Sample records for crystal structure space

  1. Molecular Dynamic Simulation of Space and Earth-Grown Crystal Structures of Thermostable T1 Lipase Geobacillus zalihae Revealed a Better Structure.

    PubMed

    Ishak, Siti Nor Hasmah; Aris, Sayangku Nor Ariati Mohamad; Halim, Khairul Bariyyah Abd; Ali, Mohd Shukuri Mohamad; Leow, Thean Chor; Kamarudin, Nor Hafizah Ahmad; Masomian, Malihe; Rahman, Raja Noor Zaliha Raja Abd

    2017-09-25

    Less sedimentation and convection in a microgravity environment has become a well-suited condition for growing high quality protein crystals. Thermostable T1 lipase derived from bacterium Geobacillus zalihae has been crystallized using the counter diffusion method under space and earth conditions. Preliminary study using YASARA molecular modeling structure program for both structures showed differences in number of hydrogen bond, ionic interaction, and conformation. The space-grown crystal structure contains more hydrogen bonds as compared with the earth-grown crystal structure. A molecular dynamics simulation study was used to provide insight on the fluctuations and conformational changes of both T1 lipase structures. The analysis of root mean square deviation (RMSD), radius of gyration, and root mean square fluctuation (RMSF) showed that space-grown structure is more stable than the earth-grown structure. Space-structure also showed more hydrogen bonds and ion interactions compared to the earth-grown structure. Further analysis also revealed that the space-grown structure has long-lived interactions, hence it is considered as the more stable structure. This study provides the conformational dynamics of T1 lipase crystal structure grown in space and earth condition.

  2. Space-Time Crystal and Space-Time Group

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xu, Shenglong; Wu, Congjun

    2018-03-01

    Crystal structures and the Bloch theorem play a fundamental role in condensed matter physics. We extend the static crystal to the dynamic "space-time" crystal characterized by the general intertwined space-time periodicities in D +1 dimensions, which include both the static crystal and the Floquet crystal as special cases. A new group structure dubbed a "space-time" group is constructed to describe the discrete symmetries of a space-time crystal. Compared to space and magnetic groups, the space-time group is augmented by "time-screw" rotations and "time-glide" reflections involving fractional translations along the time direction. A complete classification of the 13 space-time groups in one-plus-one dimensions (1 +1 D ) is performed. The Kramers-type degeneracy can arise from the glide time-reversal symmetry without the half-integer spinor structure, which constrains the winding number patterns of spectral dispersions. In 2 +1 D , nonsymmorphic space-time symmetries enforce spectral degeneracies, leading to protected Floquet semimetal states. We provide a general framework for further studying topological properties of the (D +1 )-dimensional space-time crystal.

  3. Space-Time Crystal and Space-Time Group.

    PubMed

    Xu, Shenglong; Wu, Congjun

    2018-03-02

    Crystal structures and the Bloch theorem play a fundamental role in condensed matter physics. We extend the static crystal to the dynamic "space-time" crystal characterized by the general intertwined space-time periodicities in D+1 dimensions, which include both the static crystal and the Floquet crystal as special cases. A new group structure dubbed a "space-time" group is constructed to describe the discrete symmetries of a space-time crystal. Compared to space and magnetic groups, the space-time group is augmented by "time-screw" rotations and "time-glide" reflections involving fractional translations along the time direction. A complete classification of the 13 space-time groups in one-plus-one dimensions (1+1D) is performed. The Kramers-type degeneracy can arise from the glide time-reversal symmetry without the half-integer spinor structure, which constrains the winding number patterns of spectral dispersions. In 2+1D, nonsymmorphic space-time symmetries enforce spectral degeneracies, leading to protected Floquet semimetal states. We provide a general framework for further studying topological properties of the (D+1)-dimensional space-time crystal.

  4. Crystallization of dienelactone hydrolase in two space groups: structural changes caused by crystal packing

    PubMed Central

    Porter, Joanne L.; Carr, Paul D.; Collyer, Charles A.; Ollis, David L.

    2014-01-01

    Dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) is a monomeric protein with a simple α/β-hydrolase fold structure. It readily crystallizes in space group P212121 from either a phosphate or ammonium sulfate precipitation buffer. Here, the structure of DLH at 1.85 Å resolution crystallized in space group C2 with two molecules in the asymmetric unit is reported. When crystallized in space group P212121 DLH has either phosphates or sulfates bound to the protein in crucial locations, one of which is located in the active site, preventing substrate/inhibitor binding. Another is located on the surface of the enzyme coordinated by side chains from two different molecules. Crystallization in space group C2 from a sodium citrate buffer results in new crystallographic protein–protein interfaces. The protein backbone is highly similar, but new crystal contacts cause changes in side-chain orientations and in loop positioning. In regions not involved in crystal contacts, there is little change in backbone or side-chain configuration. The flexibility of surface loops and the adaptability of side chains are important factors enabling DLH to adapt and form different crystal lattices. PMID:25005082

  5. Electrochemical deposition of silver crystals aboard Skylab 4

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Grodzka, P. G.; Facemire, B. R.; Johnston, M. H.; Gates, D. W.

    1976-01-01

    Silver crystals were grown aboard Skylab 4 by an electro-chemical reaction and subsequently returned to earth for comparison with crystals grown at 1- and 5-g. Both the Skylab and earth-grown crystals show a variety of structures. Certain tendencies in structure dependency on gravity level, however, can be discerned. In addition, downward growing dendrite streamers; upward growing chunky crystal streamers; growth along an air/liquid interface; and ribbon, film, and fiber crystal habits were observed in experiments conducted on the ground with solutions of varying concentrations. It was also observed that the crystal structures of space and ground electro-deposited silver crystals were very similar to the structures of germanium selenide and germanium telluride crystals grown in space and on the ground by a vapor transport technique. Consideration of the data leads to the conclusions that: (1) the rate of electrochemical displacement of silver ions from a 5 percent aqueous solution by copper is predominantly diffussion controlled in space and kinetically controlled in 1- and higher-g because of augmentation of mass transport by convection; (2) downward and upward crystal streamers are the result of gravity-driven convection, the flow patterns of which can be delineated. Lateral growths along an air/liquid interface are the result of surface-tension-driven convection, the pattern of which also can be delineated; (3) electrolysis in space or low-g environments can produce either dendritic crystals with more perfect microcrystalline structures or massive, single crystals with fewer defects than those grown on ground or at higher g-levels. Ribbons or films of space-grown silicon crystals would find a ready market for electronic substrate and photocell applications. Space-grown dendritic, metal crystals present the possibility of unique catalysts. Large perfect crystals of various materials are desired for a number of electronic and optical applications; and (4) vapor transport growth of germanium selenide and germanium telluride is affected by convection mechanisms similar to the mechanisms hypothesized for the electrochemical deposition of silver crystals. Evidence and considerations leading to the preceding summaries and conclusions are presented. The implications of the findings and conclusions for technological applications are discussed, and recommendations for further experiments are presented.

  6. Concentration and structure inhomogeneities in GaSb(Si) single crystals grown at different heat and mass transfer conditions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Serebryakov, Yu. A.; Prokhorov, I. A.; Vlasov, V. N.; Korobeynikova, E. N.; Zakharov, B. G.; Shul'pina, I. L.; Marchenko, M. P.; Fryazinov, I. V.

    2007-06-01

    Results of ground-based experiments on crystallization of gallium antimonide on the POLIZON facility carried out within the framework of space experiment preparation aboard FOTON satellite are submitted. Technical and technological opportunities of suppression of disturbing factors for improvement of quality of grown crystals in space are substantiated. Features of formation of concentration and structure inhomogeneities in GaSb:Si crystals grown under non-stationary and stationary convection conditions are investigated. Experimental data about structure and dopant distribution inhomogeneities are discussed taking into account results of numerical researches of GaSb:Si crystallization. Also earlier received results of modeling of GaSb:Te crystallization under close temperature conditions are used. Correlation between computational and experimental data is shown. The data on intensity of flows close to crystallization front are received at which non-stationary or stationary conditions of crystallization are realized. The forecast for space conditions is made. The influence of a rotating magnetic field on convection in melt for application in space experiment projected is investigated.

  7. Protein Crystal Quality Studies

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1998-01-01

    Eddie Snell, Post-Doctoral Fellow the National Research Council (NRC) uses a reciprocal space mapping diffractometer for macromolecular crystal quality studies. The diffractometer is used in mapping the structure of macromolecules such as proteins to determine their structure and thus understand how they function with other proteins in the body. This is one of several analytical tools used on proteins crystallized on Earth and in space experiments. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  8. Protein Crystal Quality Studies

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1998-01-01

    Eddie Snell (standing), Post-Doctoral Fellow the National Research Council (NRC),and Marc Pusey of Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) use a reciprocal space mapping diffractometer for marcromolecular crystal quality studies. The diffractometer is used in mapping the structure of marcromolecules such as proteins to determine their structure and thus understand how they function with other proteins in the body. This is one of several analytical tools used on proteins crystalized on Earth and in space experiments. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  9. Validation of missed space-group symmetry in X-ray powder diffraction structures with dispersion-corrected density functional theory.

    PubMed

    Hempler, Daniela; Schmidt, Martin U; van de Streek, Jacco

    2017-08-01

    More than 600 molecular crystal structures with correct, incorrect and uncertain space-group symmetry were energy-minimized with dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D, PBE-D3). For the purpose of determining the correct space-group symmetry the required tolerance on the atomic coordinates of all non-H atoms is established to be 0.2 Å. For 98.5% of 200 molecular crystal structures published with missed symmetry, the correct space group is identified; there are no false positives. Very small, very symmetrical molecules can end up in artificially high space groups upon energy minimization, although this is easily detected through visual inspection. If the space group of a crystal structure determined from powder diffraction data is ambiguous, energy minimization with DFT-D provides a fast and reliable method to select the correct space group.

  10. Crystallographic analysis of ground and space thermostable T1 lipase crystal obtained via counter diffusion method approach.

    PubMed

    Mohamad Aris, Sayangku Nor Ariati; Thean Chor, Adam Leow; Mohamad Ali, Mohd Shukuri; Basri, Mahiran; Salleh, Abu Bakar; Raja Abd Rahman, Raja Noor Zaliha

    2014-01-01

    Three-dimensional structure of thermostable lipase is much sought after nowadays as it is important for industrial application mainly found in the food, detergent, and pharmaceutical sectors. Crystallization utilizing the counter diffusion method in space was performed with the aim to obtain high resolution diffracting crystals with better internal order to improve the accuracy of the structure. Thermostable T1 lipase enzyme has been crystallized in laboratory on earth and also under microgravity condition aboard Progress spacecraft to the ISS in collaboration with JAXA (Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency). This study is conducted with the aims of improving crystal packing and structure resolution. The diffraction data set for ground grown crystal was collected to 1.3 Å resolution and belonged to monoclinic C2 space group with unit cell parameters a = 117.40 Å, b = 80.95 Å, and c = 99.81 Å, whereas the diffraction data set for space grown crystal was collected to 1.1 Å resolution and belonged to monoclinic C2 space group with unit cell parameters a = 117.31 Å, b = 80.85 Å, and c = 99.81 Å. The major difference between the two crystal growth systems is the lack of convection and sedimentation in microgravity environment resulted in the growth of much higher quality crystals of T1 lipase.

  11. Synthesis, structural and optical properties of (ALa)(FeMn)O6 (A = Ba and Sr) double perovskites

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kumar, Dinesh; Sudarshan, V.; Singh, Akhilesh Kumar

    2018-05-01

    Here, we report structural and optical properties of ALaFeMnO6 (A = Ba and Sr) double perovskite synthesized via auto-combustion followed by calcinations process. Rietveld refinement of structure using x-ray diffraction data reveals that BaLaFeMnO6 crystallizes into cubic crystal structure with space group Pm-3m while SrLaFeMnO6 crystallizes into rhombohedral crystal structure having space group R-3c. The absorption spectrum measurement using UV-Vis spectroscopy reveals that these samples are prefect insulator having energy band gap between conduction and valence band of the order of 6 eV.

  12. High resolution synchrotron X-radiation diffraction imaging of crystals grown in microgravity and closely related terrestrial crystals

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Steiner, Bruce; Dobbyn, Ronald C.; Black, David; Burdette, Harold; Kuriyama, Masao; Fripp, Archibald; Simchik, Richard

    1991-01-01

    Irregularities in three crystals grown in space and in four terrestrial crystals grown under otherwise comparable conditions have been observed in high resolution diffraction imaging. The images provide important new clues to the nature and origins of irregularities in each crystal. For two of the materials, mercuric iodide and lead tin telluride, more than one phase (an array of non-diffracting inclusions) was observed in terrestrial samples; but the formation of these multiple phases appears to have been suppressed in directly comparable crystals grown in microgravity. The terrestrial seed crystal of triglycine sulfate displayed an unexpected layered structure, which propagated during directly comparable space growth. Terrestrial Bridgman regrowth of gallium arsenide revealed a mesoscopic structure substantially different from that of the original Czochralski material. A directly comparable crystal is to be grown shortly in space.

  13. Biomineral nanoparticles are space-filling

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yang, Li; Killian, Christopher E.; Kunz, Martin; Tamura, Nobumichi; Gilbert, P. U. P. A.

    2011-02-01

    Sea urchin biominerals have been shown to form from aggregating nanoparticles of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), which then crystallize into macroscopic single crystals of calcite. Here we measure the surface areas of these biominerals and find them to be comparable to those of space-filling macroscopic geologic calcite crystals. These biominerals differ from synthetic mesocrystals, which are invariably porous. We propose that space-filling ACC is the structural precursor for echinoderm biominerals.Sea urchin biominerals have been shown to form from aggregating nanoparticles of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), which then crystallize into macroscopic single crystals of calcite. Here we measure the surface areas of these biominerals and find them to be comparable to those of space-filling macroscopic geologic calcite crystals. These biominerals differ from synthetic mesocrystals, which are invariably porous. We propose that space-filling ACC is the structural precursor for echinoderm biominerals. This article was submitted as part of a Themed Issue on Crystallization and Formation Mechanisms of Nanostructures. Other papers on this topic can be found in issue 11 of vol. 2 (2010). This issue can be found from the Nanoscale homepage [http://www.rsc.org/nanoscale

  14. Stochastic generation of complex crystal structures combining group and graph theory with application to carbon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shi, Xizhi; He, Chaoyu; Pickard, Chris J.; Tang, Chao; Zhong, Jianxin

    2018-01-01

    A method is introduced to stochastically generate crystal structures with defined structural characteristics. Reasonable quotient graphs for symmetric crystals are constructed using a random strategy combined with space group and graph theory. Our algorithm enables the search for large-size and complex crystal structures with a specified connectivity, such as threefold sp2 carbons, fourfold sp3 carbons, as well as mixed sp2-sp3 carbons. To demonstrate the method, we randomly construct initial structures adhering to space groups from 75 to 230 and a range of lattice constants, and we identify 281 new sp3 carbon crystals. First-principles optimization of these structures show that most of them are dynamically and mechanically stable and are energetically comparable to those previously proposed. Some of the new structures can be considered as candidates to explain the experimental cold compression of graphite.

