104 research outputs found

    High-altitude glacier archives lost due to climate change-related melting.

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    Global warming has caused widespread surface lowering of mountain glaciers. By comparing two firn cores collected in 2018 and 2020 from Corbassière glacier in Switzerland, we demonstrate how vulnerable these precious archives of past environmental conditions have become. Within two years, the soluble impurity records were destroyed by melting. The glacier is now irrevocably lost as an archive for reconstructing major atmospheric aerosol components

    Segmental dynamics of polyethylene-alt-propylene studied by NMR spin echo techniques

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    © 2017 Author(s). Segmental dynamics of a highly entangled melt of linear polyethylene-alt-propylene with a molecular weight of 200 kDa was studied with a novel proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) approach based upon 1 H → 2 H isotope dilution as applied to a solid-echo build-up function I SE (t), which is constructed from the NMR spin echo signals arising from the Hahn echo (HE) and two variations of the solid-echo pulse sequence. The isotope dilution enables the separation of inter- and intramolecular contributions to this function and allows one to extract the segmental mean-squared displacements in the millisecond time range, which is hardly accessible by other experimental methods. The proposed technique in combination with time-temperature superposition yields information about segmental translation in polyethylene-alt-propylene over 6 decades in time from 10 -6 s up to 1 s. The time dependence of the mean-squared displacement obtained in this time range clearly shows three regimes of power law with exponents, which are in good agreement with the tube-reptation model predictions for the Rouse model, incoherent reptation and coherent reptation regimes. The results at short times coincide with the fast-field cycling relaxometry and neutron spin echo data, yet, significantly extending the probed time range. Furthermore, the obtained data are verified as well by the use of the dipolar-correlation effect on the Hahn echo, which was developed before by the co-authors. At the same time, the amplitude ratio of the intermolecular part of the proton dynamic dipole-dipole correlation function over the intramolecular part obtained from the experimental data is not in agreement with the predictions of the tube-reptation model for the regimes of incoherent and coherent reptation

    Proton-Radical Interaction in Crude Oil - A Combined NMR and EPR Study

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    © 2018 American Chemical Society. We present a detailed study of electron/nuclear interaction in a specific crude oil by continuous-wave and pulsed EPR, electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) at W-band (94 GHz), and fast field-cycling dynamic nuclear polarization (FFC-DNP) at X-band. A perceptible non-Overhauser (solid) effect is found at room temperature as a result of the polarization transfer from the intrinsic oil "free" radicals to the 1H nuclei with different dynamics. On the basis of the analysis of the longitudinal nuclear relaxation times, three dynamical components described by different electron-proton coupling parameters were found, which in combination with ENDOR provides information about the distribution of the radicals in the high-molecular oil components

    Study of structural and dynamic characteristics of copper(ii) amino acid complexes in solutions by combined EPR and NMR relaxation methods

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    Structural features and dynamical behaviour of the copper(ii) bis-complexes with glycine, d-alanine, d-valine, l-serine, l-aspartic acid, l-glutamic acid, l-lysine, l-proline, and sarcosine were studied by combined EPR and NMR relaxation methods. The cis and trans isomers were unambiguously assigned and characterized by EPR data. It was found that addition of a salt background has an influence on the cis-trans isomer equilibrium in favour of the formation of the cis isomer. By comparison of NMRD, DFT computations, and structural data it was shown that only one water molecule is coordinated in the axial position of these complexes. The increased exchange rates of this molecule found for Cu(l-Asp)2 2-, Cu(l-Glu)2 2-, Cu(l-LysH)2 2+, and Cu(l-Pro)2 were attributed to its pushing out by side chain groups of the ligands. By simulation of NMRD profiles an increase of lifetimes of the copper(ii) 2nd coordination sphere water molecules was revealed in the presence of additional carboxylic, alcoholic, or ammonium groups of the ligands, as well as the pyrrolidine ring of proline. The very short lifetimes of the 2nd coordination sphere water molecules (4-13 ps at 298 K) were explained in terms of the Frank-Wen structural model by the existence of cavities which draw in quickly enough water molecules from the 2nd coordination sphere. © 2014 The Partner Organisations

    Structure and Dynamics of Solvation Shells of Copper(II) Complexes with N,O-Containing Ligands

