12 research outputs found

    Spontaneous symmetry breaking by double lithium adsorption in polyacenes

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    We show that adsorption of one lithium atom to a polyacenes, i.e. chains of linearly fused benzene rings, will cause this chain to be slightly deformed. If we adsorb a second identical atom on the opposite side of the same ring, this deformation is dramatically enhanced despite of the fact, that a symmetric configuration seems possible. We argue, that this may be due to an instability of the Jahn-Teller type possibly indeed to a Peierls instability.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure

    Energies for Cyclic and Acyclic Aggregations of Adamantane Sharing Six-membered Rings

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    Tension energies for acyclic and cyclic assemblies of adamantane units sharing hexagons of carbon atoms converge in a size-extensive manner for large numbers n of adamantane units. In most cases the convergence features diagrams of strain energy per adamantane unit E(n–1) versus n–2 for cyclic aggregates and versus n–1 for acyclic aggregates having linear dependence with slopes of opposite signs. However, we found two exceptions which are discussed in the present paper, with convergence involving linear dependence with slopes of the same sign. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

    Current vortices in aromatic carbon molecules

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    The local current flow through three small aromatic carbon molecules, namely benzene, naphthalene and anthracene, is studied. Applying density functional theory and the non-equilibrium Green's function method for transport, we demonstrate that pronounced current vortices exist at certain electron energies for these molecules. The intensity of these circular currents, which appear not only at the anti-resonances of the transmission but also in vicinity of its maxima, can exceed the total current flowing through the molecular junction and generate considerable magnetic fields. The π\pi electron system of the molecular junctions is emulated experimentally by a network of macroscopic microwave resonators. The local current flows in these experiments confirm the existence of current vortices as a robust property of ring structures. The circular currents can be understood in terms of a simple nearest-neighbor tight-binding H\"uckel model. Current vortices are caused by the interplay of the complex eigenstates of the open system which have energies close-by the considered electron energy. Degeneracies, as observed in benzene and anthracene, can thus generate strong circular currents, but also non-degenerate systems like naphthalene exhibit current vortices. Small imperfections and perturbations can couple otherwise uncoupled states and induce circular currents

    A survey of the clinicopathological and molecular characteristics of patients with suspected Lynch syndrome in Latin America

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    Background: Genetic counselling and testing for Lynch syndrome (LS) have recently been introduced in several Latin America countries. We aimed to characterize the clinical, molecular and mismatch repair (MMR) variants spectrum of patients with suspected LS in Latin America. Methods: Eleven LS hereditary cancer registries and 34 published LS databases were used to identify unrelated families that fulfilled the Amsterdam II (AMSII) criteria and/or the Bethesda guidelines or suggestive of a dominant colorectal (CRC) inheritance syndrome. Results: We performed a thorough investigation of 15 countries and identified 6 countries where germline genetic testing for LS is available and 3 countries where tumor testing is used in the LS diagnosis. The spectrum of pathogenic MMR variants included MLH1 up to 54%, MSH2 up to 43%, MSH6 up to 10%, PMS2 up to 3% and EPCAM up to 0.8%. The Latin America MMR spectrum is broad with a total of 220 different variants which 80% were private and 20% were recurrent. Frequent regions included exons 11 of MLH1 (15%), exon 3 and 7 of MSH2 (17 and 15%, respectively), exon 4 of MSH6 (65%), exons 11 and 13 of PMS2 (31% and 23%, respectively). Sixteen international founder variants in MLH1, MSH2 and MSH6 were identified and 41 (19%) variants have not previously been reported, thus representing novel genetic variants in the MMR genes. The AMSII criteria was the most used clinical criteria to identify pathogenic MMR carriers although microsatellite instability, immunohistochemistry and family history are still the primary methods in several countries where no genetic testing for LS is available yet. Conclusion: The Latin America LS pathogenic MMR variants spectrum included new variants, frequently altered genetic regions and potential founder effects, emphasizing the relevance implementing Lynch syndrome genetic testing and counseling in all of Latin America countries.Radium Hospital Foundation (Oslo, Norway) in the design of the study and collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript, Helse SÞr-Øst (Norway) in the design of the study and collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript, the French Association Recherche contre le Cancer (ARC) in the analysis, and interpretation of data, the Groupement des Entreprises Françaises dans la Lutte contre le Cancer (Gefluc) in the analysis, and interpretation of data, the Association Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie (ANRT, CIFRE PhD fellowship to H.T.) in the analysis, and interpretation of data and by the OpenHealth Institute in the analysis, and interpretation of data. Barretos Cancer Hospital received financial support by FINEP-CT-INFRA (02/2010)info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Current Vortices in Aromatic Carbon Molecules

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    The local current flow through three small aromatic carbon molecules, namely benzene, naphthalene and anthracene, is studied. Applying density functional theory and the non-equilibrium Green’s function method for transport, we demonstrate that pronounced current vortices exist at certain electron energies for these molecules. The intensity of these circular currents, which appear not only at the anti-resonances of the transmission but also in vicinity of its maxima, can exceed the total current flowing through the molecular junction and generate considerable magnetic fields. The π electron system of the molecular junctions is emulated experimentally by a network of macroscopic microwave resonators. The local current flows in these experiments confirm the existence of current vortices as a robust property of ring structures. The circular currents can be understood in terms of a simple nearest-neighbor tight-binding HĂŒckel model. Current vortices are caused by the interplay of the complex eigenstates of the open system which have energies close-by the considered electron energy. Degeneracies, as observed in benzene and anthracene, can thus generate strong circular currents, but also non-degenerate systems like naphthalene exhibit current vortices. Small imperfections and perturbations can couple otherwise uncoupled states and induce circular currents.</div
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