Publications by authors named "Thomas J Ugras"

Isomerization, the process by which a molecule is coherently transformed into another molecule with the same molecular formula but a different atomic structure, is an important and well-known phenomenon of organic chemistry, but has only recently been observed for inorganic nanoclusters. Previously, CdS nanoclusters were found to isomerize between two end point structures rapidly and reversibly (the α-phase and β-phase), mediated by hydroxyl groups on the surface. This observation raised many significant structural and pathway questions.

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Controllable synthesis of homochiral nano/micromaterials has been a constant challenge for fabricating various stimuli-responsive chiral sensors. To provide an avenue to this goal, we report electrospinning as a simple and economical strategy to form continuous homochiral microfibers with strain-sensitive chiroptical properties. First, electrospun homochiral microfibers from self-assembled cadmium sulfide (CdS) quantum dot magic-sized clusters (MSCs) are produced.

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Chiral materials with strong linear anisotropies are difficult to accurately characterize with circular dichroism (CD) because of artifactual contributions to their spectra from linear dichroism (LD) and birefringence (LB). Historically, researchers have used a second-order Taylor series expansion on the Mueller matrix to model the LDLB interaction effects on the spectra in conventional materials, but this approach may no longer be sufficient to account for the artifactual CD signals in emergent materials. In this work, we present an expression to model the measured CD using a third-order expansion, which introduces "pairwise interference" terms that, unlike the LDLB terms, cannot be averaged out of the signal.

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Chiroptically active, hierarchically structured materials are difficult to accurately characterize due to linear anisotropic contributions (i.e., linear dichroism (LD) and linear birefringence (LB)) and parasitic ellipticities that produce artifactual circular dichroism (CD) signals, in addition to chiral analyte contributions ranging from molecular-scale clusters to micron-sized assemblies.

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