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    © 2015 American Chemical Society. EPR, NMR relaxation methods, and DFT calculations were jointly used to investigate the structural and dynamical characteristics of solvation shells of copper(II) complexes with iminodiacetic acid, glycylglycine, and glycyglycylglycine in comparison with the copper(II) bis-glycinate studied previously. A strong trans influence of deprotonated peptide nitrogen was revealed in EPR spectra parameters of copper(II) complexes with oligopeptides. With models of the experimental NMRD data and literature X-ray structural information, it was suggested that only one water molecule coordinates in axial position of copper(II) complexes with glycine and di- and triglycine (Cu(Gly)2, Cu(GGH-1), and Cu(GGGH-2)-), and the copper ion in these complexes is pentacoordinated, while in the iminodiacetate complex, Cu(IDA), both apical positions can be occupied by solute molecules. The obtained structural results were confirmed by DFT calculations of structures of studied compounds using different functionals and basis sets. It was shown that the donor ability of equatorial ligands and trans influence have an effect on the characteristics of the axial water bond. With increasing donor strength of equatorial ligands, pentacoordination of copper(II) complexes in water solutions becomes more preferable

    HER2 and ESR1 mRNA expression levels and response to neoadjuvant trastuzumab plus chemotherapy in patients with primary breast cancer

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    Introduction: Recent data suggest that benefit from trastuzumab and chemotherapy might be related to expression of HER2 and estrogen receptor (ESR1). Therefore, we investigated HER2 and ESR1 mRNA levels in core biopsies of HER2-positive breast carcinomas from patients treated within the neoadjuvant GeparQuattro trial. Methods: HER2 levels were centrally analyzed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), silver in-situ hybridization (SISH) and qRT-PCR in 217 pretherapeutic formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) core biopsies. All tumors had been HER2-positive by local pathology and had been treated with neoadjuvant trastuzumab/ chemotherapy in GeparQuattro. Results: Only 73% of the tumors (158 of 217) were centrally HER2-positive (cHER2-positive) by IHC/SISH, with cHER2-positive tumors showing a significantly higher pCR rate (46.8% vs. 20.3%, p<0.0005). HER2 status by qRT-PCR showed a concordance of 88.5% with the central IHC/SISH status, with a low pCR rate in those tumors that were HER2-negative by mRNA analysis (21.1% vs. 49.6%, p<0.0005). The level of HER2 mRNA expression was linked to response rate in ESR1-positive tumors, but not in ESR1-negative tumors. HER2 mRNA expression was significantly associated with pCR in the HER2-positive/ESR1-positive tumors (p=0.004), but not in HER2-positive/ESR1-negative tumors. Conclusions: Only patients with cHER2-positive tumors - irrespective of the method used - have an increased pCR rate with trastuzumab plus chemotherapy. In patients with cHER2-negative tumors the pCR rate is comparable to the pCR rate in the non-trastuzumab treated HER-negative population. Response to trastuzumab is correlated to HER2 mRNA levels only in ESR1-positive tumors. This study adds further evidence to the different biology of both subsets within the HER2-positive group

    Molecular velocity auto-correlation of simple liquids observed by NMR MGSE method

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    The velocity auto-correlation spectra of simple liquids obtained by the NMR method of modulated gradient spin echo show features in the low frequency range up to a few kHz, which can be explained reasonably well by a t3/2t^{-3/2} long time tail decay only for non-polar liquid toluene, while the spectra of polar liquids, such as ethanol, water and glycerol, are more congruent with the model of diffusion of particles temporarily trapped in potential wells created by their neighbors. As the method provides the spectrum averaged over ensemble of particle trajectories, the initial non-exponential decay of spin echoes is attributed to a spatial heterogeneity of molecular motion in a bulk of liquid, reflected in distribution of the echo decays for short trajectories. While at longer time intervals, and thus with longer trajectories, heterogeneity is averaged out, giving rise to a spectrum which is explained as a combination of molecular self-diffusion and eddy diffusion within the vortexes of hydrodynamic fluctuations.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figur

    Molecular Dynamics and Proton Hyperpolarization via Synthetic and Crude Oil Porphyrin Complexes in Solid and Solution States

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    The use of vanadyl porphyrins either in synthetic compounds or naturally occurring in asphaltenes is investigated as a source of proton hyperpolarization via dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments. The features of dynamics and location of the vanadyl VO2+ complex in aggregates within the oil asphaltene molecules are studied by means of DNP, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), and NMR field cycling relaxometry. Both the solid effect and Overhauser DNP were observed for the asphaltene solution in benzene, as well as in the solution and solid states for synthetic compounds. By comparison with a solution of synthetic vanadyl porphyrins, it is shown that vanadyl porphyrins in asphaltene aggregates are localized outside of the interface of the asphaltene aggregates and more exposed to the maltene molecules than "free"carbon-centered radicals associated with the core of asphaltene molecules. The perceptible contribution of scalar interaction is observed in solutions for both synthetic and asphaltene vanadyl porphyrins
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