  15. Crystal engineering of ibuprofen compounds: From molecule to crystal structure to morphology prediction by computational simulation and experimental study

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhang, Min; Liang, Zuozhong; Wu, Fei; Chen, Jian-Feng; Xue, Chunyu; Zhao, Hong

    2017-06-01

    We selected the crystal structures of ibuprofen with seven common space groups (Cc, P21/c, P212121, P21, Pbca, Pna21, and Pbcn), which was generated from ibuprofen molecule by molecular simulation. The predicted crystal structures of ibuprofen with space group P21/c has the lowest total energy and the largest density, which is nearly indistinguishable with experimental result. In addition, the XRD patterns for predicted crystal structure are highly consistent with recrystallization from solvent of ibuprofen. That indicates that the simulation can accurately predict the crystal structure of ibuprofen from the molecule. Furthermore, based on this crystal structure, we predicted the crystal habit in vacuum using the attachment energy (AE) method and considered solvent effects in a systematic way using the modified attachment energy (MAE) model. The simulation can accurately construct a complete process from molecule to crystal structure to morphology prediction. Experimentally, we observed crystal morphologies in four different polarity solvents compounds (ethanol, acetonitrile, ethyl acetate, and toluene). We found that the aspect ratio decreases of crystal habits in this ibuprofen system were found to vary with increasing solvent relative polarity. Besides, the modified crystal morphologies are in good agreement with the observed experimental morphologies. Finally, this work may guide computer-aided design of the desirable crystal morphology.

  16. Use of Crystal Structure Informatics for Defining the Conformational Space Needed for Predicting Crystal Structures of Pharmaceutical Molecules.

    PubMed

    Iuzzolino, Luca; Reilly, Anthony M; McCabe, Patrick; Price, Sarah L

    2017-10-10

    Determining the range of conformations that a flexible pharmaceutical-like molecule could plausibly adopt in a crystal structure is a key to successful crystal structure prediction (CSP) studies. We aim to use conformational information from the crystal structures in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) to facilitate this task. The conformations produced by the CSD Conformer Generator are reduced in number by considering the underlying rotamer distributions, an analysis of changes in molecular shape, and a minimal number of molecular ab initio calculations. This method is tested for five pharmaceutical-like molecules where an extensive CSP study has already been performed. The CSD informatics-derived set of crystal structure searches generates almost all the low-energy crystal structures previously found, including all experimental structures. The workflow effectively combines information on individual torsion angles and then eliminates the combinations that are too high in energy to be found in the solid state, reducing the resources needed to cover the solid-state conformational space of a molecule. This provides insights into how the low-energy solid-state and isolated-molecule conformations are related to the properties of the individual flexible torsion angles.

  17. Procedure to prepare transparent silica gels

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Barber, Patrick G. (Inventor); Simpson, Norman R. (Inventor)

    1987-01-01

    This invention relates to the production of silica gels and in particular to a process for the preparation of silica gels which can be used as a crystal growth medium that simulates the convectionless environment of space to produce structurally perfect crystals. Modern utilizations of substances in electronics, such as radio transmitters and high frequency microphones, often require single crystals with controlled purity and structural perfection. The near convectionless environment of silica gel suppresses nucleation, thereby reducing the competitive nature of crystal growth. This competition limits the size and perfection of the crystal; and it is obviously desirable to suppress nucleation until, ideally, only one crystal grows in a predetermined location. A silica gel is not a completely convectionless environment like outer space, but is the closest known environment to that of outer space that can be created on Earth.

  18. Instrument and method for focusing X-rays, gamma rays and neutrons

    DOEpatents

    Smither, Robert K.

    1984-01-01

    A crystal diffraction instrument or diffraction grating instrument with an improved crystalline structure or grating spacing structure having a face for receiving a beam of photons or neutrons and diffraction planar spacing or grating spacing along that face with the spacing increasing progressively along the face to provide a decreasing Bragg diffraction angle for a monochromatic radiation and thereby increasing the usable area and acceptance angle. The increased planar spacing for the diffraction crystal is provided by the use of a temperature differential across the crystalline structure, by assembling a plurality of crystalline structures with different compositions, by an individual crystalline structure with a varying composition and thereby a changing planar spacing along its face, and by combinations of these techniques. The increased diffraction grating element spacing is generated during the fabrication of the diffraction grating by controlling the cutting tool that is cutting the grooves or controlling the laser beam, electron beam or ion beam that is exposing the resist layer, etc. It is also possible to vary this variation in grating spacing by applying a thermal gradient to the diffraction grating in much the same manner as is done in the crystal diffraction case.

  19. Design considerations for a Space Shuttle Main Engine turbine blade made of single crystal material

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Abdul-Aziz, A.; August, R.; Nagpal, V.

    1993-01-01

    Nonlinear finite-element structural analyses were performed on the first stage high-pressure fuel turbopump blade of the Space Shuttle Main Engine. The analyses examined the structural response and the dynamic characteristics at typical operating conditions. Single crystal material PWA-1480 was considered for the analyses. Structural response and the blade natural frequencies with respect to the crystal orientation were investigated. The analyses were conducted based on typical test stand engine cycle. Influence of combined thermal, aerodynamic, and centrifugal loadings was considered. Results obtained showed that the single crystal secondary orientation effects on the maximum principal stresses are not highly significant.

  20. The crystal structure of the new ternary antimonide Dy 3Cu 20+xSb 11-x ( x≈2)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fedyna, L. O.; Bodak, O. I.; Fedorchuk, A. O.; Tokaychuk, Ya. O.

    2005-06-01

    New ternary antimonide Dy 3Cu 20+xSb 11-x ( x≈2) was synthesized and its crystal structure was determined by direct methods from X-ray powder diffraction data (diffractometer DRON-3M, Cu Kα-radiation, R=6.99%,R=12.27%,R=11.55%). The compound crystallizes with the own cubic structure type: space group F 4¯ 3m, Pearson code cF272, a=16.6150(2) Å,Z=8. The structure of the Dy 3Cu 20Sb 11-x ( x≈2) can be obtained from the structure type BaHg 11 by doubling of the lattice parameter and subtraction of 16 atoms. The studied structure was compared with the structures of known compounds, which crystallize in the same space group with similar cell parameters.

  1. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1998-06-16

    Eddie Snell (standing), Post-Doctoral Fellow the National Research Council (NRC),and Marc Pusey of Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) use a reciprocal space mapping diffractometer for marcromolecular crystal quality studies. The diffractometer is used in mapping the structure of marcromolecules such as proteins to determine their structure and thus understand how they function with other proteins in the body. This is one of several analytical tools used on proteins crystalized on Earth and in space experiments. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  2. Protein crystal growth in space

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Bugg, C. E.; Clifford, D. W.

    1987-01-01

    The advantages of protein crystallization in space, and the applications of protein crystallography to drug design, protein engineering, and the design of synthetic vaccines are examined. The steps involved in using protein crystallography to determine the three-dimensional structure of a protein are discussed. The growth chamber design and the hand-held apparatus developed for protein crystal growth by vapor diffusion techniques (hanging-drop method) are described; the experimental data from the four Shuttle missions are utilized to develop hardware for protein crystal growth in space and to evaluate the effects of gravity on protein crystal growth.

  3. Rare-earth metal gallium silicides via the gallium self-flux method. Synthesis, crystal structures, and magnetic properties of RE(Ga 1–xSi x)₂ (RE=Y, La–Nd, Sm, Gd–Yb, Lu)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Darone, Gregory M.; Hmiel, Benjamin; Zhang, Jiliang

    Fifteen ternary rare-earth metal gallium silicides have been synthesized using molten Ga as a molten flux. They have been structurally characterized by single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction to form with three different structures—the early to mid-late rare-earth metals RE=La–Nd, Sm, Gd–Ho, Yb and Y form compounds with empirical formulae RE(Ga xSi 1–x)₂ (0.38≤x≤0.63), which crystallize with the tetragonal α-ThSi₂ structure type (space group I4₁/amd, No. 141; Pearson symbol tI12). The compounds of the late rare-earth crystallize with the orthorhombic α-GdSi₂ structure type (space group Imma, No. 74; Pearson symbol oI12), with refined empirical formula REGa xSi 2–x–y (RE=Ho, Er, Tm;more » 0.33≤x≤0.40, 0.10≤y≤0.18). LuGa₀.₃₂₍₁₎Si₁.₄₃₍₁₎ crystallizes with the orthorhombic YbMn₀.₁₇Si₁.₈₃ structure type (space group Cmcm, No. 63; Pearson symbol oC24). Structural trends are reviewed and analyzed; the magnetic susceptibilities of the grown single-crystals are presented. - Graphical abstract: This article details the exploration of the RE–Ga–Si ternary system with the aim to systematically investigate the structural “boundaries” between the α-ThSi₂ and α-GdSi₂-type structures, and studies of the magnetic properties of the newly synthesized single-crystalline materials. Highlights: • Light rare-earth gallium silicides crystallize in α-ThSi₂ structure type. • Heavy rare-earth gallium silicides crystallize in α-GdSi₂ structure type. • LuGaSi crystallizes in a defect variant of the YbMn₀.₁₇Si₁.₈₃ structure type.« less

  4. [Fine stereo structure for natural organic molecules, a preliminary study. II. Melting point influenced by structure factors].

    PubMed

    Lu, Y; Zheng, Q; Lu, D; Ma, P; Chen, Y

    1995-06-01

    Crystal structures of two compounds from Tripterygium wilfordii Hook f. have been determined by X-ray diffraction method. Structure factors influencing melting point of solid state have been analysed. Crystal class (or space group), recrystallization solvent, force between molecules and fine changes of molecular structures will all cause melting point changes of crystal substance.

  5. Molecule diagram from space-grown crystals

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2004-01-01

    Researchers' at Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute, in Buffalo, N.Y. have analyzed the molecular structures of insulin crystals grown during Space Shuttle experiments and are unlocking the mystery of how insulin works.

  6. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1998-06-16

    Eddie Snell, Post-Doctoral Fellow the National Research Council (NRC) uses a reciprocal space mapping diffractometer for macromolecular crystal quality studies. The diffractometer is used in mapping the structure of macromolecules such as proteins to determine their structure and thus understand how they function with other proteins in the body. This is one of several analytical tools used on proteins crystallized on Earth and in space experiments. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  7. Human 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-ligand complexes: crystals of different space groups with various cations and combined seeding and co-crystallization

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhu, D.-W.; Han, Q.; Qiu, W.; Campbell, R. L.; Xie, B.-X.; Azzi, A.; Lin, S.-X.

    1999-01-01

    Human estrogenic 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD1) is responsible for the synthesis of active estrogens that stimulate the proliferation of breast cancer cells. The enzyme has been crystallized using a Mg 2+/PEG (3500)/β-octyl glucoside system [Zhu et al., J. Mol. Biol. 234 (1993) 242]. The space group of these crystals is C2. Here we report that cations can affect 17β-HSD1 crystallization significantly. In the presence of Mn 2+ instead of Mg 2+, crystals have been obtained in the same space group with similar unit cell dimensions. In the presence of Li + and Na + instead of Mg 2+, the space group has been changed to P2 12 12 1. A whole data set for a crystal of 17ß-HSD1 complex with progesterone grown in the presence of Li + has been collected to 1.95 Å resolution with a synchrotron source. The cell dimensions are a=41.91 Å, b=108.21 Å, c=117.00 Å. The structure has been preliminarily determined by molecular replacement, yielding important information on crystal packing in the presence of different cations. In order to further understand the structure-function relationship of 17β-HSD1, enzyme complexes with several ligands have been crystallized. As the steroids have very low aqueous solubility, we used a combined method of seeding and co-crystallization to obtain crystals of 17β-HSD1 complexed with various ligands. This method provides ideal conditions for growing complex crystals, with ligands such as 20α-hydroxysteroid progesterone, testosterone and 17β-methyl-estradiol-NADP +. Several complex structures have been determined with reliable electronic density of the bound ligands.

  8. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1999-04-21

    University of Alabama engineer Stacey Giles briefs NASA astronaut Dr. Bornie Dunbar about the design and capabilities of the X-ray Crystallography Facility under development at the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, April 21, 1999. The X-ray Crystallography Facility is designed to speed the collection of protein structure information from crystals grown aboard the International Space Station. By measuring and mapping the protein crystal structure in space, researchers will avoid exposing the delicate crystals to the rigors of space travel and make important research data available to scientists much faster. The X-ray Crystallography facility is being designed and developed by the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, a NASA Commercial Space Center.

  9. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1999-04-21

    University of Alabama engineer Lance Weiss briefs NASA astronaut Dr. Bornie Dunbar about the design and capabilities of the X-ray Crystallography Facility under development at the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, April 21, 1999. The X-ray Crystallography Facility is designed to speed the collection of protein structure information from crystals grown aboard the International Space Station. By measuring and mapping the protein crystal structure in space, researchers will avoid exposing the delicate crystals to the rigors of space travel and make important research data available to scientists much faster. The X-ray Crystallography facility is being designed and developed by the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, a NASA Commercial Space Center.

  10. Instrument and method for focusing x rays, gamma rays, and neutrons

    DOEpatents

    Smither, R.K.

    1982-03-25

    A crystal-diffraction instrument or diffraction-grating instrument is described with an improved crystalline structure or grating spacing structure having a face for receiving a beam of photons or neutrons and diffraction planar spacing or grating spacing along that face with the spacing increasing progressively along the face to provide a decreasing Bragg diffraction angle for a monochromatic radiation and thereby increasing the usable area and acceptance angle. The increased planar spacing for the diffraction crystal is provided by the use of a temperature differential across the line structures with different compositions, by an individual crystalline structure with a varying composition and thereby a changing planar spacing along its face, and by combinations of these techniques. The increased diffraction grating element spacing is generated during the fabrication of the diffraction grating by controlling the cutting tool that is cutting the grooves or controlling the laser beam, electron beam, or ion beam that is exposing the resist layer, etc. It is also possible to vary this variation in grating spacing by applying a thermal gradient to the diffraction grating in much the same manner as is done in the crystal-diffraction case.

  11. The Crystal Structure of Oxaliplatin: A Case of Overlooked Pseudo Symmetry.

    PubMed

    Johnstone, Timothy C

    2014-01-08

    The crystal structure of the anticancer drug oxaliplatin, [Pt( R,R- DACH)(oxalate)] (DACH = diaminocyclohexane), was first reported in the non-centrosymmetric space group P2 1 , confirming the sole presence of the R , R enantiomer of the DACH ligand [M. A. Bruck et al. , Inorg. Chim. Acta , 92 (1984) 279-284]. It was later proposed that the crystal structure is better described in the centrosymmetric space group P2 1 /m, signifying the presence of the compound as a racemic mixture [A. S. Abu-Surrah et al. , Polyhedron , 22 (2003) 1529-1534]. Herein is presented a reinvestigation of this crystal structure, which shows that the discrepancy between the two proposed space group assignments arises from overlooked pseudo symmetry. The crystal structures of the synthetic precursor to oxaliplatin, Pt( R , R -DACH)I 2 , and a platinum(IV) derivative, trans -[Pt( R , R -DACH)(oxalate)(OH) 2 ], were also determined, and the absolute configuration of the DACH ligand in each was confirmed to be R , R . A spectroscopic investigation of the optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) of the oxaliplatin crystals was carried out to further confirm the lack of the true crystallographic mirror plane required for a P2 1 /m solution. The ORD was theoretically simulated, in one instance, by applying the Kramers-Kronig transform to the computed circular dichroism spectrum and was found to corroborate the spectroscopic and crystallographic findings. Finally, a brief discussion is given of the importance of discussing the details of nuanced crystal structures and of providing evidence in addition to X-ray structure determination if chemically unexpected results are obtained.

  12. The Crystal Structure of Oxaliplatin: A Case of Overlooked Pseudo Symmetry

    PubMed Central

    Johnstone, Timothy C.

