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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    Short-Range Cooperative Slow-down of Water Solvation Dynamics Around SO42--Mg2+ Ion Pairs
    (Washington, DC : American Chemical Society, 2022) Kundu, Achintya; Mamatkulov, Shavkat I.; Brünig, Florian N.; Bonthuis, Douwe Jan; Netz, Roland R.; Elsaesser, Thomas; Fingerhut, Benjamin P.
    The presence of ions affects the structure and dynamics of water on a multitude of length and time scales. In this context, pairs of Mg2+ and SO42- ions in water constitute a prototypical system for which conflicting pictures of hydration geometries and dynamics have been reported. Key issues are the molecular pair and solvation shell geometries, the spatial range of electric interactions, and their impact on solvation dynamics. Here, we introduce asymmetric SO42- stretching vibrations as new and most specific local probes of solvation dynamics that allow to access ion hydration dynamics at the dilute concentration (0.2 M) of a native electrolyte environment. Highly sensitive heterodyne 2D-IR spectroscopy in the fingerprint region of the SO42- ions around 1100 cm-1 reveals a specific slow-down of solvation dynamics for hydrated MgSO4 and for Na2SO4 in the presence of Mg2+ ions, which manifests as a retardation of spectral diffusion compared to aqueous Na2SO4 solutions in the absence of Mg2+ ions. Extensive molecular dynamics and density functional theory QM/MM simulations provide a microscopic view of the observed ultrafast dephasing and hydration dynamics. They suggest a molecular picture where the slow-down of hydration dynamics arises from the structural peculiarities of solvent-shared SO42--Mg2+ ion pairs.
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    Modification of Newton's law of gravity at very large distances
    (Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2002) Kirillov, A.A.; Turaev, D.
    We discuss a Modified Field Theory (MOFT) in which the number of fields can vary. It is shown that when the number of fields is conserved MOFT reduces to the standard field theory but interaction constants undergo an additional renormalization and acquire a dependence on spatial scales. In particular, the renormalization of the gravitational constant leads to the deviation of the law of gravity from the Newton's law in some range of scales rmin < r < rmax, in which the gravitational potential shows essentially logarithmic ∼ ln r (instead of 1/r) behavior. In this range, the renormalized value of the gravitational constant G increases and at scales r > rmax acquires a new constant value G′ ∼ Grmax/rmin. From the dynamical standpoint this looks as if every point source is surrounded with a halo of dark matter. It is also shown that if the maximal scale rmax is absent, the homogeneity of the dark matter in the Universe is consistent with a fractal distribution of baryons in space, in which the luminous matter is located on thin two-dimensional surfaces separated by empty regions of ever growing size.
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    Large thermoelectric power factor from crystal symmetry-protected non-bonding orbital in half-Heuslers
    (London : Nature Publishing Group, 2018) Zhou, J.; Zhu, H.; Liu, T.-H.; Song, Q.; He, R.; Mao, J.; Liu, Z.; Ren, W.; Liao, B.; Singh, D.J.; Ren, Z.; Chen, G.
    Modern society relies on high charge mobility for efficient energy production and fast information technologies. The power factor of a material-the combination of electrical conductivity and Seebeck coefficient-measures its ability to extract electrical power from temperature differences. Recent advancements in thermoelectric materials have achieved enhanced Seebeck coefficient by manipulating the electronic band structure. However, this approach generally applies at relatively low conductivities, preventing the realization of exceptionally high-power factors. In contrast, half-Heusler semiconductors have been shown to break through that barrier in a way that could not be explained. Here, we show that symmetry-protected orbital interactions can steer electron-acoustic phonon interactions towards high mobility. This high-mobility regime enables large power factors in half-Heuslers, well above the maximum measured values. We anticipate that our understanding will spark new routes to search for better thermoelectric materials, and to discover high electron mobility semiconductors for electronic and photonic applications.
