications. He has contributed to several high-quality research publications in reputed international journals.

Author

Neelanjana Sengupta is Professor at IISER Kolkata, where she leads an interdisciplinary research group developing advanced in silico approaches to investigate complex biomolecular systems. Her research integrates statistical mechanics–based and data-driven methodologies to uncover the principles governing emergent phenomena across diverse thermodynamic environments. Her contributions to biophysical and computational sciences have been recognized through several honors, including the CSIR-Raman Research Fellowship, the Alexander von Humboldt, Experienced Researcher, Fellowship, and the CRSI Bronze Medal. She served as the Indian Ambassador, 2022–25, to the Biophysical Society, USA, and currently holds the position of Secretary of the Indian Biophysical Society.

Author

Goutam Ghosh is an Assistant Professor, Ramanujan Faculty, at the Centre for Nano and Soft Matter Sciences, Bengaluru, India. His research focuses on controlled supramolecular polymerization of peptides, amphiphilic molecules, and polymers, with emphasis on developing functional soft materials for piezoelectricity, circularly polarized luminescence, catalysis, energy conversion, and bioelectronic applications. In 2023, he was awarded the prestigious Ramanujan Fellowship by the ANRF, Govt. of India. He is also a recipient of the Rising Star 2024 Award from the Society of Polymer Science, Japan, the CRS Bronze Medal 2026, and has been recognized as a ChemComm Emerging Investigator 2026. Additionally, he serves as an Early Career Research Advisory Board member for multiple international journals.

Chirality Switches Piezoelectricity

Author

Aparna Ramesh is a DST-INSPIRE Fellow and currently pursuing her PhD under the guidance of Dr. Goutam Ghosh at the Centre for Nano and Soft Matter Sciences, CeNS,, Bengaluru, India. Her research primarily focuses on peptide self-assembly, supramolecular chirality, and the development of functional peptide-based nanomaterials for applications in piezoelectricity, bioelectronics, and sustainable energy-related technologies. She has authored several high-quality research articles in highly reputed international journals.