    2013-01-01

    The crystal structure of the anticancer drug oxaliplatin, [Pt(R,R-DACH)(oxalate)] (DACH = diaminocyclohexane), was first reported in the non-centrosymmetric space group P21, confirming the sole presence of the R,R enantiomer of the DACH ligand [M. A. Bruck et al., Inorg. Chim. Acta, 92 (1984) 279–284]. It was later proposed that the crystal structure is better described in the centrosymmetric space group P21/m, signifying the presence of the compound as a racemic mixture [A. S. Abu-Surrah et al., Polyhedron, 22 (2003) 1529–1534]. Herein is presented a reinvestigation of this crystal structure, which shows that the discrepancy between the two proposed space group assignments arises from overlooked pseudo symmetry. The crystal structures of the synthetic precursor to oxaliplatin, Pt(R,R-DACH)I2, and a platinum(IV) derivative, trans-[Pt(R,R-DACH)(oxalate)(OH)2], were also determined, and the absolute configuration of the DACH ligand in each was confirmed to be R,R. A spectroscopic investigation of the optical rotatory dispersion (ORD) of the oxaliplatin crystals was carried out to further confirm the lack of the true crystallographic mirror plane required for a P21/m solution. The ORD was theoretically simulated, in one instance, by applying the Kramers-Kronig transform to the computed circular dichroism spectrum and was found to corroborate the spectroscopic and crystallographic findings. Finally, a brief discussion is given of the importance of discussing the details of nuanced crystal structures and of providing evidence in addition to X-ray structure determination if chemically unexpected results are obtained. PMID:24415827

  13. Biomineral nanoparticles are space-filling.

    PubMed

    Yang, Li; Killian, Christopher E; Kunz, Martin; Tamura, Nobumichi; Gilbert, P U P A

    2011-02-01

    Sea urchin biominerals have been shown to form from aggregating nanoparticles of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), which then crystallize into macroscopic single crystals of calcite. Here we measure the surface areas of these biominerals and find them to be comparable to those of space-filling macroscopic geologic calcite crystals. These biominerals differ from synthetic mesocrystals, which are invariably porous. We propose that space-filling ACC is the structural precursor for echinoderm biominerals.

  14. Path-integral and Ornstein-Zernike study of quantum fluid structures on the crystallization line

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sesé, Luis M., E-mail: msese@ccia.uned.es

    2016-03-07

    Liquid neon, liquid para-hydrogen, and the quantum hard-sphere fluid are studied with path integral Monte Carlo simulations and the Ornstein-Zernike pair equation on their respective crystallization lines. The results cover the whole sets of structures in the r-space and the k-space and, for completeness, the internal energies, pressures and isothermal compressibilities. Comparison with experiment is made wherever possible, and the possibilities of establishing k-space criteria for quantum crystallization based on the path-integral centroids are discussed. In this regard, the results show that the centroid structure factor contains two significant parameters related to its main peak features (amplitude and shape) thatmore » can be useful to characterize freezing.« less

  15. Placement of molecules in (not out of) the cell

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dauter, Zbigniew, E-mail: dauter@anl.gov

    2013-01-01

    The importance of presenting macromolecular structures in unified, standard ways is discussed. To uniquely describe a crystal structure, it is sufficient to specify the crystal unit cell and symmetry, and describe the unique structural motif which is repeated by the space-group symmetry throughout the whole crystal. It is somewhat arbitrary how such a unique motif can be defined and positioned with respect to the unit-cell origin. As a result of such freedom, some isomorphous structures are presented in the Protein Data Bank in different locations and appear as if they have different atomic coordinates, despite being completely equivalent structurally. Thismore » may easily confuse those users of the PDB who are less familiar with crystallographic symmetry transformations. It would therefore be beneficial for the community of PDB users to introduce standard rules for locating crystal structures of macromolecules in the unit cells of various space groups.« less

  16. X-ray Crystallography Facility

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1999-01-01

    University of Alabama engineer Lance Weiss briefs NASA astronaut Dr. Bornie Dunbar about the design and capabilities of the X-ray Crystallography Facility under development at the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, April 21, 1999. The X-ray Crystallography Facility is designed to speed the collection of protein structure information from crystals grown aboard the International Space Station. By measuring and mapping the protein crystal structure in space, researchers will avoid exposing the delicate crystals to the rigors of space travel and make important research data available to scientists much faster. The X-ray Crystallography facility is being designed and developed by the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, a NASA Commercial Space Center.

  17. X-ray Crystallography Facility

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1999-01-01

    University of Alabama engineer Stacey Giles briefs NASA astronaut Dr. Bornie Dunbar about the design and capabilities of the X-ray Crystallography Facility under development at the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, April 21, 1999. The X-ray Crystallography Facility is designed to speed the collection of protein structure information from crystals grown aboard the International Space Station. By measuring and mapping the protein crystal structure in space, researchers will avoid exposing the delicate crystals to the rigors of space travel and make important research data available to scientists much faster. The X-ray Crystallography facility is being designed and developed by the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, a NASA Commercial Space Center.

  18. Structure, dielectric and electric properties of diisobutylammonium hydrogen sulfate crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bednarchuk, Tamara J.; Kinzhybalo, Vasyl; Markiewicz, Ewa; Hilczer, Bożena; Pietraszko, Adam

    2018-02-01

    Diisobutylammonium hydrogen sulfate, a new organic-inorganic hybrid compound, was successfully synthesized and three structural phases in 298-433 K temperature range were revealed by differential scanning calorimetry and X-ray powder diffraction studies. Single crystal X-ray diffraction data were used to describe the crystal structures in each particular case. In phase III (below 336/319 K on heating/cooling) the crystal arrangement appears to be within the triclinic symmetry with P-1 space group. During heating in the 336-339 K region (and 319-337 K on cooling) the crystal exists in the phase II, characterized by monoclinic symmetry with P21/c space group. Consequently, above 339 K (during heating, and 337 K during cooling temperature sequences), i.e. in phase I the crystal exhibits orthorhombic symmetry (Cmce space group). Ferroelastic domain structure was observed in phase III. These phase boundaries (III→II and II→I) were accompanied by the presence of small anomalies, apparent in the dielectric permittivity and electric conductivity experimental data. Fast proton transport with activation energy of 0.23 eV was observed in the high temperature phase I and related to phonon assisted proton diffusion conditioned by disorder of diisobutylammonium (diba) cations, as well as by high thermal displacements of oxygen and sulfur atoms of hydrogen sulfate anion (hs).

  19. Crystallographic Topology 2: Overview and Work in Progress

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Johnson, C.K.

    1999-08-01

    This overview describes an application of contemporary geometric topology and stochastic process concepts to structural crystallography. In this application, crystallographic groups become orbifolds, crystal structures become Morse functions on orbifolds, and vibrating atoms in a crystal become vector valued Gaussian measures with the Radon-Nikodym property. Intended crystallographic benefits include new methods for visualization of space groups and crystal structures, analysis of the thermal motion patterns seen in ORTEP drawings, and a classification scheme for crystal structures based on their Heegaard splitting properties.

  20. From molecule to solid: The prediction of organic crystal structures

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Dzyabchenko, A. V.

    2008-10-01

    A method for predicting the structure of a molecular crystal based on the systematic search for a global potential energy minimum is considered. The method takes into account unequal occurrences of the structural classes of organic crystals and symmetry of the multidimensional configuration space. The programs of global minimization PMC, comparison of crystal structures CRYCOM, and approximation to the distributions of the electrostatic potentials of molecules FitMEP are presented as tools for numerically solving the problem. Examples of predicted structures substantiated experimentally and the experience of author’s participation in international tests of crystal structure prediction organized by the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Center (Cambridge, UK) are considered.

  1. Astronaut Scott Parazynski works with PCG experiment on middeck

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1994-11-14

    STS066-13-029 (3-14 Nov 1994) --- On the Space Shuttle Atlantis' mid-deck, astronaut Scott E. Parazynski, mission specialist, works at one of two areas onboard the Shuttle which support the Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) experiment. This particular section is called the Vapor Diffusion Apparatus (VDA), housed in a Single Locker Thermal Enclosure (STES). Together with the Crystal Observation System, housed in the Thermal Enclosure System (COS/TES) the VDA represents the continuing research into the structures of proteins and other macromolecules such as viruses. In addition to using the microgravity of space to grow high-quality protein crystals for structural analyses, the experiments are expected to help develop technologies and methods to improve the protein crystallization process on Earth as well as in space.

  2. Swinging Symmetry, Multiple Structural Phase Transitions, and Versatile Physical Properties in RECuGa3 (RE = La-Nd, Sm-Gd).

    PubMed

    Subbarao, Udumula; Rayaprol, Sudhindra; Dally, Rebecca; Graf, Michael J; Peter, Sebastian C

    2016-01-19

    The compounds RECuGa3 (RE = La-Nd, Sm-Gd) were synthesized by various techniques. Preliminary X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses at room temperature suggested that the compounds crystallize in the tetragonal system with either the centrosymmetric space group I4/mmm (BaAl4 type) or the non-centrosymmetric space group I4mm (BaNiSn3 type). Detailed single-crystal XRD, neutron diffraction, and synchrotron XRD studies of selected compounds confirmed the non-centrosymmetric BaNiSn3 structure type at room temperature with space group I4mm. Temperature-dependent single-crystal XRD, powder XRD, and synchrotron beamline measurements showed a structural transition between centro- and non-centrosymmetry followed by a phase transition to the Rb5Hg19 type (space group I4/m) above 400 K and another transition to the Cu3Au structure type (space group Pm3̅m) above 700 K. Combined single-crystal and synchrotron powder XRD studies of PrCuGa3 at high temperatures revealed structural transitions at higher temperatures, highlighting the closeness of the BaNiSn3 structure to other structure types not known to the RECuGa3 family. The crystal structure of RECuGa3 is composed of eight capped hexagonal prism cages [RE4Cu4Ga12] occupying one rare-earth atom in each ring, which are shared through the edge of Cu and Ga atoms along the ab plane, resulting in a three-dimensional network. Resistivity and magnetization measurements demonstrated that all of these compounds undergo magnetic ordering at temperatures between 1.8 and 80 K, apart from the Pr and La compounds: the former remains paramagnetic down to 0.3 K, while superconductivity was observed in the La compound at T = 1 K. It is not clear whether this is intrinsic or due to filamentary Ga present in the sample. The divalent nature of Eu in EuCuGa3 was confirmed by magnetization measurements and X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy and is further supported by the crystal structure analysis.

  3. Special Features of the Structure of Single-Crystal Refractory Nickel Alloy Under Directed Crystallization

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bondarenko, Yu. A.; Echin, A. B.; Surova, V. A.; Kolodyazhnyi, M. Yu.

    2017-05-01

    The effect of the conditions of directed crystallization (the temperature gradient and the crystallization rate) on the dendrite spacing, on the size of the particles of the hardening γ'-phase in the arms and arm spaces of the dendrites, on the volume fraction and size of the pores, on the size of the particles of the eutectic γ/γ'-phase, and on the features of dendritic segregation in a single-crystal castable refractory alloy is studied.

  4. Infrared Fibers for Use in Space-Based Smart Structures

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Tucker, Dennis S.; Nettles, Alan T.; Brantley, Lott W. (Technical Monitor)

    2001-01-01

    Infrared optical fibers are finding a number of applications including laser surgery, remote sensing, and nuclear radiation resistant links. Utilizing these fibers in space-based structures is another application, which can be exploited. Acoustic and thermal sensing are two areas in which these fibers could be utilized. In particular, fibers could be embedded in IM7/8552 toughened epoxy and incorporated into space structures both external and internal. ZBLAN optical fibers are a candidate, which have been studied extensively over the past 20 years for terrestrial applications. For the past seven years the effects of gravity on the crystallization behavior of ZBLAN optical fiber has been studied. It has been found that ZBLAN crystallization is suppressed in microgravity. This lack of crystallization leads to a fiber with better transmission characteristics than its terrestrial counterpart.

  5. Protein crystal growth and the International Space Station

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    DeLucas, L. J.; Moore, K. M.; Long, M. M.

    1999-01-01

    Protein structural information plays a key role in understanding biological structure-function relationships and in the development of new pharmaceuticals for both chronic and infectious diseases. The Center for Macromolecular Crystallography (CMC) has devoted considerable effort studying the fundamental processes involved in macromolecular crystal growth both in a 1-g and microgravity environment. Results from experiments performed on more than 35 U.S. space shuttle flights have clearly indicated that microgravity can provide a beneficial environment for macromolecular crystal growth. This research has led to the development of a new generation of pharmaceuticals that are currently in preclinical or clinical trials for diseases such as cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, AIDS, influenza, stroke and other cardiovascular complications. The International Space Station (ISS) provides an opportunity to have complete crystallographic capability on orbit, which was previously not possible with the space shuttle orbiter. As envisioned, the x-ray Crystallography Facility (XCF) will be a complete facility for growing protein crystals; selecting, harvesting, and mounting sample crystals for x-ray diffraction; cryo-freezing mounted crystals if necessary; performing x-ray diffraction studies; and downlinking the data for use by crystallographers on the ground. Other advantages of such a facility include crystal characterization so that iterations in the crystal growth conditions can be made, thereby optimizing the final crystals produced in a three month interval on the ISS.

  6. Characterization of photonic colloidal crystals in real and reciprocal space

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Thijssen, J. H. J.

    2007-05-01

    In this thesis, we present experimental work on the characterization of photonic colloidal crystals in real and reciprocal space. Photonic crystals are structures in which the refractive index varies periodically in space on the length scale of the wavelength of light. Self-assembly of colloidal particles is a promising route towards three-dimensional (3-D) photonic crystals. However, fabrication of photonic band-gap materials remains challenging, so calculations that predict their optical properties are indispensable. Our photonic band-structure calculations on binary Laves phases have led to a proposed route towards photonic colloidal crystals with a band gap in the visible region. Furthermore, contrary to results in literature, we found that there is no photonic band gap for inverse BCT crystals. Finally, optical spectra of colloidal crystals were analyzed using band-structure calculations. Self-assembled photonic crystals are fabricated in multiple steps. Each of these steps can significantly affect the 3-D structure of the resulting crystal. X-rays are an excellent probe of the internal structure of photonic crystals, even if the refractive-index contrast is large. In Chapter 3, we demonstrate that an angular resolution of 0.002 mrad is achievable at a third-generation synchrotron using compound refractive optics. As a result, the position and the width of Bragg reflections in 2D diffraction patterns can be resolved, even for lattice spacings larger than a micrometer (corresponding to approximately 0.1 mrad). X-ray diffraction patterns and electron-microscopy images are used in Chapter 4 to determine the orientation of hexagonal layers in convective-assembly colloidal crystals. Quantitative analysis revealed that, in our samples, the layers were not exactly hexagonal and the stacking sequence was that of face-centered cubic (FCC) crystals, though stacking faults may have been present. In Chapter 5, binary colloidal crystals of organic spheres (polystyrene, PMMA) and/or inorganic spheres (silica) are introduced as promising templates for strongly photonic crystals. To prevent melting of the template, we used atomic layer deposition (ALD) to infiltrate polystyrene and PMMA templates with alumina, after which chemical vapor deposition (CVD) was used to further enhance the refractive-index contrast. Binary colloidal crystals of silica spheres can be infiltrated by CVD directly, but they often have a layer of colloidal fluid on top. Preliminary etching experiments demonstrated that it may be possible to etch silica templates with plasmas or with adhesive tape. As described in Chapter 6, sedimentation of colloidal silica spheres in an external, high-frequency electric field lead to mm-scale BCT crystals with up to 25 layers. In addition, electric fields were used as an external control to switch between BCT and close-packed (CP) crystal structures within seconds. We also developed two procedures to invert BCT crystals without loss of structure - colloidal particles were immobilized by diffusion-polymerization or photo-induced polymerization of the surrounding solvent. Some BCT crystals were even infiltrated with silicon using CVD. We demonstrate in Chapter 7 that X-ray diffraction can be used to determine the 3-D structure of such photonic colloidal crystals at the various stages of their fabrication. Excellent agreement was found with confocal and electron-microscopy images.

