213 research outputs found
Isomers of Polyenes Attached to Benzene
A polyene graph is a tree that can be embedded in a hexagonal lattice.
Systems of polyene graphs attached to one hexagon are considered. Overlapping edges and/or vertices (geometrically nonplanar systems) are allowed. A complete mathematical solution is presented in terms of a generating function for the numbers of isomers of the systems in question. The corresponding geometrically planar systems, referred to as styrenoids, are enumerated by computer programming. Finally, in the Appendix, the generating function is given for the numbers of free polyene graphs
Enumeration and Classification of Double Coronoid Hydrocarbons Appendix: Triple Coronoids
An enumeration of double coronoids (polyhexes with two heles) is performed, both by hand and by computer. The numbers 15123 and 125760 for the systems with h = 17 and h = 18, respectively, are reported for the first time. Here h denotes the number of hexagons. The generated systems are classified in different ways.
In this connection the strata of corona hale constellations are defined, depending on the proximity of the holes. As appendix, a first enumeration of triple coronoids is reported
GRAPH-THEORETICAL STUDIES ON FLUORANTHENOIDS AND FLUORENOIDS - ENUMERATION OF SOME CATACONDENSED SYSTEMS
Precise definitions are given for some classes of molecular graphs with one pentagon and otherwise hexagons: the monopentapolyhexes. The fluoranthenoid and fluorenoid systems belong to monopentapolyhexes. Complete mathematical solutions, using combinatorial summations on the one hand and generating functions on the other hand, are given for the numbers of catacondensed simply connected monopentapolyhexes (catafluorenoids and the corresponding helicenic systems). Generating functions and numerical values are included
Raman scattering in C_{60} and C_{48}N_{12} aza-fullerene: First-principles study
We carry out large scale {\sl ab initio} calculations of Raman scattering
activities and Raman-active frequencies (RAFs) in
aza-fullerene. The results are compared with those of .
Twenty-nine non-degenerate polarized and 29 doubly-degenerate unpolarized RAFs
are predicted for . The RAF of the strongest Raman
signal in the low- and high-frequency regions and the lowest and highest RAFs
for are almost the same as those of .
The study of reveals the importance of electron correlations and
the choice of basis sets in the {\sl ab initio} calculations. Our best
calculated results for with the B3LYP hybrid density functional
theory are in excellent agreement with experiment and demonstrate the desirable
efficiency and accuracy of this theory for obtaining quantitative information
on the vibrational properties of these molecules.Comment: submitted to Phys.Rev.
The crossover from propagating to strongly scattered acoustic modes of glasses observed in densified silica
Spectroscopic results on low frequency excitations of densified silica are
presented and related to characteristic thermal properties of glasses. The end
of the longitudinal acoustic branch is marked by a rapid increase of the
Brillouin linewidth with the scattering vector. This rapid growth saturates at
a crossover frequency Omega_co which nearly coincides with the center of the
boson peak. The latter is clearly due to additional optic-like excitations
related to nearly rigid SiO_4 librations as indicated by hyper-Raman
scattering. Whether the onset of strong scattering is best described by
hybridization of acoustic modes with these librations, by their elastic
scattering (Rayleigh scattering) on the local excitations, or by soft
potentials remains to be settled.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, to be published in a special issue of J. Phys.
Condens. Matte
Infrared Emission from Interstellar Dust. I. Stochastic Heating of Small Grains
We present a method for calculating the infrared emission from a population
of dust grains heated by starlight, including very small grains for which
stochastic heating by starlight photons results in high temperature transients.
Because state-to-state transition rates are generally unavailable for complex
molecules, we consider model PAH, graphitic, and silicate grains with realistic
vibrational mode spectra and realistic radiative properties. The vibrational
density of states is used in a statistical-mechanical description of the
emission process. Unlike previous treatments, our approach fully incorporates
multiphoton heating effects, important for large grains or strong radiation
fields. We discuss how the "temperature" of the grain is related to its
vibrational energy. By comparing with an "exact" statistical calculation of the
emission process, we determine the conditions under which the "thermal" and the
"continuous cooling" approximations can be used to calculate the emission
spectrum.
We present results for the infrared emission spectra of PAH grains of various
sizes heated by starlight. We show how the relative strengths of the 6.2, 7.7,
and 11.3um features depend on grain size, starlight spectrum and intensity, and
grain charging conditions. We show results for grains in the "cold neutral
medium", "warm ionized medium", and representative conditions in
photodissociation regions. Our model results are compared to observed ratios of
emission features for reflection nebulae and photodissociation regions, the
Milky Way, normal spiral galaxies, and starburst galaxies.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 42 pages, 18 figures, Late
Theoretical Investigation of C_60 IR Spectrum
A semi-empirical model of the infrared (IR) spectrum of the C molecule
is proposed. The weak IR-active modes seen experimentally in a C
crystalline sample are argued to be combination modes caused by anharmonicity.
The origin of these 2-mode excitations can be either mechanical (anharmonic
interatomic forces) or electrical (nonlinear dipole-moment expansion in normal
modes coordinates). It is shown that the electrical anharmonicity model
exhibits basic features of the experimental spectrum while nonlinear dynamics
would lead to a qualitatively different overall picture.Comment: 17 pages, 5 Postscript figures, Fig. 3 of scanned quality; Accepted
to PRB; (Original submission failed for the source file
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