6 results match your criteria: "FAMU-FSU Joint College of Engineering[Affiliation]"
Phys Chem Chem Phys
February 2023
Department of Physics, Scientific Computing, Material Sciences and Engineering, High-Performance Material Institute, Condensed Matter-High Magnetic Field National Lab, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, 32310, USA.
The nuclear waste problem is one of the main interests of rare earth and actinide element chemistry. Studies of actinide-containing compounds are at the frontier of the applications of current theoretical methods due to the need to consider relativistic effects and approximations to the Dirac equation in them. Here, we employ four-component relativistic quantum calculations and scalar approximations to understand the contribution of f-type atomic orbitals in the chemical bonding of actinides (Ac) to organic ligands.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
April 2021
Department of Chemical & Biomedical Engineering, FAMU-FSU Joint College of Engineering, Tallahassee, Florida 32310, United States.
Solid-state thermoelastic behavior-a sudden exertion of an expansive or contractive physical force following a temperature change and phase transition in a solid-state compound-is rare in organic crystals, few are reversible systems, and most of these are limited to a dozen or so cycles before the crystal degrades or they reverse slowly over the course of many minutes or even hours. Comparable to thermosalience, wherein crystal phase changes induce energetic jumping, thermomorphism produces physical work via consistent and near-instantaneous predictable directional force. In this work, we show a fully reversible thermomorphic actuator that is stable at room temperature for multiple years and is capable of actuation for more than 200 cycles at near-ambient temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNano Lett
September 2020
Department of Chemistry, MIT, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
We investigate the effect of lattice disorder and local correlation effects in finite and periodic silicene structures caused by carbon doping using first-principles calculations. For both finite and periodic silicene structures, the electronic properties of carbon-doped monolayers are dramatically changed by controlling the doping sites in the structures, which is related to the amount of disorder introduced in the lattice and electron-electron correlation effects. By changing the position of the carbon dopants, we found that a Mott-Anderson transition is achieved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
April 2018
Department of Chemical & Biomedical Engineering , FAMU-FSU Joint College of Engineering, Tallahassee , Florida 32310 , United States.
In this article, we present an approach for the generalization of adsorption of light gases in porous materials. This new theory goes beyond Langmuir and Brunauer-Emmett-Teller theories, which are the standard approaches that have a limited application to crystalline porous materials by their unphysical assumptions on the amount of possible adsorption layers. The derivation of a more general equation for any crystalline porous framework is presented, restricted multilayer theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltramicroscopy
May 2017
Arizona State University, Department of Physics, Tempe AZ 85287, USA.
Using computer-generated models we discuss the use of fluctuation electron microscopy (FEM) to identify the structure of amorphous silicon. We show that a combination of variable resolution FEM to measure the correlation length, with correlograph analysis to obtain the structural motif, can pin down structural correlations. We introduce the method of correlograph variance as a promising means of independently measuring the volume fraction of a paracrystalline composite.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProteins
August 2003
Program in Biomedical Engineering, Florida State University, FAMU-FSU Joint College of Engineering, Tallahassee, Florida 32306, USA.
Predicting the long-time, nonequilibrium dynamics of receptor-ligand interactions for structured proteins in a host fluid is a formidable task, but of great importance to predicting and analyzing cell-signaling processes and small molecule drug efficacies. Such processes take place on timescales on the order of milliseconds to seconds, so "brute-force" real-time, molecular or atomic simulations to determine absolute ligand-binding rates to receptor targets and over a statistical ensemble of systems are not currently feasible. In the current study, we implement on real protein systems a previously developed 3-5 hybrid molecular dynamics/Brownian dynamics algorithm, which takes advantage of the underlying, disparate timescales involved and overcomes the limitations of brute-force approaches.
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