  7. Synchrotron X-ray reciprocal-space mapping, topography and diffraction resolution studies of macromolecular crystal quality.

    PubMed

    Boggon, T J; Helliwell, J R; Judge, R A; Olczak, A; Siddons, D P; Snell, E H; Stojanoff, V

    2000-07-01

    A comprehensive study of microgravity and ground-grown chicken egg-white lysozyme crystals is presented using synchrotron X-ray reciprocal-space mapping, topography techniques and diffraction resolution. Microgravity crystals displayed reduced intrinsic mosaicities on average, but no differences in terms of strain over their ground-grown counterparts. Topographic analysis revealed that in the microgravity case the majority of the crystal was contributing to the peak of the reflection at the appropriate Bragg angle. In the ground-control case only a small volume of the crystal contributed to the intensity at the diffraction peak. The techniques prove to be highly complementary, with the reciprocal-space mapping providing a quantitative measure of the crystal mosaicity and strain (or variation in lattice spacing) and the topography providing a qualitative overall assessment of the crystal in terms of its X-ray diffraction properties. Structural data collection was also carried out at the synchrotron.

  8. Synchrotron X-Ray Reciprocal Space Mapping, Topography and Diffraction Resolution Studies of Macromolecular Crystal Quality

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Boggon, T. J.; Helliwell, J. R.; Judge, Russell A.; Siddons, D. P.; Snell, Edward H.; Stojanoff, V.

    2000-01-01

    A comprehensive study of microgravity and ground grown chicken egg white lysozyme crystals is presented using synchrotron X-ray reciprocal space mapping, topography techniques and diffraction resolution. Microgravity crystals displayed, on average, reduced intrinsic mosaicities but no differences in terms of stress over their earth grown counterparts. Topographic analysis revealed that in the microgravity case the majority of the crystal was contributing to the peak of the reflection at the appropriate Bragg angle. In the earth case at the diffraction peak only a small volume of the crystal contributed to the intensity. The techniques prove to be highly complementary with the reciprocal space mapping providing a quantitative measure of the crystal mosaicity and stress (or variation in lattice spacing) and topography providing a qualitative overall assessment of the crystal in terms of its X-ray diffraction properties. Structural data collection was also carried out both at the synchrotron and in the laboratory.

  9. Realization of a complementary medium using dielectric photonic crystals.

    PubMed

    Xu, Tao; Fang, Anan; Jia, Ziyuan; Ji, Liyu; Hang, Zhi Hong

    2017-12-01

    By exploiting the scaling invariance of photonic band diagrams, a complementary photonic crystal slab structure is realized by stacking two uniformly scaled double-zero-index dielectric photonic crystal slabs together. The space cancellation effect in complementary photonic crystals is demonstrated in both numerical simulations and microwave experiments. The refractive index dispersion of double-zero-index dielectric photonic crystal is experimentally measured. Using pure dielectrics, our photonic crystal structure will be an ideal platform to explore various intriguing properties related to a complementary medium.

  10. Crystal structural characterization reveals novel oligomeric interactions of human voltage-dependent anion channel 1.

    PubMed

    Hosaka, Toshiaki; Okazaki, Masateru; Kimura-Someya, Tomomi; Ishizuka-Katsura, Yoshiko; Ito, Kaori; Yokoyama, Shigeyuki; Dodo, Kosuke; Sodeoka, Mikiko; Shirouzu, Mikako

    2017-09-01

    Voltage-dependent anion channel 1 (VDAC1), which is located in the outer mitochondrial membrane, plays important roles in various cellular processes. For example, oligomerization of VDAC1 is involved in the release of cytochrome c to the cytoplasm, leading to apoptosis. However, it is unknown how VDAC1 oligomerization occurs in the membrane. In the present study, we determined high-resolution crystal structures of oligomeric human VDAC1 (hVDAC1) prepared by using an Escherichia coli cell-free protein synthesis system, which avoided the need for denaturation and refolding of the protein. Broad-range screening using a bicelle crystallization method produced crystals in space groups C222 and P22 1 2 1 , which diffracted to a resolution of 3.10 and 3.15 Å, respectively. Each crystal contained two hVDAC1 protomers in the asymmetric unit. Dimer within the asymmetrical unit of the crystal in space group C222 were oriented parallel, whereas those of the crystal in space group P22 1 2 1 were oriented anti-parallel. From a model of the crystal in space group C222, which we constructed by using crystal symmetry operators, a heptameric structure with eight patterns of interaction between protomers, including hydrophobic interactions with β-strands, hydrophilic interactions with loop regions, and protein-lipid interactions, was observed. It is possible that by having multiple patterns of interaction, VDAC1 can form homo- or hetero-oligomers not only with other VDAC1 protomers but also with other proteins such as VDAC2, VDAC3 and apoptosis-regulating proteins in the Bcl-2 family. © 2017 The Protein Society.

  11. A comparative study on the crystal structure of bicycle analogues to the natural phytotoxin helminthosporins

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Barbosa, Luiz Cláudio de Almeida; Teixeira, Robson Ricardo; Nogueira, Leonardo Brandão; Maltha, Celia Regina Alvares; Doriguetto, Antônio Carlos; Martins, Felipe Terra

    2016-02-01

    Herein we described structural insights of a series of analogues to helminthosporin phytotoxins. The key reaction used to prepare the compounds corresponded to the [3 + 4] cycloaddition between the oxyallyl cation generated from 2,4-dibromopentan-3-one and different furans. Their structures were confirmed upon IR, NMR and X-ray diffraction analyses. While bicycles 7, 8 and 9 crystallize in the centrosymmetric monoclinic space group P21/c, compound 10 was solved in the noncentrosymmetric orthorhombic space group P212121. The solid materials obtained were shown to be racemic crystals (7, 8, 9) or racemic conglomerate (10). In all compounds, there is formation of a bicycle featured by fused tetrahydropyranone and 2,5-dihydrofuran rings. They adopt chair and envelope conformations, respectively. Crystal packing of all compounds is stabilized through C-H•••O contacts. Conformational aspects as well as similarities and differences among the crystal structures of the synthesized analogues are discussed.

  12. Combinatorial selection of molecular conformations and supramolecular synthons in quercetin cocrystal landscapes: a route to ternary solids

    PubMed Central

    Dubey, Ritesh; Desiraju, Gautam R.

    2015-01-01

    The crystallization of 28 binary and ternary cocrystals of quercetin with dibasic coformers is analyzed in terms of a combinatorial selection from a solution of preferred molecular conformations and supramolecular synthons. The crystal structures are characterized by distinctive O—H⋯N and O—H⋯O based synthons and are classified as nonporous, porous and helical. Variability in molecular conformation and synthon structure led to an increase in the energetic and structural space around the crystallization event. This space is the crystal structure landscape of the compound and is explored by fine-tuning the experimental conditions of crystallization. In the landscape context, we develop a strategy for the isolation of ternary cocrystals with the use of auxiliary template molecules to reduce the molecular and supramolecular ‘confusion’ that is inherent in a molecule like quercetin. The absence of concomitant polymorphism in this study highlights the selectivity in conformation and synthon choice from the virtual combinatorial library in solution. PMID:26175900

  13. Time Crystal Platform: From Quasicrystal Structures in Time to Systems with Exotic Interactions.

    PubMed

    Giergiel, Krzysztof; Miroszewski, Artur; Sacha, Krzysztof

    2018-04-06

    Time crystals are quantum many-body systems that, due to interactions between particles, are able to spontaneously self-organize their motion in a periodic way in time by analogy with the formation of crystalline structures in space in condensed matter physics. In solid state physics properties of space crystals are often investigated with the help of external potentials that are spatially periodic and reflect various crystalline structures. A similar approach can be applied for time crystals, as periodically driven systems constitute counterparts of spatially periodic systems, but in the time domain. Here we show that condensed matter problems ranging from single particles in potentials of quasicrystal structure to many-body systems with exotic long-range interactions can be realized in the time domain with an appropriate periodic driving. Moreover, it is possible to create molecules where atoms are bound together due to destructive interference if the atomic scattering length is modulated in time.

  14. Time Crystal Platform: From Quasicrystal Structures in Time to Systems with Exotic Interactions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Giergiel, Krzysztof; Miroszewski, Artur; Sacha, Krzysztof

    2018-04-01

    Time crystals are quantum many-body systems that, due to interactions between particles, are able to spontaneously self-organize their motion in a periodic way in time by analogy with the formation of crystalline structures in space in condensed matter physics. In solid state physics properties of space crystals are often investigated with the help of external potentials that are spatially periodic and reflect various crystalline structures. A similar approach can be applied for time crystals, as periodically driven systems constitute counterparts of spatially periodic systems, but in the time domain. Here we show that condensed matter problems ranging from single particles in potentials of quasicrystal structure to many-body systems with exotic long-range interactions can be realized in the time domain with an appropriate periodic driving. Moreover, it is possible to create molecules where atoms are bound together due to destructive interference if the atomic scattering length is modulated in time.

  15. Growing protein crystals in microgravity - The NASA Microgravity Science and Applications Division (MSAD) Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) program

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Herren, B.

    1992-01-01

    In collaboration with a medical researcher at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, under the sponsorship of the Microgravity Science and Applications Division (MSAD) at NASA Headquarters, is continuing a series of space experiments in protein crystal growth which could lead to innovative new drugs as well as basic science data on protein molecular structures. From 1985 through 1992, Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) experiments will have been flown on the Space Shuttle a total of 14 times. The first four hand-held experiments were used to test hardware concepts; later flights incorporated these concepts for vapor diffusion protein crystal growth with temperature control. This article provides an overview of the PCG program: its evolution, objectives, and plans for future experiments on NASA's Space Shuttle and Space Station Freedom.

  16. Prediction of molecular crystal structures by a crystallographic QM/MM model with full space-group symmetry.

    PubMed

    Mörschel, Philipp; Schmidt, Martin U

    2015-01-01

    A crystallographic quantum-mechanical/molecular-mechanical model (c-QM/MM model) with full space-group symmetry has been developed for molecular crystals. The lattice energy was calculated by quantum-mechanical methods for short-range interactions and force-field methods for long-range interactions. The quantum-mechanical calculations covered the interactions within the molecule and the interactions of a reference molecule with each of the surrounding 12-15 molecules. The interactions with all other molecules were treated by force-field methods. In each optimization step the energies in the QM and MM shells were calculated separately as single-point energies; after adding both energy contributions, the crystal structure (including the lattice parameters) was optimized accordingly. The space-group symmetry was maintained throughout. Crystal structures with more than one molecule per asymmetric unit, e.g. structures with Z' = 2, hydrates and solvates, have been optimized as well. Test calculations with different quantum-mechanical methods on nine small organic molecules revealed that the density functional theory methods with dispersion correction using the B97-D functional with 6-31G* basis set in combination with the DREIDING force field reproduced the experimental crystal structures with good accuracy. Subsequently the c-QM/MM method was applied to nine compounds from the CCDC blind tests resulting in good energy rankings and excellent geometric accuracies.

  17. Structural study of quasi-one-dimensional vanadium pyroxene LiVSi{sub 2}O{sub 6} single crystals

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Ishii, Yuto; Matsushita, Yoshitaka; Oda, Migaku

    Single crystals of quasi-one-dimensional vanadium pyroxene LiVSi{sub 2}O{sub 6} were synthesized and the crystal structures at 293 K and 113 K were studied using X-ray diffraction experiments. We found a structural phase transition from the room-temperature crystal structure with space group C2/c to a low-temperature structure with space group P2{sub 1}/c, resulting from a rotational displacement of SiO{sub 4} tetrahedra. The temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility shows a broad maximum around 116 K, suggesting an opening of the Haldane gap expected for one-dimensional antiferromagnets with S=1. However, an antiferromagnetic long-range order was developed below 24 K, probably caused by amore » weak inter-chain magnetic coupling in the compound. - Graphical abstract: Low temperature crystal structure of LiVSi{sub 2}O{sub 6} and an orbital arrangement within the V-O zig-zag chain along the c-axis. - Highlights: • A low temperature structure of LiVSi{sub 2}O{sub 6} was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction measurements. • The origin of the structural transition is a rotational displacement of SiO{sub 4} tetrahedra. • The uniform orbital overlap in the V-O zigzag chain makes the system a quasi one-dimensional antiferromagnet.« less

  18. Visualization of Hyperconjugation and Subsequent Structural Distortions through 3D Printing of Crystal Structures.

    PubMed

    Mithila, Farha J; Oyola-Reynoso, Stephanie; Thuo, Martin M; Atkinson, Manza Bj

    2016-01-01

    Structural distortions due to hyperconjugation in organic molecules, like norbornenes, are well captured through X-ray crystallographic data, but are sometimes difficult to visualize especially for those applying chemical knowledge and are not chemists. Crystal structure from the Cambridge database were downloaded and converted to .stl format. The structures were then printed at the desired scale using a 3D printer. Replicas of the crystal structures were accurately reproduced in scale and any resulting distortions were clearly visible from the macroscale models. Through space interactions or effect of through space hyperconjugation was illustrated through loss of symmetry or distortions thereof. The norbornene structures exhibits distortion that cannot be observed through conventional ball and stick modelling kits. We show that 3D printed models derived from crystallographic data capture even subtle distortions in molecules. We translate such crystallographic data into scaled-up models through 3D printing.

  19. Structural Variation of LaMnO3+δ by Oxygen Nonstoichiometry

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Niwa, Eiki; Maeda, Hiroki; Hashimoto, Takuya; Mizusaki, Junichiro

    2013-07-01

    The relationship between oxygen content and crystal structure of LaMnO3+δ, which is mother phase of cathode material for solid oxide fuel cells, has been investigated by X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetry and iodometric titration. It was confirmed that LaMnO3+δ with different oxygen content can be prepared by controlling sintering temperature in static air. Crystal system of LaMnO3.17±0.02 and LaMnO3.13±0.01 at room temperature was rhombohedral with space group of Rbar {3}c, whereas crystal structure of LaMnO3.08±0.01 was orthorhombic whose space group was proposed to be Pmna (No. 53). With increase of oxygen content in LaMnO3+δ, molar volume decreased and higher crystal symmetry was obtained.

  20. Cocrystals of caffeine with formylphenoxyaliphatic acids: Syntheses, structural characterization, and biological activity

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Suresh Kumar, G. S.; Seethalakshmi, P. G.; Bhuvanesh, N.; Kumaresan, S.

    2013-02-01

    Three organic cocrystals namely, caffeine:p-formylphenoxyacetic acid [(caf)(p-fpaa)] (1) caffeine:o-formylphenoxyacetic acid monohydrate [(caf)(o-fpaa)]H2O (2) and caffeine:p-formylphenoxypropionic acid [(caf)(p-fppa)] (3) were synthesized and studied by FT-IR, NMR, and single crystal XRD studies. The crystal system of cocrystal [(caf)(p-fpaa)] (1) is monoclinic with space group P21/n and Z = 16, that of cocrystal [(caf)(o-fpaa)]H2O (2) is triclinic with space group P - 1 and Z = 2, and that of cocrystal [(caf)(p-fppa)] (3) is monoclinic with space group P21/c and Z = 4. The imidazole-carboxylic acid synthon is observed in all the three cocrystals. The intermolecular hydrogen bonds, Osbnd H···N and π-π interactions together play a major role in stabilizing the crystal structure of all the three cocrystals. The biological activities of crystals 1-3 were studied.

