Publications by authors named "Estefania Rossich Molina"

The confinement of water molecules is vital in fields from biology to nanotechnology. The conditions allowing confinement in small finite polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are unclear, yet are crucial for understanding confinement in larger systems. Here, we report a computational study of water cluster confinement within PAHs dimers.

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Preparing phosphorylated peptides with multiple adjacent phosphorylations is synthetically difficult, leads to β-elimination, results in low yields, and is extremely slow. We combined synthetic chemical methodologies with computational studies and engineering approaches to develop a strategy that takes advantage of fast stirring, high temperature, and a very low concentration of 1,8-diazabicyclo[5.4.

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Water-cluster interactions with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are of paramount interest in many chemical and biological processes. We report a study of anthracene monomers and dimers with water (up to four)-cluster systems utilizing molecular beam vacuum-UV photoionization mass spectrometry and density functional calculations. Structural loss in photoionization efficiency curves when adding water indicates that various isomers are generated, while theory indicates only a slight shift in energy in photoionization states of different isomers.

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Polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are widespread in the interstellar medium (ISM). The abundance and relevance of PAHs call for a clear understanding of their formation mechanisms, which, to date, have not been completely deciphered. Of particular interest is the formation of benzene, the basic building block of PAHs.

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Reactions of NO, in particular heterogeneous hydrolysis, play a vital role in determining the chemistry of the atmosphere. The NO heterogeneous hydrolysis reaction has been the subject of extensive research for decades, yet the physicochemical details of the mechanism have not been established. In this study, we show that this reaction can occur on the surface of a pure water droplet.

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Interactions of N2O5 with water media are of great importance in atmospheric chemistry and have been the topic of extensive research for over two decades. Nevertheless, many physical and chemical properties of N2O5 at the surface or in bulk water are unknown or not microscopically understood. This study presents extensive new results on the physical properties of N2O5 in water and at the surface of water, with a focus on their microscopic basis.

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The fragmentation mechanisms of prototypical disaccharides have been studied herein by coupling tandem mass spectrometry (MS) with collisional chemical dynamics simulations. These calculations were performed by explicitly considering the collisions between the protonated sugar and the neutral target gas, which led to an ensemble of trajectories for each system, from which it was possible to obtain reaction products and mechanisms without pre-imposing them. The β-aminoethyl and aminopropyl derivatives of cellobiose, maltose, and gentiobiose were studied to observe differences in both the stereochemistry and the location of the glycosidic linkage.

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The potential energy surface of protonated uracil has been explored by an automated transition state search procedure, resulting in the finding of 1398 stationary points and 751 reactive channels, which can be categorized into isomerizations between pairs of isomers, unimolecular fragmentations and bimolecular reactions. The use of statistical Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus (RRKM) theory and Kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulations allowed us to determine the relative abundances of each fragmentation channel as a function of the ion's internal energy. The KMC/RRKM product abundances are compared with novel mass spectrometry (MS) experiments in the collision energy range 1-6 eV.

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In this study we have coupled mixed quantum-classical (quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics) direct chemical dynamics simulations with electrospray ionization/tandem mass spectrometry experiments in order to achieve a deeper understanding of the fragmentation mechanisms occurring during the collision induced dissociation of gaseous protonated uracil. Using this approach, we were able to successfully characterize the fragmentation pathways corresponding to ammonia loss (m/z 96), water loss (m/z 95) and cyanic or isocyanic acid loss (m/z 70). Furthermore, we also performed experiments with isotopic labeling completing the fragmentation picture.

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