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    Probing nucleobase photoprotection with soft x-rays
    (Les Ulis : EDP Sciences, 2013) McFarland, B.K.; Farrell, J.P.; Berrah, N.; Bostedt, C.; Bozek, J.; Bucksbaum, P.H.; Coffee, R.; Cryan, J.; Fang, L.; Feifel, R.; Gaffney, K.; Glownia, J.; Martinez, T.; Mucke, M.; Murphy, B.; Miyabe, S.; Natan, A.; Osipov, T.; Petrovic, V.; Schorb, S.; Schultz, T.; Spector, L.; Tarantelli, F.; Tenney, I.; Wang, S.; White, W.; White, J.; Gühr, M.
    Nucleobases absorb strongly in the ultraviolet region, leading to molecular excitation into reactive states. The molecules avoid the photoreactions by funnelling the electronic energy into less reactive states on an ultrafast timescale via non-Born-Oppenheimer dynamics. Current theory on the nucleobase thymine discusses two conflicting pathways for the photoprotective dynamics. We present our first results of our free electron laser based UV-pump soft x-ray-probe study of the photoprotection mechanism of thymine. We use the high spatial sensitivity of the Auger electrons emitted after the soft x-ray pulse induced core ionization. Our transient spetra show two timescales on the order of 200 fs and 5 ps, in agreement with previous (all UV) ultrafast experiments. The timescales appear at different Auger kinetic energies which will help us to decipher the molecular dynamics.
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    Sub-laser-cycle control of coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at a conical intersection
    ([London] : IOP, 2015) Richter, Maria; Bouakline, Foudhil; González-Vázquez, Jesús; Martínez-Fernández, Lara; Corral, Inés; Patchkovskii, Serguei; Morales, Felipe; Ivanov, Misha; Martín, Fernando; Smirnova, Olga
    Nonadiabatic processes play a fundamental role in the understanding of photochemical processes in excited polyatomic molecules. A particularly important example is that of radiationless electronic relaxation at conical intersections (CIs). We discuss new opportunities for controlling coupled electron–nuclear dynamics at CIs, offered by the advent of nearly single-cycle, phase-stable, mid-infrared laser pulses. To illustrate the control mechanism, a two-dimensional model of the NO2 molecule is considered. The key idea of the control scheme is to match the time scale of the laser field oscillations to the characteristic time scale of the wave packet transit through the CI. The instantaneous laser field changes the shape and position of the CI as the wave packet passes through. As the CI moves in the laser field, it 'slices' through the wave packet, sculpting it in the coordinate and momentum space in a way that is sensitive to the carrier-envelope phase of the control pulse. We find that the electronic coherence imparted on the sub-laser-cycle time scale manifests during much longer nuclear dynamics that follow on the many tens of femtosecond time scale. Control efficiency as a function of molecular orientation is analyzed, showing that modest alignment is sufficient for showing the described effects.
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    Phosphate Vibrations Probe Electric Fields in Hydrated Biomolecules: Spectroscopy, Dynamics, and Interactions
    (Washington, DC : Soc., 2021) Elsaesser, Thomas; Schauss, Jakob; Kundu, Achintya; Fingerhut, Benjamin P.
    Electric interactions have a strong impact on the structure and dynamics of biomolecules in their native water environment. Given the variety of water arrangements in hydration shells and the femto- to subnanosecond time range of structural fluctuations, there is a strong quest for sensitive noninvasive probes of local electric fields. The stretching vibrations of phosphate groups, in particular the asymmetric (PO2)− stretching vibration νAS(PO2)−, allow for a quantitative mapping of dynamic electric fields in aqueous environments via a field-induced redshift of their transition frequencies and concomitant changes of vibrational line shapes. We present a systematic study of νAS(PO2)− excitations in molecular systems of increasing complexity, including dimethyl phosphate (DMP), short DNA and RNA duplex structures, and transfer RNA (tRNA) in water. A combination of linear infrared absorption, two-dimensional infrared (2D-IR) spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations gives quantitative insight in electric-field tuning rates of vibrational frequencies, electric field and fluctuation amplitudes, and molecular interaction geometries. Beyond neat water environments, the formation of contact ion pairs of phosphate groups with Mg2+ ions is demonstrated via frequency upshifts of the νAS(PO2)− vibration, resulting in a distinct vibrational band. The frequency positions of contact geometries are determined by an interplay of attractive electric and repulsive exchange interactions.