161 research outputs found
Charging Induced Emission of Neutral Atoms from NaCl Nanocube Corners
Detachment of neutral cations/anions from solid alkali halides can in
principle be provoked by donating/subtracting electrons to the surface of
alkali halide crystals, but generally constitutes a very endothermic process.
However, the amount of energy required for emission is smaller for atoms
located in less favorable positions, such as surface steps and kinks. For a
corner ion in an alkali halide cube the binding is the weakest, so it should be
easier to remove that atom, once it is neutralized. We carried out first
principles density functional calculations and simulations of neutral and
charged NaCl nanocubes, to establish the energetics of extraction of
neutralized corner ions. Following hole donation (electron removal) we find
that detachment of neutral Cl corner atoms will require a limited energy of
about 0.8 eV. Conversely, following the donation of an excess electron to the
cube, a neutral Na atom is extractable from the corner at the lower cost of
about 0.6 eV. Since the cube electron affinity level (close to that a NaCl(100)
surface state, which we also determine) is estimated to lie about 1.8 eV below
vacuum, the overall energy balance upon donation to the nanocube of a zero
energy electron from vacuum will be exothermic. The atomic and electronic
structure of the NaCl(100) surface, and of the nanocube Na and Cl corner
vacancies are obtained and analyzed as a byproduct.Comment: 16 pages, 2 table, 7 figure
Dipole-quadrupole interactions and the nature of phase III of compressed hydrogen
A new class of strongly infrared active structures is identified for phase
III of compressed molecular H2 by constant-pressure ab initio molecular
dynamics and density-functional perturbation calculations. These are planar
quadrupolar structures obtained as a distortion of low-pressure quadrupolar
phases, after they become unstable at about 150 GPa due to a zone-boundary soft
phonon. The nature of the II-III transition and the origin of the IR activity
are rationalized by means of simple electrostatics, as the onset of a
stabilizing dipole-quadrupole interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Solid molecular hydrogen: The Broken Symmetry Phase
By performing constant-pressure variable-cell ab initio molecular dynamics
simulations we find a quadrupolar orthorhombic structure, of symmetry,
for the broken symmetry phase (phase II) of solid H2 at T=0 and P =110 - 150
GPa. We present results for the equation of state, lattice parameters and
vibronic frequencies, in very good agreement with experimental observations.
Anharmonic quantum corrections to the vibrational frequencies are estimated
using available data on H2 and D2. We assign the observed modes to specific
symmetry representations.Comment: 5 pages (twocolumn), 4 Postscript figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Let
Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 (HSV-1) Uracil-DNA Glycosylase: Functional Expression in Escherichia coli, Biochemical Characterization, and Selective Inhibition by 6-(p-n-Octylanilino)Uracil
AbstractThe Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG) is encoded by the UL2 gene. The translation from the first putative start codon of UL2 predicts a polypeptide of 334 residues, while the translation from the second start codon predicts a polypeptide of 244 residues. We have cloned and expressed the two forms of UDG, by means of the prokaryotic expression vector pMAL-c2, and both of them were enzymatically active. Furthermore, the enzymatic properties of the recombinant UDGs and of the enzyme purified from HSV-1-infected cells were similar. The two UDG polypeptides have molecular weights of 27 and 37 kDa, respectively. The 37-kDa form of recombinant UDG is consistent with the reported molecular mass of 37 kDa for the enzyme purified from HSV-1-infected cells. Both recombinant UDGs were as sensitive as UDG purified from HSV-1-infected cells to 6-(p-n-octylanilino)uracil, the most potent of a series of uracil analogs that inhibit the viral enzyme
A critical assessment of the Self-Interaction Corrected Local Density Functional method and its algorithmic implementation
We calculate the electronic structure of several atoms and small molecules by
direct minimization of the Self-Interaction Corrected Local Density
Approximation (SIC-LDA) functional. To do this we first derive an expression
for the gradient of this functional under the constraint that the orbitals be
orthogonal and show that previously given expressions do not correctly
incorporate this constraint. In our atomic calculations the SIC-LDA yields
total energies, ionization energies and charge densities that are superior to
results obtained with the Local Density Approximation (LDA). However, for
molecules SIC-LDA gives bond lengths and reaction energies that are inferior to
those obtained from LDA. The nonlocal BLYP functional, which we include as a
representative GGA functional, outperforms both LDA and SIC-LDA for all ground
state properties we considered.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Targeted metatranscriptomics of compost derived consortia reveals a GH11 exerting an unusual exo-1,4-β-xylanase activity
Background: Using globally abundant crop residues as a carbon source for energy generation and renewable chemicals production stands out as a promising solution to reduce current dependency on fossil fuels. In nature, such as in compost habitats, microbial communities efficiently degrade the available plant biomass using a diverse set of synergistic enzymes. However, deconstruction of lignocellulose remains a challenge for industry due to recalcitrant nature of the substrate and the inefficiency of the enzyme systems available, making the economic production of lignocellulosic biofuels difficult. Metatranscriptomic studies of microbial communities can unveil the metabolic functions employed by lignocellulolytic consortia and identify new biocatalysts that could improve industrial lignocellulose conversion. Results: In this study, a microbial community from compost was grown in minimal medium with sugarcane bagasse sugarcane bagasse as the sole carbon source. Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance was used to monitor lignocellulose degradation; analysis of metatranscriptomic data led to the selection and functional characterization of several target genes, revealing the first glycoside hydrolase from Carbohydrate Active Enzyme family 11 with exo-1,4-β-xylanase activity. The xylanase crystal structure was resolved at 1.76 Å revealing the structural basis of exo-xylanase activity. Supplementation of a commercial cellulolytic enzyme cocktail with the xylanase showed improvement in Avicel hydrolysis in the presence of inhibitory xylooligomers. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that composting microbiomes continue to be an excellent source of biotechnologically important enzymes by unveiling the diversity of enzymes involved in in situ lignocellulose degradation
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