352 research outputs found

    "Identity Theft in The Talented Mr. Ripley: A post-panel discussion."

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    Transcription of a panel discussion following a performance of The Faction's production, The Talented Mr. Ripley. The production took place as a special event organised by the Media and the Inner World research network, and was held at the New Diorama Theatre, London in February 2015. The discussion is contextualised in an introduction written by Prof Candida Yates, who directs Media and the Inner World and who chaired the panel

    Structure, Energetics, and Dynamics of Screw Dislocations in Even n-Alkane Crystals

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    Spiral hillocks on n-alkane crystal surfaces were observed immediately after Frank recognized the importance of screw dislocations for crystal growth, yet their structures and energies in molecular crystals remain ill-defined. To illustrate the structural chemistry of screw dislocations that are responsible for plasticity in organic crystals and upon which the organic electronics and pharmaceutical industries depend, molecular dynamics was used to examine heterochiral dislocation pairs with Burgers vectors along [001] in n-hexane, n-octane, and n-decane crystals. The cores were anisotropic and elongated in the (110) slip plane, with significant local changes in molecular position, orientation, conformation, and energy. This detailed atomic level picture produced a distribution of strain consistent with linear elastic theory, giving confidence in the simulations. Dislocations with doubled Burgers vectors split into pairs with elementary displacements. These results suggest a pathway to understanding the mechanical properties and failure associated with elastic and plastic deformation in soft crystals

    A Supramolecular Ice Growth Inhibitor

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    Safranine O, a synthetic dye, was found to inhibit growth of ice at millimolar concentrations with an activity comparable to that of highly evolved antifreeze glycoproteins. Safranine inhibits growth of ice crystals along the crystallographic a-axis, resulting in bipyramidal needles extended along the directions as well as and plane-specific thermal hysteresis (TH) activity. The interaction of safranine with ice is reversible, distinct from the previously reported behavior of antifreeze proteins. Spectroscopy and molecular dynamics indicate that safranine forms aggregates in aqueous solution at micromolar concentrations. Metadynamics simulations and aggregation theory suggested that as many as 30 safranine molecules were preorganized in stacks at the concentrations where ice growth inhibition was observed. The simulations and single-crystal X-ray structure of safranine revealed regularly spaced amino and methyl substituents in the aggregates, akin to the ice-binding site of antifreeze proteins. Collectively, these observations suggest an unusual link between supramolecular assemblies of small molecules and functional proteins

    Structural Correspondence of Solution, Liquid Crystal, and Crystalline Phases of the Chromonic Mesogen Sunset Yellow

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    The azo dye, sunset yellow, is a prototypical, chromonic liquid crystal in which assembly in aqueous solution at high volume fraction leads to lyotropic mesophases with a “package of properties distinct in almost every aspect” (Lydon, J. Curr. Opin. Colloid Interface Sci. 2004, 8, 480). In particular, the isotropic to nematic transition in such phases, the consequence of stacking of dye molecules in chains, is difficult to bring into correspondence with athermal theories for rigid rods as well as modifications that consider chain interactions with one another. Chromonic mesogens, small molecules that stack to form lyotropic liquid crystals, prompt structural questions that have yet to be answered; a full understanding of structure should inform colligative properties. Herein, the single crystal structure of a guanidinium salt of the sunset yellow dianion, a known chromonic mesogen, is reported. The compound crystallizes as a dihydrate, tetrahydrofuran solvate in the orthorhombic space group Pnna, with a = 6.8426(5) Å, b = 20.048(1) Å, c = 21.466(2) Å. The sunset yellow molecules, point group approximately Cs, are disordered about a crystallographic diad axis.The structure is informative because pairwise interactions in the disordered crystal structure show a remarkable correspondence with the stereochemistry of sunset yellow molecules in solution and in the liquid crystal phase. The solution structure is here simulated by the combination of molecular dynamics,metadynamics, and quantum chemical computations. The comparable disorder in the fluid and solid states suggests the possibility that stacked aggregates adhere to growing crystals intact. Computations were used to evaluate proposals that stacking faults and branching points lower the X-ray correlation lengths while preserving extended structures. Evidence is found forstacking faults but not branches. The solution stereochemistry and stereodynamics has implications for the geometry of long rods, for which understanding is a prerequisite for reckoning properties of vexing chromonic mesophases

    Dislocation-Actuated Growth and Inhibition of Hexagonal L-Cystine Crystallization at the Molecular Level

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    Crystallization of L-cystine is a critical process in the pathogenesis of kidney stone formation in cystinuria, a disorder affecting more than 20 000 individuals in the United States alone. In an effort to elucidate the crystallization of L-cystine and the mode of action of tailored growth inhibitors that may constitute effective therapies, real-time in situ atomic force microscopy has been used to investigate the surface micromorphology and growth kinetics of the {0001} faces of L-cystine at various supersaturations and concentrations of the growth inhibitor L-cystine dimethylester (CDME). Crystal growth is actuated by screw dislocations on the {0001} L-cystine surface, producing hexagonal spiral hillocks that are a consequence of six interlacing spirals of anisotropic molecular layers. The high level of elastic stress in the immediate vicinity around the dislocation line results in a decrease in the step velocities and a corresponding increase in the spacing of steps. The kinetic curves acquired in the presence of CDME conform to the classical Cabrera–Vermilyea model. Anomalous birefringence in the {101̅0} growth sectors, combined with computational modeling, supports a high fidelity of stereospecific binding of CDME, in a unique orientation, exclusively at one of the six crystallographically unique projections on the {1010} plane