  1. Crystal structure of minoxidil at low temperature and polymorph prediction.

    PubMed

    Martín-Islán, Africa P; Martín-Ramos, Daniel; Sainz-Díaz, C Ignacio

    2008-02-01

    An experimental and theoretical investigation on crystal forms of the popular and ubiquitous pharmaceutical Minoxidil is presented here. A new crystallization method is presented for Minoxidil (6-(1-piperidinyl)-2,4-pyrimidinediamide 3-oxide) in ethanol-poly(ethylene glycol), yielding crystals with good quality. The crystal structure is determined at low temperature, with a final R value of 0.035, corresponding to space group P2(1) (monoclinic) with cell dimensions a = 9.357(1) A, b = 8.231(1) A, c = 12.931(2) A, and beta = 90.353(4) degrees . Theoretical calculations of the molecular structure of Minoxidil are set forward using empirical force fields and quantum-mechanical methods. A theoretical prediction for Minoxidil crystal structure shows many possible polymorphs. The predicted crystal structures are compared with X-ray experimental data obtained in our laboratory, and the experimental crystal form is found to be one of the lowest energy polymorphs.

  2. Structure of Bacillus halmapalus α-amylase crystallized with and without the substrate analogue acarbose and maltose

    PubMed Central

    Lyhne-Iversen, Louise; Hobley, Timothy J.; Kaasgaard, Svend G.; Harris, Pernille

    2006-01-01

    Recombinant Bacillus halmapalus α-amylase (BHA) was studied in two different crystal forms. The first crystal form was obtained by crystallization of BHA at room temperature in the presence of acarbose and maltose; data were collected at cryogenic temperature to a resolution of 1.9 Å. It was found that the crystal belonged to space group P212121, with unit-cell parameters a = 47.0, b = 73.5, c = 151.1 Å. A maltose molecule was observed and found to bind to BHA and previous reports of the binding of a nonasaccharide were confirmed. The second crystal form was obtained by pH-induced crystallization of BHA in a MES–HEPES–boric acid buffer (MHB buffer) at 303 K; the solubility of BHA in MHB has a retrograde temperature dependency and crystallization of BHA was only possible by raising the temperature to at least 298 K. Data were collected at cryogenic temperature to a resolution of 2.0 Å. The crystal belonged to space group P212121, with unit-cell parameters a = 38.6, b = 59.0, c = 209.8 Å. The structure was solved using molecular replacement. The maltose-binding site is described and the two structures are compared. No significant changes were seen in the structure upon binding of the substrates. PMID:16946462

  3. The statistical kinematical theory of X-ray diffraction as applied to reciprocal-space mapping

    PubMed

    Nesterets; Punegov

    2000-11-01

    The statistical kinematical X-ray diffraction theory is developed to describe reciprocal-space maps (RSMs) from deformed crystals with defects of the structure. The general solutions for coherent and diffuse components of the scattered intensity in reciprocal space are derived. As an example, the explicit expressions for intensity distributions in the case of spherical defects and of a mosaic crystal were obtained. The theory takes into account the instrumental function of the triple-crystal diffractometer and can therefore be used for experimental data analysis.

  4. Expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of α-11 giardin from Giardia lamblia

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Pathuri, Puja; Nguyen, Emily Tam; Luecke, Hartmut, E-mail: hudel@uci.edu

    2006-11-01

    α-11 giardin from the intestinal protozoan parasite, G. lamblia has been cloned, expressed, purified and crystallized under two different conditions and in two different space groups. Crystals from the first condition diffracted to 1.1 Å and belong to a primitive orthorhombic space group and crystals obtained in the second condition diffracted to 2.93 Å and belong to a primitive monoclinic space group. α-11 Giardin, a protein from the annexin superfamily, is a 35.0 kDa protein from the intestinal protozoan parasite Giardia lamblia which triggers a form of diarrhea called giardiasis. Here, the cloning, expression, purification and the crystallization of α-11more » giardin under two different conditions and in two different space groups is reported. Crystals from the first condition diffracted to 1.1 Å and belong to a primitive orthorhombic space group, while crystals from the second condition, which included calcium in the crystallization solution, diffracted to 2.93 Å and belong to a primitive monoclinic space group. Determination of the detailed atomic structure of α-11 giardin will provide a better insight into its biological function and might establish whether this class of proteins is a potential drug target against giardiasis.« less

  5. Preparation, structural characterization, and decomposition studies of two new γ-octamolybdates of 4-methylpyridine.

    PubMed

    Szymańska, Anna; Nitek, Wojciech; Rutkowska-Zbik, Dorota; Łasocha, Wiesław

    We synthesized two new γ-octamolybdates, and determined their crystal structures from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data. Orange-yellow tetrakis(4-methylpyridinium) bis(4-methylpyridine)-γ-octamolybdate 1 crystallizes in space group P2 1 /c with a  = 11.586(2) Å, b  = 15.526(2) Å, c  = 16.247(2) Å, β  = 118.753(1)º, Z  = 2. White tetrakis(4-methylpyridinium) bis(4-methylpyridine)-γ-octamolybdate hydrate 2 crystallizes in space group C2/c with a  = 27.086(4) Å, b  = 11.917(2) Å, c  = 19.332(2) Å, β  = 124.427(1)º, Z  = 4. Results of crystal structure determinations are presented and discussed in this paper. Thermal stability and decomposition studies of the obtained two new γ-octamolybdates were performed using TG/DSC and XRPD methods. Both compounds decomposed with the formation of 4-methylpyridinium β-octamolybdate. The two compounds are pseudo-polymorphs, exhibiting both striking similarities as well as significant differences in their structures and properties.

  6. Space manufacturing in an automated crystal growth facility

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Quinn, Alberta W.; Herrmann, Melody C.; Nelson, Pamela J.

    1989-01-01

    An account is given of a Space Station Freedom-based robotic laboratory system for crystal growth experiments; the robot must interface with both the experimental apparatus and such human input as may be required for control and display. The goal of the system is the simultaneous growth of several hundred protein crystals in microgravity. The robot possesses six degrees-of-freedom, allowing it to efficiently manipulate the cultured crystals as well as their respective growth cells; the crystals produced are expected to be of sufficiently high quality for complete structural determination on the basis of XRD.

  7. Transmission electron microscopy: direct observation of crystal structure in refractory ceramics.

    PubMed

    Shaw, T M; Thomas, G

    1978-11-10

    Using high-resolution multibeam interference techniques in the transmission electron microscope, images have been obtained that make possible a real-space structure analysis of a beryllium-silicon-nitrogen compound. The results illustrate the usefulness of lattice imaging in the analysis of local crystal structure in these technologically promising ceramic materials.

  8. Evidence for monoclinic distortion in the ground state phase of underdoped La 1.95Sr 0.05CuO 4: A single crystal neutron diffraction study

    DOE PAGES

    Singh, Anar; Schefer, Jurg; Sura, Ravi; ...

    2016-03-24

    The existing controversy about the symmetry of the crystal structure of the ground state of the critical doped La 1.95Sr 0.05CuO 4 has been resolved by analyzing the single crystal neutron diffraction data collected between 5 and 730 K. We observed small but significant intensities for "forbidden" reflections given by extinction rules of the orthorhombic Bmab space group at low temperatures. A careful investigation of neutron diffraction data reveals that the crystal structure of La 1.95Sr 0.05CuO 4 at 5 K is monoclinic with B2/m (2/m 1 1) space group. The monoclinic structure emerges from the orthorhombic structure in amore » continuous way; however, the structure is stable below similar to 120K which agrees with other observed phenomena. Lastly, our results on symmetry changes are crucial for the interpretation of physical properties also in other high temperature superconductors with similar structures.« less

  9. Evidence for monoclinic distortion in the ground state phase of underdoped La{sub 1.95}Sr{sub 0.05}CuO{sub 4}: A single crystal neutron diffraction study

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Singh, Anar, E-mail: singhanar@gmail.com; Schefer, Jürg; Frontzek, Matthias

    2016-03-28

    The existing controversy about the symmetry of the crystal structure of the ground state of the critical doped La{sub 1.95}Sr{sub 0.05}CuO{sub 4} has been resolved by analyzing the single crystal neutron diffraction data collected between 5 and 730 K. We observed small but significant intensities for “forbidden” reflections given by extinction rules of the orthorhombic Bmab space group at low temperatures. A careful investigation of neutron diffraction data reveals that the crystal structure of La{sub 1.95}Sr{sub 0.05}CuO{sub 4} at 5 K is monoclinic with B2/m (2/m 1 1) space group. The monoclinic structure emerges from the orthorhombic structure in a continuous way;more » however, the structure is stable below ∼120 K which agrees with other observed phenomena. Our results on symmetry changes are crucial for the interpretation of physical properties also in other high temperature superconductors with similar structures.« less

  10. Effect of permeable flow on cyclic layering in solidifying magma bodies: Insights from an analog experiment of diffusion-precipitation systems

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Toramaru, A.; Yamauchi, S.

    2012-04-01

    Characteristic structures such as rhythmic layering, cress cumulate, cross bedding, perpendicular feldspar rock etc, are commonly observed in layered intrusion or shallow magmatic intrusions. These structures result from complex processes including thermal and compositional diffusions, crystallization, crystal settling, convection and interaction among three phases (crystals, bubble, melt). In order to understand how the differentiation proceeds in solidifying magma bodies from each characteristic structure together with chemical signatures, it is necessary to evaluate the relative importance among these elemental processes on structures. As an attempt to evaluate the effect of advection on a diffusion-related structure, we carried out an analog experiment of Liesegang system using lead-iodide (PbI2) crystallization in agar media which have been normally used to prohibit convection. In the ordinary Liesegang band formation experiments including only diffusion and crystallization kinetics without any advection and convection, the precipitation bands develop with regular spacing following a geometric progression due to two-component diffusion and reaction with supersaturation. This type of banding structure has been advocated as the same type of cyclic layering or vesicle layering (a sort of rhythmic layering) in dykes or sills. In order to see the effect of one-directional advection on Liesegang band, we apply the electric field (5 V to 25 V for a distance 15 cm) along the concentration gradient in agar media, thereby counteracting flows of lead anion Pb2+ and iodide ion I- are driven at constant velocities. The flows of anions and ions are equivalent to the permeable flows in porous media of crystal mush. The resultant precipitation structures exhibit very curious banding structure in which band spacings do not change with distance, are nearly constant and quite narrow, depending on the voltage, unlike those in ordinary Liesegang bands in which band spacings increase with distance following geometric progression. Further interestingly each band consists of a lot of very tiny irregular-shaped crystal aggregates. From experimental results and scaling arguments, with regard to the effect of one directional permeable flow on band spacing of cyclic layering, we propose a hypothesis of constant Peclet number that Peclet number (ratio of flow velocity to diffusive velocity) is nearly unity. By applying the hypothesis to natural examples, we can estimate a value of permeable flow velocity of interstitial melts in differentiating magma bodies from values of a band spacing and diffusivity data.

  11. Intricate Li-Sn Disorder in Rare-Earth Metal-Lithium Stannides. Crystal Chemistry of RE3Li4- xSn4+ x (RE = La-Nd, Sm; x < 0.3) and Eu7Li8- xSn10+ x ( x ≈ 2.0).

    PubMed

    Suen, Nian-Tzu; Guo, Sheng-Ping; Hoos, James; Bobev, Svilen

    2018-05-07

    Reported are the syntheses, crystal structures, and electronic structures of six rare-earth metal-lithium stannides with the general formulas RE 3 Li 4- x Sn 4+ x (RE = La-Nd, Sm) and Eu 7 Li 8- x Sn 10+ x . These new ternary compounds have been synthesized by high-temperature reactions of the corresponding elements. Their crystal structures have been established using single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods. The RE 3 Li 4- x Sn 4+ x phases crystallize in the orthorhombic body-centered space group Immm (No. 71) with the Zr 3 Cu 4 Si 4 structure type (Pearson code oI22), and the Eu 7 Li 8- x Sn 10+ x phase crystallizes in the orthorhombic base-centered space group Cmmm (No. 65) with the Ce 7 Li 8 Ge 10 structure type (Pearson code oC50). Both structures can be consdered as part of the [RESn 2 ] n [RELi 2 Sn] m homologous series, wherein the structures are intergrowths of imaginary RESn 2 (AlB 2 -like structure type) and RELi 2 Sn (MgAl 2 Cu-like structure type) fragments. Close examination the structures indicates complex occupational Li-Sn disorder, apparently governed by the drive of the structure to achieve an optimal number of valence electrons. This conclusion based on experimental results is supported by detailed electronic structure calculations, carried out using the tight-binding linear muffin-tin orbital method.

  12. X-ray crystal structure and small-angle X-ray scattering of sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Yennawar, Hemant; Møller, Magda; University of Copenhagen, DK-2100 Copenhagen

    The X-ray crystal structure and a small-angle X-ray scattering solution structure of sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase have been determined. The details of the interactions that enable the tetramer scaffold to be the functional biological unit have been analyzed. The X-ray crystal structure of sheep liver sorbitol dehydrogenase (slSDH) has been determined using the crystal structure of human sorbitol dehydrogenase (hSDH) as a molecular-replacement model. slSDH crystallized in space group I222 with one monomer in the asymmetric unit. A conserved tetramer that superposes well with that seen in hSDH (despite belonging to a different space group) and obeying the 222 crystalmore » symmetry is seen in slSDH. An acetate molecule is bound in the active site, coordinating to the active-site zinc through a water molecule. Glycerol, a substrate of slSDH, also occupies the substrate-binding pocket together with the acetate designed by nature to fit large polyol substrates. The substrate-binding pocket is seen to be in close proximity to the tetramer interface, which explains the need for the structural integrity of the tetramer for enzyme activity. Small-angle X-ray scattering was also used to identify the quaternary structure of the tetramer of slSDH in solution.« less

  13. Temperature-resolved study of three [M(M'O4)4(TBPO)4] complexes (MM' = URe, ThRe, ThTc).

    PubMed

    Helliwell, Madeleine; Collison, David; John, Gordon H; May, Iain; Sarsfield, Mark J; Sharrad, Clint A; Sutton, Andrew D

    2006-02-01

    The crystal structures of the title complexes were measured at several temperatures between room temperature and 100 K. Each sample shows reversible crystal-to-crystal phase transitions as the temperature is varied. The behaviour of [U(ReO4)4(TBPO)4] (I) and [Th(ReO4)4(TBPO)4] (II) (TBPO = tri-n-butylphosphine oxide) is very similar; at room temperature, crystals of (I) and (II) are isostructural, with space group I42m, and reducing the temperature to 100 K causes a lowering of the space-group symmetry to C-centred cells, space groups Cc for (I) and Cmc2(1) for (II). The variation of lattice symmetry of [Th(TcO4)4(TBPO)4] (III) was found to be somewhat different, with the body-centred cubic space group, I43m, occurring at 293 K, a reduction of symmetry at 230 K to the C-centred orthorhombic space group, Cmc2(1), and a further transition to the primitive orthorhombic space group, Pbc2(1), below 215 K. Elucidation of the correct space-group symmetry and the subsequent refinement was complicated in some cases by the twinning by pseudo-merohedry that arises from the lowering of the space-group symmetry, occurring as the temperature is reduced. All three of the crystal structures determined at room temperature have high atomic displacement parameters, particularly of the (n)Bu groups, and (III) shows disorder of some of the O atoms. The structures in the space group Cmc2(1), show some disorder of nBu groups, but are otherwise reasonably well ordered; the structures of (I) in Cc and (III) in Pbc2(1) are ordered, even to the ends of the alkyl chains. Inter-comparison of the structures measured below 293 K, using the program OFIT from the SHELXTL package, showed that generally, they are remarkably alike, with weighted r.m.s. deviations of the M, M' and P atoms of less than 0.1 A, as are the 293 K structures of (I) and (II) with their low-temperature counterparts. However, the structure of (III) measured in the space group Cmc2(1) is significantly different from both the structure of (III) at 293 K and that found below 215 K, with weighted r.m.s. deviations of the Th, Tc and P atoms of 0.40 and 0.37 A, respectively. An extensive network of weak intra- and intermolecular C-H...O hydrogen bonds found between the atoms of the nBu and [M'O4] groups probably influences the packing and the overall geometry of the molecules.

