Publications by authors named "Hans-Robert Volpp"

Deoxyuridine nucleosides embodied into diarylethenes form an especial class of photoswitchable compounds that are designed to stack and pair with DNA bases. The molecular geometry can be switched between "open" and "closed" isomers by a pericyclic reaction that affects the stability of the surrounding double helix. This potentially enables light-induced control of DNA hybridization at microscopic resolution.

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The chemical basis for the alteration of the refractive properties of an intraocular lens with a femtosecond laser was investigated. Three different microscope setups have been used for the study: Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) microscopy, Raman microscopy and coherent anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (CARS) microscopy. Photo-induced hydrolysis of polymeric material in aqueous media produces two hydrophilic functional groups: acid group and alcohol group.

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Photoswitches based on the diarylethene architecture have been attracting considerable attention for the investigation and control of a variety of biological processes. The reversible photoisomerization reaction between their open- and closed-ring forms can be selectively addressed by irradiation with light of two markedly different wavelengths. In this work, the dynamics of the photochromic ring-opening reaction of four novel diarylethene-based photoswitchable deoxyuridine nucleosides is investigated by femtosecond transient absorption.

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The dynamics of the gas-phase hydrogen atom exchange reaction H + DCl --> HCl + D were studied using the pulsed laser photolysis/laser induced fluorescence "pump-and-probe" method. Laser photolysis of H2S at 222 nm was used to generate nonequilibrium distributions of translationally excited hydrogen atoms at high dilution in a flowing moderator gas (Ar)/reagent (DCl) mixture. H and D atoms were detected with sub-Doppler resolution via Lyman-alpha laser induced fluorescence spectroscopy, which allowed the measurement of the line shapes of the moderated H atom Doppler profiles as well as the concentration of the D atoms produced in the H + DCl --> HCl + D reaction.

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