12 results match your criteria: "Institute for Molecular Physical Science[Affiliation]"

X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is a powerful technique that provides information about the electronic and local geometric structural properties of newly developed electrocatalysts, especially when it is performed under operating conditions (i.e., ).

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More than a half century ago it became feasible to simulate, using classical-mechanical equations of motion, the dynamics of molecular systems on a computer. Since then classical-physical molecular simulation has become an integral part of chemical research. It is widely applied in a variety of branches of chemistry and has significantly contributed to the development of chemical knowledge.

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Purpose: The objective of the present work was to test the feasibility of in vivo imaging of hyperpolarized 50-nm silicon-29 (Si) nanoparticles.

Methods: Commercially available, crystalline 50-nm nanoparticles were hyperpolarized using dynamic polarization transfer via the endogenous silicon oxide-silicon defects without the addition of exogenous radicals. Phantom experiments were used to quantify the effect of sample dissolution and various surface coating on T and T relaxation.

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A method for structure refinement of molecules based on residual dipolar coupling (RDC) data is proposed. It calculates RDC values using magnetic-field rotational sampling of the rotational degrees of freedom of a molecule in conjunction with molecule-internal configurational sampling. By applying rotational sampling, as is occurring in the experiment, leading to observable RDCs, the method stays close to the experiment.

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The CH oxidation performance of Cu-chabazite zeolites characterized by distinct Si/Al ratios and Cu loadings has been studied and the observed variations in reactivity have been correlated to the differences in the nature of the formed active centers. Plug flow reactor tests, in situ Fourier-transform infrared, and X-ray absorption spectroscopy demonstrate that a decrease in Cu loading shifts the reactivity/redox profile to higher temperatures and increases the CHOH selectivity and Cu-efficiency. In situ electron paramagnetic resonance, Raman, ultraviolet-visible, Fourier-transform infrared, and photoluminescence spectroscopies reveal that this behavior is associated with the presence of monomeric Cu active sites, including bare Cu and [CuOH] present at low Si/Al ratio and Cu loading.

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The binding affinity determination of protein-ligand complexes is a cornerstone of drug design. State-of-the-art techniques are limited by lengthy and expensive processes. Building upon our recently introduced novel screening method utilizing photochemically induced dynamic nuclear polarization (photo-CIDNP) NMR, we provide the methodological framework to determine binding affinities within 5-15 min using 0.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Two models of a small molecule, one rigid and one flexible, are used to test the assumptions that internal and rotational motions are decoupled and that the molecule is rigid.
  • * The findings suggest that the rigid model can reproduce the target RDC values, but struggles with orientation distribution, while the flexible model fails to reproduce both target RDC values and orientation distribution, highlighting challenges in studying flexible biomolecules.
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Co-based catalysts are promising candidates to replace Ir/Ru-based oxides for oxygen evolution reaction (OER) catalysis in an acidic environment. However, both the reaction mechanism and the active species under acidic conditions remain unclear. In this study, by combining surface-sensitive soft X-ray absorption spectroscopy characterization with electrochemical analysis, we discover that the acidic OER activity of Co-based catalysts are determined by their surface oxidation/spin state.

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Nitrene transfer reactions catalyzed by heme proteins have broad potential for the stereoselective formation of carbon-nitrogen bonds. However, competition between productive nitrene transfer and the undesirable reduction of nitrene precursors limits the broad implementation of such biocatalytic methods. Here, we investigated the reduction of azides by the model heme protein myoglobin to gain mechanistic insights into the factors that control the fate of key reaction intermediates.

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The photoionisation of the metastable rare-gas atoms Rg = Ar, Kr and Xe is investigated at the Rg […](s)(p)P ← Rg[…](s)(p)(( + 1)s) P photoionisation threshold ( = 3, 4 and 5 for Ar, Kr and Xe) using the technique of pulsed-ramped-field-ionisation zero-kinetic-energy (PRFI-ZEKE) photoelectron spectroscopy. This technique, which monitors the field ionisation of high Rydberg states induced by a slowly growing electric-field ramp after a prepulse of opposite polarity, was recently introduced to record photoelectron spectra with high resolution and high sensitivity [Harper, Chen, Boyé-Péronne and Gans, , 2022, , 9353]. A tunable UV laser system with a bandwidth of 30 MHz is used here to establish the factors determining the resolution and overall accuracy of this new method.

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Fragment-based drug design is a well-established strategy for rational drug design, with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) on high-field spectrometers as the method of reference for screening and hit validation. However, high-field NMR spectrometers are not only expensive, but require specialized maintenance, dedicated space, and depend on liquid helium cooling which became critical over the recurring global helium shortages. We propose an alternative to high-field NMR screening by applying the recently developed approach of fragment screening by photoinduced hyperpolarized NMR on a cryogen-free 80 MHz benchtop NMR spectrometer yielding signal enhancements of up to three orders in magnitude.

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Cu-exchanged mordenite (MOR) is a promising material for partial CH oxidation. The structural diversity of Cu species within MOR makes it difficult to identify the active Cu sites and to determine their redox and kinetic properties. In this study, the Cu speciation in Cu-MOR materials with different Cu loadings has been determined using operando electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and operando ultraviolet-visible (UV/Vis) spectroscopy as well as in situ photoluminescence (PL) and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy.

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