  14. Synthesis, crystal structure, thermal and nonlinear optical properties of new metal-organic single crystal: Tetrabromo (piperazinium) zincate (II) (TBPZ)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Boopathi, K.; Babu, S. Moorthy; Ramasamy, P.

    2018-04-01

    Tetrabromo (piperazinium) zincate, a new metal-organic crystal has been synthesized and its single crystal grown by slow evaporation method. The grown crystal has characterized by structural, spectral, thermal, linear and nonlinear optical properties. Single crystal X-ray diffractions study reveals that grown crystal belongs to orthorhombic crystal system with space group P212121. The presence of functional groups is identified by FT-IR spectral analysis. Thermal stability of the crystal was ascertained by TG-DTA measurement. The second order harmonic generation efficiency was measured using Kurtz and Perry technique and it was found to be 1.5 times that of KDP.

  15. Sixty years from discovery to solution: crystal structure of bovine liver catalase form III

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Foroughi, Leila M.; Kang, You-Na; Matzger, Adam J.

    2012-03-27

    The crystallization and structural characterization of bovine liver catalase (BLC) has been intensively studied for decades. Forms I and II of BLC have previously been fully characterized using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Form III has previously been analyzed by electron microscopy, but owing to the thinness of this crystal form an X-ray crystal structure had not been determined. Here, the crystal structure of form III of BLC is presented in space group P212121, with unit-cell parameters a = 68.7, b = 173.7, c = 186.3 {angstrom}. The asymmetric unit is composed of the biological tetramer, which is packed in a tetrahedronmore » motif with three other BLC tetramers. This higher resolution structure has allowed an assessment of the previously published electron-microscopy studies.« less

  16. Spatial frequency maps of power flow in metamaterials and photonic crystals: Investigating backward-wave modes across the electromagnetic spectrum

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Aghanejad, Iman; Markley, Loïc

    2017-11-01

    We present spatial frequency maps of power flow in metamaterials and photonic crystals in order to provide insights into their electromagnetic responses and further our understanding of backward power in periodic structures. Since 2001, many different structures across the electromagnetic spectrum have been presented in the literature as exhibiting an isotropic negative effective index. Although these structures all exhibit circular or spherical equifrequency contours that resemble those of left-handed media, here we show through k -space diagrams that the distribution of power in the spatial frequency domain can vary considerably across these structures. In particular, we show that backward power arises from high-order right-handed harmonics in photonic crystals, magnetodielectric crystals, and across the layers of coupled-plasmonic-waveguide metamaterials, while arising from left-handed harmonic pairs in split-ring resonator and wire composites, plasmonic crystals, and along the layers of coupled-plasmonic-waveguide metamaterials. We also show that the fishnet structure exhibits the same left-handed harmonic pairs as the latter group. These observations allow us to categorize different metamaterials according to their spatial spectral source of backward power and identify the mechanism behind negative refraction at a given interface. Finally, we discuss how k -space maps of power flow can be used to explain the high or low transmittance of power into different metamaterial or photonic crystal structures.

  17. Synthesis of three new thiophene condensed pyrene derivatives, crystal structure and evaluation of their photophysical properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Moriguchi, Tetsuji; Yakeya, Daisuke; Tsuge, Akihiko; Jalli, Venkataprasad

    2018-04-01

    Three new thiophene condensed fluorescent pyrene derivatives have been synthesized by a two-step process, via. Wittig reaction followed by iodine promoted photocyclization. These molecules have been characterized by 1H NMR and EI-MS. Further, the molecular structures of 4a, 4b and 4c has been confirmed by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The protons located in the fjord and cove-regions of molecules 4b and 4c showed downfield shifts of the protons. Molecule 4a crystallized under monoclinic system with space group P21/c, molecule 4b crystallized under monoclinic system with space group C2/c and the molecule 4c crystalized under triclinic system with space group P-1. Molecules 4a, 4b and 4c showed strong absorption maxima wavelengths at 305, 358 and 330 nm, respectively. The molar extinctinction coefficients (ε) of the compounds 4a, 4b and 4c indicated molecule 4c has better ability to absorb UV light, molecule 4b has better fluorescence intensity than molecule 4a and 4c.

  18. Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Virus Structure

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2000-01-01

    The structure of the Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Viurus (STMV)--one of the smallest viruses known--has been successfully reduced using STMV crystals grown aboard the Space Shuttle in 1992 and 1994. The STMV crystals were up to 30 times the volume of any seen in the laboratory. At the time they gave the best resolution data ever obtained on any virus crystal. STMV is a small icosahedral plant virus, consisting of a protein shell made up of 60 identical protein subunits of molecular weight 17,500. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that, in contrast to the crystals grown on Earth, the crystals grown under microgravity conditions were visually perfect, with no striations or clumping of crystals. Furthermore, the x-ray diffraction data obtained from the space-grown crystals was of a much higher quality than the best data available at that time from ground-based crystals. This stylized ribbon model shows the protein coat in white and the nucleic acid in yellow. STMV is used because it is a simple protein to work with; studies are unrelated to tobacco. Credit: Dr. Alex McPherson, University of California at Irvin.

  19. Crystallization of Hard Sphere Colloids in Microgravity: Results of the Colloidal Disorder-Order Transition, CDOT on USML-2. Experiment 33

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Zhu, Ji-Xiang; Chaikin, P. M.; Li, Min; Russel, W. B.; Ottewill, R. H.; Rogers, R.; Meyer, W. V.

    1998-01-01

    Classical hard spheres have long served as a paradigm for our understanding of the structure of liquids, crystals, and glasses and the transitions between these phases. Ground-based experiments have demonstrated that suspensions of uniform polymer colloids are near-ideal physical realizations of hard spheres. However, gravity appears to play a significant and unexpected role in the formation and structure of these colloidal crystals. In the microgravity environment of the Space Shuttle, crystals grow purely via random stacking of hexagonal close-packed planes, lacking any of the face-centered cubic (FCC) component evident in crystals grown in 1 g beyond melting and allowed some time to settle. Gravity also masks 33-539 the natural growth instabilities of the hard sphere crystals which exhibit striking dendritic arms when grown in microgravity. Finally, high volume fraction "glass" samples which fail to crystallize after more than a year in 1 g begin nucleation after several days and fully crystallize in less than 2 weeks on the Space Shuttle.

  20. Crystalline structures of particles interacting through the harmonic-repulsive pair potential

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Levashov, V. A.

    2017-09-01

    The behavior of identical particles interacting through the harmonic-repulsive pair potential has been studied in 3D using molecular dynamics simulations at a number of different densities. We found that at many densities, as the temperature of the systems decreases, the particles crystallize into complex structures whose formation has not been anticipated in previous studies on the harmonic-repulsive pair potential. In particular, at certain densities, crystallization into the structure I a 3 ¯ d (space group #230) with 16 particles in the unit cell occupying Wyckoff special positions (16b) was observed. This crystal structure has not been observed previously in experiments or in computer simulations of single component atomic or soft matter systems. At another density, we observed a liquid which is rather stable against crystallization. Yet, we observed crystallization of this liquid into the monoclinic C2/c (space group #15) structure with 32 particles in the unit cell occupying four different non-special Wyckoff (8f) sites. In this structure particles located at different Wyckoff sites have different energies. From the perspective of the local atomic environment, the organization of particles in this structure resembles the structure of some columnar quasicrystals. At a different value of the density, we did not observe crystallization at all despite rather long molecular dynamics runs. At two other densities, we observed the formation of the β S n distorted diamond structures instead of the expected diamond structure. Possibly, we also observed the formation of the R 3 ¯ c hexagonal lattice with 24 particles per unit cell occupying non-equivalent positions.

  1. The perfection and defect structure of organic hourglass inclusion K 2SO 4 crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vetter, William M.; Totsuka, Hirono; Dudley, Michael; Kahr, Bart

    2002-06-01

    Hourglass inclusion crystals of K 2SO 4 were grown from aqueous solutions containing the dye acid fuchsin, and studied by synchrotron white-beam X-ray topography and reciprocal space mapping. Both self-nucleated and larger, seeded dye-included crystals were prepared, as well as comparable undoped crystals. While the dye modified the crystals' habit strongly, X-ray topographs showed it had no influence on their dislocation configurations, which were typical for solution-grown crystals. No kinematical contrast arising from the presence of the dye was observed that indicated dye-induced strain in the crystal lattice. Growth sector boundaries were visible in the dyed crystals but not in undoped crystals, implying there was a slightly higher lattice mismatch across growth sector boundaries in the dye-included crystals. Reciprocal space maps of small areas on an hourglass inclusion crystal within either a dye-included growth sector or an undoped growth sector showed single peaks with the same perfect crystal rocking curve width and no dilatation or tilt of the host lattice resulting from the dye's presence. These results showed hourglass inclusion crystals can be grown in which the presence of the dye disturbs the crystalline structure of the host salt minimally, and that hourglass inclusions have the nature of a solid solution.

  2. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction studies of polyketide synthase-1 (PKS-1) from Cannabis sativa

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Taguchi, Chiho; Quantum Beam Science Directorate, Japan Atomic Energy Agency; Taura, Futoshi

    Polyketide synthase-1 from C. sativa has been crystallized. The crystal diffracted to 1.55 Å resolution with sufficient quality for further structure determination. Polyketide synthase-1 (PKS-1) is a novel type III polyketide synthase that catalyzes the biosynthesis of hexanoyl triacetic acid lactone in Cannabis sativa (Mexican strain). PKS-1 was overproduced in Escherichia coli, purified and finally crystallized in two different space groups. The crystal obtained in 0.1 M HEPES buffer pH 7.5 containing 0.2 M calcium acetate and 20%(w/v) polyethylene glycol 3350 diffracted to 1.65 Å resolution and belonged to space group P1, with unit-cell parameters a = 54.3, b =more » 59.3, c = 62.6 Å, α = 69, β = 81, γ = 80°. Another crystal obtained in 0.1 M HEPES buffer pH 7.5 containing 0.2 M sodium chloride and 20%(w/v) polyethylene glycol 3350 diffracted to 1.55 Å resolution and belonged to space group P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2{sub 1}, with unit-cell parameters a = 54.3, b = 110, c = 130 Å. These data will enable us to determine the crystal structure of PKS-1.« less

  3. Layered Structure and Swelling Behavior of a Multiple Hydrate-Forming Pharmaceutical Compound

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kiang, Y.; Xu, W; Stephens, P

    2009-01-01

    Investigation of one anhydrous and four hydrated forms of a pharmaceutical compound (1) using both single-crystal and high-resolution powder X-ray diffraction methods revealed a two-dimensional framework which, upon exposure to moisture, absorbed water between the layers, causing the lattice to expand by as much as 20% of the axial length along a. The single-crystal structure was solved and refined for the pentahydrate form in space group C2 with unit cell parameters a = 36.961(5) Angstroms, b = 7.458(2) Angstroms, c = 20.691(4) Angstroms, e = 99.461(1), and V = 5626(4) Angstroms3. In the single-crystal structure the water layers were parallelmore » to the bc plane and sandwiched by the crystalline compound 1 framework. Upon a change of relative humidity, water goes in and out of the interlayer space with the retention of the layer structure of the development compound. Starting from the anhydrous form, each additional water of hydration increased the interlayer spacing of the pharmaceutical solid by 1.3 Angstroms, half the size of a water molecule. In an exploratory formulation, this expansion of interlayer spacing caused tablets to crack upon storage at high relative humidity.« less

  4. VO{sub 2} (A): Reinvestigation of crystal structure, phase transition and crystal growth mechanisms

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Rao Popuri, Srinivasa; University of Bordeaux, ICMCB, UPR 9048, F-33608 Pessac; National Institute for Research and Development in Electrochemistry and Condensed Matter, Timisoara, Plautius Andronescu Str. No. 1, 300224 Timisoara

    2014-05-01

    Well crystallized VO{sub 2} (A) microrods were grown via a single step hydrothermal reaction in the presence of V{sub 2}O{sub 5} and oxalic acid. With the advantage of high crystalline samples, we propose P4/ncc as an appropriate space group at room temperature. From morphological studies, we found that the oriented attachment and layer by layer growth mechanisms are responsible for the formation of VO{sub 2} (A) micro rods. The structural and electronic transitions in VO{sub 2} (A) are strongly first order in nature, and a marked difference between the structural transition temperatures and electronic transitions temperature was evidenced. The reversiblemore » intra- (LTP-A to HTP-A) and irreversible inter- (HTP-A to VO{sub 2} (M1)) structural phase transformations were studied by in-situ powder X-ray diffraction. Attempts to increase the size of the VO{sub 2} (A) microrods are presented and the possible formation steps for the flower-like morphologies of VO{sub 2} (M1) are described. - Graphical abstract: Using a single step and template free hydrothermal synthesis, well crystallized VO{sub 2} (A) microrods were prepared and the P4/ncc space group was assigned to the room temperature crystal structure. Reversible and irreversible phase transitions among different VO{sub 2} polymorphs were identified and their progressive nature was highlighted. Attempts to increase the microrods size, involving layer by layer formation mechanisms, are presented. - Highlights: • Highly crystallized VO{sub 2} (A) microrods were grown via a single step hydrothermal process. • The P4/ncc space group was determined for VO{sub 2} (A) at room temperature. • The electronic structure and progressive nature of the structural phase transition were investigated. • A weak coupling between structural and electronic phase transitions was identified. • Different crystallite morphologies were discussed in relation with growth mechanisms.« less

  5. Synthesis, growth, structural and optical studies of a novel organic Piperazine (bis) p-toluenesulfonate single crystal.

    PubMed

    Rekha, P; Peramaiyan, G; NizamMohideen, M; Kumar, R Mohan; Kanagadurai, R

    2015-03-15

    A novel organic single crystal of Piperazinium (bis) p-toluenesulfonate (PPTS) was grown by a slow evaporation solution growth technique. The structure of the grown crystal was determined using single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The PPTS crystal belongs to the triclinic crystal system with space group of P1¯. The presence of functional groups was confirmed by FTIR spectral analysis. The optical transmittance range and cut-off wavelength were identified by UV-vis-NIR spectral studies. The luminescent properties of PPTS crystal were investigated. The thermal behavior of PPTS crystal was studied by TG-DT analyses. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  6. Salt-induced aggregation of lysozyme: Implications for crystal growth

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Wilson, Lori J.

    1994-01-01

    Crystallization of proteins is a prerequisite for structural analysis by x-ray crystallography. While improvements in protein crystals have been obtained in microgravity onboard the U.S. Space Shuttle, attempts to improve the crystal growth process both on the ground and in space have been limited by our lack of understanding of the mechanisms involved. Almost all proteins are crystallized with the aid of a precipitating agent. Many of the common precipitating agents are inorganic salts. An understanding of the role of salts on the aggregation of protein monomers is the key to the elucidation of the mechanisms involved in protein crystallization. In order for crystallization to occur individual molecules must self-associate into aggregates. Detection and characterization of aggregates in supersaturated protein solutions is the first step in understanding salt-induced crystallization.

