Publications by authors named "A Manian"

Xanthione is a sulfated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon which exhibits unique anti-Kasha properties and substantial sensitivity to its medium. Due to this sensitivity however, this makes xanthione-based systems very difficult to simulate. Further, xanthione's is understood to be come more photostable in the presence of a highly polar medium, however whether these photophysical properties could be taken advantage of for certain applications remains to be seen.

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Enteroviruses are a common cause of seasonal childhood infections. The vast majority of enterovirus infections are mild and self-limiting, although neonates can sometimes develop severe disease. Myocarditis is a rare complication of enterovirus infection.

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Gating logical operations through high-lying electronic excited states presents opportunities for developing ultrafast, subnanometer computational devices. A lack of molecular systems with sufficiently long-lived higher excited states has hindered practical realization of such devices, but recent studies have reported intriguing photophysics from high-lying excited states of perylene. In this work, we use femtosecond spectroscopy supported by quantum chemical calculations to identify and quantify the relaxation dynamics of monomeric perylene's higher electronic excited states.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the absorption spectra of two types of CdS clusters, wurtzite (WZ) and zincblende (ZB), focusing on how different ligands affect their exciton peak positions.
  • Strong coupling between X-type ligands and semiconductor cores can adjust exciton peaks by about 500 meV, while L-type ligands impact midgap states and cause red shifts in absorption spectra.
  • ZB clusters are chemically more stable but more sensitive to solvent changes compared to WZ clusters, which struggle in Lewis base-rich environments, giving insights for optimizing optical properties through ligand selection.
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The first order and second order corrected photoluminescence quantum yields are computed and compared to experiment for naphthalene in this manuscript discussing negative results. Results for anthracene and tetracene are recalled from previous work (Manian et al. in J Chem Phys 155:054108, 2021), and the results for all three polyacenes are juxtaposed to each other.

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