504 research outputs found
Chirality transfer and stereo-selectivity of imprinted cholesteric networks
Imprinting of cholesteric textures in a polymer network is a method of
preserving a macroscopically chiral phase in a system with no molecular
chirality. By modifying the elastics properties of the network, the resulting
stored helical twist can be manipulated within a wide range since the
imprinting efficiency depends on the balance between the elastics constants and
twisting power at network formation. One spectacular property of phase
chirality imprinting is the created ability of the network to adsorb
preferentially one stereo-component from a racemic mixture. In this paper we
explore this property of chirality transfer from a macroscopic to the molecular
scale. In particular, we focus on the competition between the phase chirality
and the local nematic order. We demonstrate that it is possible to control the
subsequent release of chiral solvent component from the imprinting network and
the reversibility of the stereo-selective swelling by racemic solvents
Probing molecular chirality by coherent optical absorption spectra
We propose an approach to sensitively probe the chirality of molecules by
measuring their coherent optical absorption spectra. It is shown that quantum
dynamics of the cyclic three-level chiral molecules driven by
appropriately-designed external fields is total-phase dependent. This will
result in chirality-dependent absorption spectra for the probe field. As a
consequence, these absorption spectra can be utilized to identify molecular
chirality and determinate enantiomer excess. The feasibility of the proposal
with chiral molecules confined in hollow-core photonic crystal fiber (HC-PCF)
is also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
On the Microscopic Origin of Cholesteric Pitch
We present a microscopic analysis of the instability of the nematic phase to
chirality when molecular chirality is introduced perturbatively. We show that
previously neglected short-range biaxial correlations play a crucial role in
determining the cholesteric pitch. We propose an order parameter which
quantifies the chirality of a molecule.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 4 pages, one included eps figure. Published versio
Chiral Crystal Growth under Grinding
To study the establishment of homochirality observed in the crystal growth
experiment of chiral molecules from a solution under grinding, we extend the
lattice gas model of crystal growth as follows. A lattice site can be occupied
by a chiral molecule in R or S form, or can be empty. Molecules form
homoclusters by nearest neighbor bonds. They change their chirality if they are
isolated monomers in the solution. Grinding is incorporated by cutting and
shafling the system randomly. It is shown that Ostwald ripening without
grinding is extremely slow to select chirality, if possible. Grinding alone
also cannot achieve chirality selection. For the accomplishment of
homochirality, we need an enhanced chirality change on crystalline surface.
With this "autocatalytic effect" and the recycling of monomers due to rinding,
an exponential increase of crystal enantiomeric excess to homochiral state is
realized.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Optical chirality without optical activity: How surface plasmons give a twist to light
Light interacts differently with left and right handed three dimensional
chiral objects, like helices, and this leads to the phenomenon known as optical
activity. Here, by applying a polarization tomography, we show experimentally,
for the first time in the visible domain, that chirality has a different
optical manifestation for twisted planar nanostructured metallic objects acting
as isolated chiral metaobjects. Our analysis demonstrate how surface plasmons,
which are lossy bidimensional electromagnetic waves propagating on top of the
structure, can delocalize light information in the just precise way for giving
rise to this subtle effect.Comment: Opt. Express 16, 12559 (2008
Interdisciplinary Teaching and Research at a Liberal Arts College on Computational Biology
ABSTRACT This paper focuses in presenting several aspects of the interdisciplinary collaboration in teaching and research at a liberal arts college. In particular, it presents courses and research projects in the computational biology area, which naturally call for collaborative work between faculty members from mathematics & computer science and biology departments. It further discusses (1) challenges arising when doing interdisciplinary work, (2) the interaction between interdisciplinary teaching, research, and communication, (3) possible outcomes of such interdisciplinary training for both students and faculty members, and (4) how interdisciplinary training fits within the liberal arts philosophy
Observation of a Chiral State in a Microwave Cavity
A microwave experiment has been realized to measure the phase difference of
the oscillating electric field at two points inside the cavity. The technique
has been applied to a dissipative resonator which exhibits a singularity --
called exceptional point -- in its eigenvalue and eigenvector spectrum. At the
singularity, two modes coalesce with a phase difference of We
conclude that the state excited at the singularity has a definitiv chirality.Comment: RevTex 4, 5 figure
Stochastic Approach to Enantiomeric Excess Amplification and Chiral Symmetry Breaking
Stochastic aspects of chemical reaction models related to the Soai reactions
as well as to the homochirality in life are studied analytically and
numerically by the use of the master equation and random walk model. For
systems with a recycling process, a unique final probability distribution is
obtained by means of detailed balance conditions. With a nonlinear
autocatalysis the distribution has a double-peak structure, indicating the
chiral symmetry breaking. This problem is further analyzed by examining
eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of the master equation. In the case without
recycling process, final probability distributions depend on the initial
conditions. In the nonlinear autocatalytic case, time-evolution starting from a
complete achiral state leads to a final distribution which differs from that
deduced from the nonzero recycling result. This is due to the absence of the
detailed balance, and a directed random walk model is shown to give the correct
final profile. When the nonlinear autocatalysis is sufficiently strong and the
initial state is achiral, the final probability distribution has a double-peak
structure, related to the enantiomeric excess amplification. It is argued that
with autocatalyses and a very small but nonzero spontaneous production, a
single mother scenario could be a main mechanism to produce the homochirality.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
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