  7. Monomer structure of a hyperthermophilic β-glucosidase mutant forming a dodecameric structure in the crystal form

    PubMed Central

    Nakabayashi, Makoto; Kataoka, Misumi; Watanabe, Masahiro; Ishikawa, Kazuhiko

    2014-01-01

    One of the β-glucosidases from Pyrococcus furiosus (BGLPf) is found to be a hyperthermophilic tetrameric enzyme that can degrade cellooligosaccharides. Recently, the crystal structures of the tetrameric and dimeric forms were solved. Here, a new monomeric form of BGLPf was constructed by removing the C-terminal region of the enzyme and its crystal structure was solved at a resolution of 2.8 Å in space group P1. It was discovered that the mutant enzyme forms a unique dodecameric structure consisting of two hexameric rings in the asymmetric unit of the crystal. Under biological conditions, the mutant enzyme forms a monomer. This result helps explain how BGLPf has attained its oligomeric structure and thermostability. PMID:25005077

  8. Artificial Hip Simulator with Crystal Models

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1966-06-21

    Robert Johnson, top, sets the lubricant flow while Donald Buckley adjusts the bearing specimen on an artificial hip simulator at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Lewis Research Center. The simulator was supplemented by large crystal lattice models to demonstrate the composition of different bearing alloys. This this image by NASA photographer Paul Riedel was used for the cover of the August 15, 1966 edition of McGraw-Hill Product Engineering. Johnson was chief of Lubrication Branch and Buckley head of the Space Environment Lubrication Section in the Fluid System Components Division. In 1962 they began studying the molecular structure of metals. Their friction and wear testing revealed that the optimal structure for metal bearings was a hexagonal crystal structure with proper molecular space. Bearing manufacturers traditionally preferred cubic structures over hexagonal arrangements. Buckley and Johnson found that even though the hexagonal structural was not as inherently strong as its cubic counterpart, it was less likely to cause a catastrophic failure. The Lewis researchers concentrated their efforts on cobalt-molybdenum and titanium alloys for high temperatures applications. The alloys had a number of possible uses, included prosthetics. The alloys were similar in composition to the commercial alloys used for prosthetics, but employed the longer lasting hexagonal structure.

  9. Crystal structure, conformational analysis, and molecular dynamics of tetra-0-methyl-(+)-catechin

    Treesearch

    Frank R. Fronczek; Richard W. Hemingway; G. Wayne McGraw; Jan P. Steynberg; Carin A. Helfer; Wayne L. Mattice

    1993-01-01

    The structure of tetra-O-methyl-(+)-catechin has been determined in the crystalline state. Two independent molecules, denoted structure A and structure B, exist in the unit cell. Crystals are triclinic, space group P1, a=4.8125(2) Ǻ, b=12.9148(8) Ǻ, c=13.8862(11) Ǻ, α=86.962(6)°, β=89.120(5)°, γ=...

  10. Synthesis and structural study of 4-(2-chlorophenyl)-2-ethoxy-5,6,7,8,9,10-hexahydrocycloocta[B]pyridine-3-carbonitrile

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fathima, K. Saiadali; Vasumathi, M.; Anitha, K.

    2016-05-01

    The novel organic material C20H21ClN2O was synthesized by One-Pot synthesis method and the single crystals were grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique. The crystal structure was elucidated by subjecting the grown crystals to the single crystal x-ray diffraction analysis and was refined by full matrix least-squares method to R=0.039 for 2746 reflections. Crystal system of the grown crystal was found to be monoclinic with the space group P21/a and a=9.196(4) Å, b=13.449(4) Å, c=14.818(4) Å, β= 101.542(3)°, V=1795.6(11) Å3 and Z=4. In this crystal structure, cyclooctanone prefers to reside in a chair-boat conformation. The structure is stabilized by attractive molecular force such as CH/π interaction called hydrophobic interaction.

  11. Glycine glycinium picrate—Reinvestigation of the structure and vibrational spectra

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ghazaryan, V. V.; Fleck, M.; Petrosyan, A. M.

    2011-01-01

    The crystal of diglycine picrate (glycine glycinum picrate) has been obtained from an aqueous solution containing stoichiometric quantities of the components. The species crystallizes in the monoclinic system (space group P2 1/ c). The crystal structure was determined with high accuracy, IR and Raman spectra are discussed and compared with previous results, and the molecular structure is presented. It was shown that crystals of diglycine picrate obtained from the solution containing equimolar quantities may contain picric acid as impurity, which is the reason for the previously reported observation of second harmonic generation in this centrosymmetric crystal. With this example we want to point out the risk of misinterpretation of SHG signals in general.

  12. First Protein Crystallization Experiments on The International Space Station: Sweet Success in Space With Thaumatin

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kundrot, Craig E.; Barnes, Cindy L.; Snell, Eddie H.; Achari, Aniruddha; Whitaker, Ann F. (Technical Monitor)

    2001-01-01

    We determined the room temperature 1.2 A structure of thaumatin using a crystal grown in the first protein crystallization experiment conducted aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The crystals were grown in the Enhanced Gaseous Nitrogen Dewar (EGN) developed by Alexander McPherson and co-workers. EGN transports frozen solutions contained in tygon tubing in a liquid nitrogen Dewar to ISS where the tubes then thaw. Batch, free interface diffusion (FID), or vapor diffusion crystallization occurs after thawing. EGN was flown to the ISS on STS-106 on September 8, 2000. This was a "risk mitigation" flight that tested EGN performance and the process of conducting experiments on ISS. We focused on how to map a hanging drop crystallization recipe to the EGN FID method. Thaumatin was chosen as the test system. Three series of crystallization recipes were set-up. Each series tested different volume ratios of protein-rich solution to precipitant-rich solution. The series differed from each other by fixing either the protein concentration or the amount of protein in the solutions. Upon return of the samples to Earth on October 24 by STS-92, bubbles that spanned the diameter of the tubing were observed in all tubes. Such bubbles interrupt liquid-liquid diffusion and force vapor diffusion equilibration to occur instead. Nonetheless, crystals grew in 9 of 30 tubes. Many large crystals were grown, the largest being 2.0 x 1.1 x 1.0 cubic mm. The largest crystal was used to collect data at room temperature on beamline 7-1 of the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Source to a maximum resolution of 1.2 A. The structure was refined anisotropically using SHELX with a data to parameter ratio of 4.5 to give an R(sub factor) of 15.8% (R(sub free) = 18.2%) for ail reflections without generated hydrogens. This refinement is proceeding. Comparisons of this 1.2 A microgravity structure to previous reports of the thaumatin structure at 1.75 A and to ground control crystals will be presented.

  13. Structures of (2E,5E)-2-(4-cyanobenzylidene)-5-(4-dimethylaminobenzylidene)cyclopentanone and (2E,5E)-2-benzylidene-5-cinnamylidenecyclopentanone

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zoto, Christopher A.; MacDonald, John C.

    2017-10-01

    The X-ray crystal structures of (2E,5E)-2-(4-cyanobenzylidene)-5-(4-dimethylaminobenzylidene)cyclopentanone (I) and (2E,5E)-2-benzylidene-5-cinnamylidenecyclopentanone (II) are presented, compared to the gas phase structures calculated using density functional theory, and discussed in the context of the photophysical behavior exhibited by I and II. Compound I crystallizes in the triclinic space group P 1 bar with a = 6.8743(2) Å, b = 8.8115(2) Å, c = 14.9664(4) Å, α = 77.135(2)°, β = 81.351(2)°, γ = 80.975(2)°, and Z = 2, and exhibits a planar structure. Compound II crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/c with a = 33.4281(10) Å, b = 11.9668(4) Å, c = 7.8031(2) Å, β = 92.785(2)°, and Z = 8, and adopts a nonplanar structure in the solid state and calculated structure.

  14. Crystal structure of low-symmetry rondorfite

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rastsvetaeva, R. K.; Zadov, A. E.; Chukanov, N. V.

    2008-03-01

    The crystal structure of an aluminum-rich variety of the mineral rondorfite with the composition Ca16[Mg2(Si7Al)(O31OH)]Cl4 from the skarns of the Verkhne-Chegemskoe plateau (the Kabardino-Balkarian Republic, the Northern Caucasus Region, Russia) was solved in the triclinic space group with the unit-cell parameters a = 15.100(2) Å, b = 15.110(2) Å, c = 15.092(2) Å, α = 90.06(1)°, β = 90.01(1)°, γ = 89.93(1)°, Z = 4, sp. gr. P1. The structural model consisting of 248 independent atoms was determined by the phase-correction method and refined to R = 3.8% with anisotropic displacement parameters based on all 7156 independent reflections with 7156 F > 3σ( F). The crystal structure is based on pentamers consisting of four Si tetrahedra linked by the central Mg tetrahedron. The structure can formally be refined in the cubic space group ( a = 15.105 Å, sp. gr. Fd overline 3 , seven independent positions) with anisotropic displacement parameters to R = 2.74% based on 579 reflections with F > 3σ( F) without accounting for more than 1000 observed reflections, which are inconsistent with the cubic symmetry of the crystal structure.

  15. Anagostic interactions in chiral separation. Polymorphism in a [Co(II)(L)] complex: Crystallographic and theoretical studies

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Awwadi, Firas F.; Hodali, Hamdallah A.

    2018-02-01

    Syntheses and crystal structures of two polymorphs of the complex [Co(II)(L)], where H2L = 2,2'-[cis-1,2-diaminocyclohexanediylbis (nitrilo-methylidyne)]bis (5-dimethyl-amino]phenol, have been studied. The two polymorphs concomitantly crystallized by vapour diffusion of solvent. The first polymorph (I) crystallized as a racemate in the centrosymmetric tetragonal I41/a space group. The second polymorph (II) crystallized in the chiral orthorhombic space group P212121. The chiral conformers of symmetrical cis-1,2-disubstituted cyclohexane molecules cannot be resolved in the liquid or gas phases, due to the rapid ring inversion. In the present study, the two chiral conformers are present in crystals of polymorph I, whereas, only one chiral conformer is present in crystals of polymorph II. Crystal structure analysis indicated that the formation of two different polymorphs of [Co(II)(L)] complex can be rationalized based on Csbnd H⋯Co anagostic interactions. Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations indicated that Csbnd H⋯Co interactions are due to HOMO-LUMO interactions.

  16. Likelihood-based molecular-replacement solution for a highly pathological crystal with tetartohedral twinning and sevenfold translational noncrystallographic symmetry

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sliwiak, Joanna; Jaskolski, Mariusz, E-mail: mariuszj@amu.edu.pl; A. Mickiewicz University, Grunwaldzka 6, 60-780 Poznan

    With the implementation of a molecular-replacement likelihood target that accounts for translational noncrystallographic symmetry, it became possible to solve the crystal structure of a protein with seven tetrameric assemblies arrayed translationally along the c axis. The new algorithm found 56 protein molecules in reduced symmetry (P1), which was used to resolve space-group ambiguity caused by severe twinning. Translational noncrystallographic symmetry (tNCS) is a pathology of protein crystals in which multiple copies of a molecule or assembly are found in similar orientations. Structure solution is problematic because this breaks the assumptions used in current likelihood-based methods. To cope with such cases,more » new likelihood approaches have been developed and implemented in Phaser to account for the statistical effects of tNCS in molecular replacement. Using these new approaches, it was possible to solve the crystal structure of a protein exhibiting an extreme form of this pathology with seven tetrameric assemblies arrayed along the c axis. To resolve space-group ambiguities caused by tetartohedral twinning, the structure was initially solved by placing 56 copies of the monomer in space group P1 and using the symmetry of the solution to define the true space group, C2. The resulting structure of Hyp-1, a pathogenesis-related class 10 (PR-10) protein from the medicinal herb St John’s wort, reveals the binding modes of the fluorescent probe 8-anilino-1-naphthalene sulfonate (ANS), providing insight into the function of the protein in binding or storing hydrophobic ligands.« less

  17. Structural properties of a family of hydrogen-bonded co-crystals formed between gemfibrozil and hydroxy derivatives of t-butylamine, determined directly from powder X-ray diffraction data

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cheung, Eugene Y.; David, Sarah E.; Harris, Kenneth D. M.; Conway, Barbara R.; Timmins, Peter

    2007-03-01

    We report the formation and structural properties of co-crystals containing gemfibrozil and hydroxy derivatives of t-butylamine H 2NC(CH 3) 3-n(CH 2OH) n, with n=0, 1, 2 and 3. In each case, a 1:1 co-crystal is formed, with transfer of a proton from the carboxylic acid group of gemfibrozil to the amino group of the t-butylamine derivative. All of the co-crystal materials prepared are polycrystalline powders, and do not contain single crystals of suitable size and/or quality for single crystal X-ray diffraction studies. Structure determination of these materials has been carried out directly from powder X-ray diffraction data, using the direct-space Genetic Algorithm technique for structure solution followed by Rietveld refinement. The structural chemistry of this series of co-crystal materials reveals well-defined structural trends within the first three members of the family ( n=0, 1, 2), but significantly contrasting structural properties for the member with n=3.

  18. Synthesis, structure, and polymorphism of A{sub 3}LnSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} (A=Na, K; Ln=Sm, Ho, Yb)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Latshaw, Allison M.; Yeon, Jeongho; Smith, Mark D.

    2016-03-15

    Four new members of the A{sub 3}LnSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} family, K{sub 3}SmSi{sub 2}O{sub 7}, Na{sub 3}HoSi{sub 2}O{sub 7}, and two polymorphs of Na{sub 3}YbSi{sub 2}O{sub 7}, are reported. K{sub 3}SmSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} crystallizes in the hexagonal space group P6{sub 3}/mcm, Na{sub 3}HoSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} and Na{sub 3}YbSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} crystallize in the hexagonal space group P6{sub 3}/m, and Na{sub 3}YbSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} crystallizes in the trigonal space group P31c. The Na{sub 3}YbSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} composition that crystallizes in P31c is a new structure type. The magnetic properties for the Ho and Yb analogs are reported. - Graphical abstract: The differentmore » structure types and polymorphs of the A{sub 3}LnSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} family reported. - Highlights: • Four new members of the A{sub 3}LnSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} family are presented. • Na{sub 3}YbSi{sub 2}O{sub 7} is reported as two polymorphs, one is a new structure type. • Crystals synthesized out of molten fluoride fluxes.« less

  19. Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of a 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase homologue from Esherichia coli.

    PubMed

    Seo, Kyung Hye; Supangat; Kim, Hye Lim; Park, Young Shik; Jeon, Che Ok; Lee, Kon Ho

    2008-02-01

    6-Pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase from E. coli (ePTPS) has been crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. Hexagonal- and rectangular-shaped crystals were obtained. Diffraction data were collected from the hexagonal and rectangular crystals to 3.0 and 2.3 A resolution, respectively. The hexagonal plate-shaped crystals belonged to space group P321, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 112.59, c = 68.82 A , and contained two molecules in the asymmetric unit. The rectangular crystals belonged to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 112.76, b = 117.66, c = 153.57 A , and contained six molecules in the asymmetric unit. The structure of ePTPS in both crystal forms has been determined by molecular replacement.