    Investigation of zeolitic imidazolate frameworks using 13C and 15N solid-state NMR spectroscopy

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    The authors are grateful to EPSRC computational support through the Collaborative Computational Project on NMR Crystallography (CCP-NC), via EP/M022501/1, and for other support through EP/G062129/1 (JK) and EP/M506631/1 (SS). AFO acknowledges funding from the European Community Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013 [grant agreement number 608490], Project M4CO2). SEA would also like to thank the Royal Society and Wolfson Foundation for a merit award. AFO would also like to acknowledge the SCI for a scholarship for her PhD studies. Some of the calculations were performed on the ARCHER UK National Supercomputing Service, and were supported by CCP-NC. The research data (and/or materials) supporting this publication can be accessed at http://dx.doi.org/10.17630/7959a81e-161d-4ada-9914-08d3d235ce88Zeolitic imidazolate frameworks (ZIFs) are a subclass of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with extended three-dimensional networks of transition metal nodes (bridged by rigid imidazolate linkers), with potential applications in gas storage and separation, sensing and controlled delivery of drug molecules. Here, we investigate the use of 13C and 15N solid-state NMR spectroscopy to characterise the local structure and disorder in a variety of single- and dual-linker ZIFs. In most cases, a combination of a basic knowledge of chemical shifts typically observed in solution-state NMR spectroscopy and the use of dipolar dephasing NMR experiments to reveal information about quaternary carbon species are combined to enable spectral assignment. Accurate measurement of the anisotropic components of the chemical shift provided additional information to characterise the local environment and the possibility of trying to understand the relationships between NMR parameters and both local and long-range structure. First-principles calculations on some of the simpler, ordered ZIFs were possible, and provided support for the spectral assignments, while comparison of these model systems to more disordered ZIFs aided interpretation of the more complex spectra obtained. It is shown that 13C and 15N NMR are sufficiently sensitive to detect small changes in the local environment, e.g., functionalisation of the linker, crystallographic inequivalence and changes to the framework topology, while the relative proportion of each linker present can be obtained by comparing relative intensities of resonances corresponding to chemically-similar species in cross polarisation experiments with short contact times. Therefore, multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, and in particular the measurement of both isotropic and anisotropic parameters, offers a useful tool for the structural study of ordered and, in particular, disordered ZIFs.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    ORBIT PRECISION ANALYSIS OF SMALL MAN-MADE SPACE OBJECTS IN LEO BASED ON RADAR TRACKING MEASUREMENTS

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    Abstract: The German Space Operations Center (GSOC

    Relation between 2D/3D chirality and the appearence of chiroptical effects in real nanostructures.

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    The optical activity of fabricated metallic nanostructures is investigated by complete polarimetry. While lattices decorated with nanoscale gammadia etched in thin metallic films have been described as two dimensional, planar nanostructures, they are better described as quasi-planar structures with some three dimensional character. We find that the optical activity of these structures arises not only from the dissymmetric backing by a substrate but, more importantly, from the selective rounding of the nanostructure edges. A true chiroptical response in the far-field is only allowed when the gammadia contain these non-planar features. This is demonstrated by polarimetric measurements in conjunction with electrodynamical simulations based on the discrete dipole approximation that consider non-ideal gammadia. It is also shown that subtle planar dissymmetries in gammadia are sufficient to generate asymmetric transmission of circular polarized light

    Resorcinol crystallization from the melt: a new ambient phase and new “riddles”

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    Structures of the alpha and beta phases of resorcinol, a major commodity chemical in the pharmaceutical, agrichemical, and polymer industries, were the first polymorphic pair of molecular crystals solved by X-ray analysis. It was recently stated that "no additional phases can be found under atmospheric conditions" (Druzbicki, K. et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2015, 119, 1681.). Herein, is described the growth and structure of a new ambient pressure phase, epsilon, through a combination of optical and X-ray crystallography evaluated by computational crystal structure prediction algorithms. alpha-Resorcinol has long been a model for mechanistic crystal growth studies from solution and the vapor because prisms extended along the polar axis grow much faster in one direction than in the opposite direction. Research has focused on identifying the absolute sense of the fast direction – the so-called ‘resorcinol riddle’ – with the aim of identifying how solvent controls crystal growth. Here, the growth velocity dissymmetry in the melt is analyzed for the ? phase. The epsilon phase only grows from the melt, concomitant with the beta phase, as polycrystalline, radially growing spherulites. If the radii are polar, the sense of the polar axis is an essential feature of the form. Here, this determination is made for spherulites of beta resorcinol (epsilon, point symmetry 222, does not have a polar axis) with additives that stereoselectively modify growth velocities. Both beta and epsilon have the additional feature that individual radial lamellae may adopt helicoidal morphologies. We correlate the appearance of twisting in beta and epsilon with the symmetry of twist-inducing additives
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