The stabilities and electronic properties of gold clusters containing up to six atoms trapped inside cyclo[8]thiophene (CS8), cyclo[8]selenophene (CSe8), and cyclo[8]tellurophene (CTe8) nanoaggregates have been studied using the M06 functional. The 6-31G(d) basis set was used for all atoms except Au and Te, for which the LANL2DZ(d,p) pseudopotential basis set was applied. Single-point energy calculations were performed with the 6-311G(d,p) basis set for all atoms except for Au and Te, for which the cc-TZVP-pp pseudopotential basis set was used. Among the three studied macrocycles, only CS8 and CSe8 were found to be capable of nanoaggregate formation. In the lowest-energy conformer of CTe8, the tellurophene fragments adopt an anti orientation, thus impeding a tubular arrangement of the macrocycles. The formation of gold clusters inside the CS8 and CSe8 nanoaggregates is a thermodynamically favorable process, and could represent a potentially useful method of stabilizing metal nanowires. The binding energy between the nanoaggregate and the gold cluster is always higher for selenium-containing complexes than for sulfur-containing ones because Se has a higher affinity than S for Au in such complexes. Interactions of the gold cluster with the nanoaggregate walls can change the geometry of the most stable isomer for the cluster. The relative energies of different isomers are rather similar, suggesting that they coexist. For nanoaggregates containing Au6 clusters, the cluster geometry when it is inside a nanoaggregate is different from the geometry of the cluster when it is not inside the nanoaggregate, due to the geometric restrictions imposed by the nanoaggregate cavity. The reorganization energy needed to change the geometry leads to lower binding energies for these complexes compared to those of some smaller systems, although the formation of a complex between Au₆ and a nanoaggregate with six CS8 or CSe8 macrocycles is still thermodynamically viable.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00894-013-1781-4 | DOI Listing |
J Mol Model
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Hubei Key Laboratory·for High-Efficiency-Utilization of Solar Energy and Operation, Control of Energy-Storage System, Hubei-University of Technology, Wuhan, 430068, China.
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Ziekenhuis Groep Twente, Almelo, Netherlands.
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Sci Rep
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Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Ming Chi University of Technology, New Taipei City, 243, Taiwan.
This study develops the you only look once segmentation (YOLOSeg), an end-to-end instance segmentation model, with applications to segment small particle defects embedded on a wafer die. YOLOSeg uses YOLOv5s as the basis and extends a UNet-like structure to form the segmentation head. YOLOSeg can predict not only bounding boxes of particle defects but also the corresponding bounding polygons.
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Department of Chemistry, Government College University Faisalabad, Faisalabad 38000 Pakistan; Dry Lab (Janjua.XYZ), Physical Chemistry and Computational Modelling (PCCM), Department of Chemistry, Government College University Faisalabad, Faisalabad 38000 Pakistan. Electronic address:
Organic photovoltaics (OPVs) have improved greatly in recent years in pursuit for efficient and sustainable energy conversion methods. Specifically, utilizing quantum chemistry approaches such as density functional theory (DFT), the electronic structures, energy levels, and charge transport characteristics of donor-π-acceptor (D-π-A) systems based on non-fullerene donor and acceptor molecules have been examined and synthesized. Non-fullerene acceptors offer several advantages over traditional fullerene-based materials, such as enhanced light absorption, modifiable energy levels, and reduced recombination losses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
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Center for Computational Quantum Physics, The Flatiron Institute, 162 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, 10010, United States.
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