  20. Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of a 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase homologue from Esherichia coli

    PubMed Central

    Seo, Kyung Hye; Supangat; Kim, Hye Lim; Park, Young Shik; Jeon, Che Ok; Lee, Kon Ho

    2008-01-01

    6-Pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase from E. coli (ePTPS) has been crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. Hexagonal- and rectangular-shaped crystals were obtained. Diffraction data were collected from the hexagonal and rectangular crystals to 3.0 and 2.3 Å resolution, respectively. The hexagonal plate-shaped crystals belonged to space group P321, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 112.59, c = 68.82 Å, and contained two molecules in the asymmetric unit. The rectangular crystals belonged to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 112.76, b = 117.66, c = 153.57 Å, and contained six molecules in the asymmetric unit. The structure of ePTPS in both crystal forms has been determined by molecular replacement. PMID:18271114

  1. Pseudo-merohedral twinning and noncrystallographic symmetry in orthorhombic crystals of SIVmac239 Nef core domain bound to different-length TCRζ fragments

    PubMed Central

    Kim, Walter M.; Sigalov, Alexander B.; Stern, Lawrence J.

    2010-01-01

    HIV/SIV Nef mediates many cellular processes through interactions with various cytoplasmic and membrane-associated host proteins, including the signalling ζ subunit of the T-­cell receptor (TCRζ). Here, the crystallization strategy, methods and refinement procedures used to solve the structures of the core domain of the SIVmac239 isolate of Nef (Nefcore) in complex with two different TCRζ fragments are described. The structure of SIVmac239 Nefcore bound to the longer TCRζ polypeptide (Leu51–Asp93) was determined to 3.7 Å resolution (R work = 28.7%) in the tetragonal space group P43212. The structure of SIVmac239 Nefcore in complex with the shorter TCRζ polypeptide (Ala63–Arg80) was determined to 2.05 Å resolution (R work = 17.0%), but only after the detection of nearly perfect pseudo-merohedral crystal twinning and proper assignment of the orthorhombic space group P212121. The reduction in crystal space-group symmetry induced by the truncated TCRζ polypeptide appears to be caused by the rearrangement of crystal-contact hydrogen-bonding networks and the substitution of crystallographic symmetry operations by similar noncrystallographic symmetry (NCS) operations. The combination of NCS rotations that were nearly parallel to the twin operation (k, h, −l) and a and b unit-cell parameters that were nearly identical predisposed the P212121 crystal form to pseudo-merohedral twinning. PMID:20124696

  2. Observing in space and time the ephemeral nucleation of liquid-to-crystal phase transitions.

    PubMed

    Yoo, Byung-Kuk; Kwon, Oh-Hoon; Liu, Haihua; Tang, Jau; Zewail, Ahmed H

    2015-10-19

    The phase transition of crystalline ordering is a general phenomenon, but its evolution in space and time requires microscopic probes for visualization. Here we report direct imaging of the transformation of amorphous titanium dioxide nanofilm, from the liquid state, passing through the nucleation step and finally to the ordered crystal phase. Single-pulse transient diffraction profiles at different times provide the structural transformation and the specific degree of crystallinity (η) in the evolution process. It is found that the temporal behaviour of η exhibits unique 'two-step' dynamics, with a robust 'plateau' that extends over a microsecond; the rate constants vary by two orders of magnitude. Such behaviour reflects the presence of intermediate structure(s) that are the precursor of the ordered crystal state. Theoretically, we extend the well-known Johnson-Mehl-Avrami-Kolmogorov equation, which describes the isothermal process with a stretched-exponential function, but here over the range of times covering the melt-to-crystal transformation.

  3. High-pressure crystal growth and electromagnetic properties of 5d double-perovskite Ca3OsO6

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Feng, Hai Luke; Shi, Youguo; Guo, Yanfeng; Li, Jun; Sato, Akira; Sun, Ying; Wang, Xia; Yu, Shan; Sathish, Clastin I.; Yamaura, Kazunari

    2013-05-01

    Single crystals of the osmium-containing compound Ca3OsO6 have been successfully grown under high-pressure conditions, for the first time. The crystal structure of Ca3OsO6 were characterized as an ordered double-perovskite structure of space group P21/n with the Ca and Os atoms being fully ordered at the perovskite B-site. The electromagnetic analysis shows that the crystal exhibits a semiconductor-like behavior below 300 K and undergoes an antiferromagnetic transition at 50 K.

  4. Structural investigation of cooperite (PtS) crystals

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Rozhdestvina, V. I., E-mail: veronika@ascnet.ru; Udovenko, A. A.; Rubanov, S. V.

    2016-03-15

    The single-crystal structure of cooperite, a natural platinum sulfide PtS, is studied by X-ray diffraction supported by high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy and X-ray spectrum microanalysis. It is found that, in addition to the main reflections corresponding to the known tetragonal cell (a = 3.47 and c = 6.11 Å; space group P4{sub 2}/mmc), many weak reflections with intensities I ≤ 60σ(I) are clearly observed. These reflections fit the tetragonal cell (space group I4/mmm) with doubled parameters. In structures with small (P4{sub 2}/mmc) and large (I4/mmm) cells, the S atoms occupy statistically two special positions. It is shown that themore » chemical composition of the cooperite crystals deviates from the stoichiometric composition: sulfur-deficient specimens predominate.« less

  5. Crystal structure of enolase from Drosophila melanogaster.

    PubMed

    Sun, Congcong; Xu, Baokui; Liu, Xueyan; Zhang, Zhen; Su, Zhongliang

    2017-04-01

    Enolase is an important enzyme in glycolysis and various biological processes. Its dysfunction is closely associated with diseases. Here, the enolase from Drosophila melanogaster (DmENO) was purified and crystallized. A crystal of DmENO diffracted to 2.0 Å resolution and belonged to space group R32. The structure was solved by molecular replacement. Like most enolases, DmENO forms a homodimer with conserved residues in the dimer interface. DmENO possesses an open conformation in this structure and contains conserved elements for catalytic activity. This work provides a structural basis for further functional and evolutionary studies of enolase.

  6. Characterization of molecular associations involving L-ornithine and α-ketoglutaric acid: crystal structure of L-ornithinium α-ketoglutarate.

    PubMed

    Allouchi, H; Céolin, R; Berthon, L; Tombret, F; Rietveld, I B

    2014-07-01

    The crystal structure of L-ornithinium α-ketoglutarate (C5H13N2O2, C5H5O5) has been solved by direct methods using single crystal X-ray diffraction data. It crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group P21, unit cell parameters a=15.4326(3), b=5.2015(1), c=16.2067(3) Å and β=91.986(1)°, containing two independent pairs of molecular ions in the asymmetric unit. An extensive hydrogen-bond network and electrostatic charges due to proton transfer provide an important part of the cohesive energy of the crystal. The conformational versatility of L-ornithine and α-ketoglutaric acid is illustrated by the present results and crystal structures available from the Cambridge Structural Database. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

  7. Protein crystal growth in microgravity review of large scale temperature induction method: Bovine insulin, human insulin and human α-interferon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Long, Marianna M.; Bishop, John Bradford; Delucas, Lawrence J.; Nagabhushan, Tattanhalli L.; Reichert, Paul; Smith, G. David

    1997-01-01

    The Protein Crystal Growth Facility (PCF) is space-flight hardware that accommodates large scale protein crystal growth experiments using temperature change as the inductive step. Recent modifications include specialized instrumentation for monitoring crystal nucleation with laser light scattering. This paper reviews results from its first seven flights on the Space Shuttle, the last with laser light scattering instrumentation in place. The PCF's objective is twofold: (1) the production of high quality protein crystals for x-ray analysis and subsequent structure-based drug design and (2) preparation of a large quantity of relatively contaminant free crystals for use as time-release protein pharmaceuticals. The first three Shuttle flights with bovine insulin constituted the PCF's proof of concept, demonstrating that the space-grown crystals were larger and diffracted to higher resolution than their earth-grown counterparts. The later four PCF missions were used to grow recombinant human insulin crystals for x-ray analysis and continue productions trials aimed at the development of a processing facility for crystalline recombinant a-interferon.

  8. Crystal-chemical characteristics of nontronites from bottom sediments of Pacific ocean

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Palchik, N. A., E-mail: nadezhda@igm.nsc.ru; Moroz, T. N.; Grigorieva, T. N.

    A crystal-chemical analysis of the nontronite samples formed in deep-water sediments of the underwater Juan-de-Fuca ridge in the Pacific ocean has been performed using powder X-ray diffraction, IR spectroscopy, and Mössbauer spectroscopy. A comparison with the previously investigated nontronites from different regions of the Sea of Okhotsk showed that the structural features of these formations are due to the difference in the physicochemical parameters of their crystallization. The values of the basal interplanar spacing d{sub 001} (within 11–13 Å) in the samples analyzed are determined by the degree of hydration and cation filling of the interlayer space, while the differencesmore » in the IR spectra are due to isomorphic substitutions in the structure. The character of cation distribution and the nature and concentration of stacking faults in nontronite structures are determined. The differences in the composition, structure, and properties of nontronites of different origin are confirmed by theoretical calculations of their structural parameters.« less

  9. Crystal Structure of Garnet-Related Li-Ion Conductor Li7–3xGaxLa3Zr2O12: Fast Li-Ion Conduction Caused by a Different Cubic Modification?

    PubMed Central

    2016-01-01

    Li-oxide garnets such as Li7La3Zr2O12 (LLZO) are among the most promising candidates for solid-state electrolytes to be used in next-generation Li-ion batteries. The garnet-structured cubic modification of LLZO, showing space group Ia-3d, has to be stabilized with supervalent cations. LLZO stabilized with Ga3+ shows superior properties compared to LLZO stabilized with similar cations; however, the reason for this behavior is still unknown. In this study, a comprehensive structural characterization of Ga-stabilized LLZO is performed by means of single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Coarse-grained samples with crystal sizes of several hundred micrometers are obtained by solid-state reaction. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction results show that Li7–3xGaxLa3Zr2O12 with x > 0.07 crystallizes in the acentric cubic space group I-43d. This is the first definite record of this cubic modification for LLZO materials and might explain the superior electrochemical performance of Ga-stabilized LLZO compared to its Al-stabilized counterpart. The phase transition seems to be caused by the site preference of Ga3+. 7Li NMR spectroscopy indicates an additional Li-ion diffusion process for LLZO with space group I-43d compared to space group Ia-3d. Despite all efforts undertaken to reveal structure–property relationships for this class of materials, this study highlights the potential for new discoveries. PMID:27019548

  10. Preparation and Single-Crystal X-Ray Structures of Four Related Mixed-Ligand 4-Methylpyridine Indium Halide Complexes

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Hepp, Aloysius F.; Clark, Eric B.; Schupp, John D.; Williams, Jennifer N.; Duraj, Stan A.; Fanwick, Philip E.

    2013-01-01

    We describe the structures of four related indium complexes obtained during synthesis of solid-state materials precursors. Indium adducts of halides and 4-methylpyridine, InX3(pic)3 (X = Cl, Br; pic = 4-methylpyridine) consist of octahedral molecules with meridional (mer) geometry. Crystals of mer-InCl3(pic)3 (1) are triclinic, space group P1(bar) (No. 2), with a = 9.3240(3), b = 13.9580(6), c = 16.7268 (7) A, alpha = 84.323(2), beta = 80.938(2), gamma = 78.274(3)Z = 4, R = 0.035 for 8820 unique reflections. Crystals of mer-InBr3(pic)3 (2) are monoclinic, space group P21/n (No. 14), with a = 15.010(2), b = 19.938(2), c = 16.593(3), beta = 116.44(1)Z = 8, R = 0.053 for 4174 unique reflections. The synthesis and structures of related compounds with phenylsulfide (chloride) (3) and a dimeric complex with bridging hydroxide (bromide) (4) coordination is also described. Crystals of trans-In(SC6H5)Cl2(pic)3 (3) are monoclinic, space group P21/n (No. 14), with a = 9.5265(2), b = 17.8729(6), c = 13.8296(4), beta = 99.7640(15)Z = 4, R = 0.048 for 5511 unique reflections. Crystals of [In(mu-OH)Br2(pic)22 (4) are tetragonal, space group = I41cd (No. 110) with a = 19.8560(4), b = 19.8560(4), c = 25.9528(6), Z = 8, R = 0.039 for 5982 unique reflections.

  11. Synthesis, crystal structure, and magnetic properties of two-dimensional divalent metal glutarate/dipyridylamine coordination polymers, with a single crystal-to-single crystal transformation in the copper derivative

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Montney, Matthew R.; Supkowski, Ronald M.; Staples, Richard J.

    Hydrothermal reaction of divalent metal chlorides with glutaric acid and 4,4'-dipyridylamine (dpa) has afforded an isostructural family of coordination polymers with formulation [M(glu)(dpa)]{sub n} (M=Co (1), Ni (2), Cu (3); glu=glutarate). Square pyramidal coordination is seen in 1-3, with semi-ligation of a sixth donor to produce a '5+1' extended coordination sphere. Neighboring metal atoms are linked into 1D [M(glu)]{sub n} neutral chains through chelating/monodentate bridging glutarate moieties with a syn-anti binding mode, and semi-chelation of the pendant carboxylate oxygen. These chains further connect into 2D layers through dipodal dpa ligands. Neighboring layers stack into the pseudo 3D crystal structure ofmore » 1-3 through supramolecular hydrogen bonding between dpa amine units and the semi-chelated glutarate oxygen atoms. The variable temperature magnetic behavior of 1-3 was explored and modeled as infinite 1D Heisenberg chains. Notably, complex 3 undergoes a thermally induced single crystal-to-single crystal transformation between centric and acentric space groups, with a conformationally disordered unilayer structure at 293 K and an ordered bilayer structure at 173 K. All materials were further characterized via infrared spectroscopy and elemental and thermogravimetric analyses. - Graphical abstract: The coordination polymers [M(glu)(dpa)]{sub n} (M=Co (1), Ni (2), Cu (3); glu=glutarate, dpa=4,4'-dipyridylamine) exhibit 2D layer structures based on 1D [M(glu)]{sub n} chains linked through dpa tethers. Antiferromagnetic coupling is observed for 2 and 3, while ferromagnetism is predominant in 1. Compound 3 undergoes a thermally induced single crystal-to-single crystal transformation from an acentric to a centrosymmetric space group.« less

  12. Two-dimensional microsphere quasi-crystal: fabrication and properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Noginova, Natalia E.; Venkateswarlu, Putcha; Kukhtarev, Nickolai V.; Sarkisov, Sergey S.; Noginov, Mikhail A.; Caulfield, H. John; Curley, Michael J.

    1996-11-01

    2D quasi-crystals were fabricated from polystyrene microspheres and characterized for their structural, diffraction, and non-linear optics properties. The quasi- crystals were produced with the method based on Langmuir- Blodgett thin film technique. Illuminating the crystal with the laser beam, we observed the diffraction pattern in the direction of the beam propagation and in the direction of the back scattering, similar to the x-ray Laue pattern observed in regular crystals with hexagonal structure. The absorption spectrum of the quasi-crystal demonstrated two series of regular maxima and minima, with the spacing inversely proportional to the microspheres diameter. Illumination of the dye-doped microspheres crystal with Q- switched radiation of Nd:YAG laser showed the enhancement of non-linear properties, in particular, second harmonic generation.

  13. Synthesis, crystal and electronic structure of the quaternary sulfides Ln{sub 2}CuMS{sub 5} (Ln=La, Ce; M=Sb, Bi)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kussainova, Ardak M.; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716; Akselrud, Lev G.

    2016-01-15

    The series of quaternary sulfides with general formula Ln{sub 2}CuMS{sub 5} (Ln=La, Ce; M=Sb, Bi) have been synthesized by solid-state reactions. Three representative members have been structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. La{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} crystallizes in a new structure type (space group Ima2 (no. 46), Z=4, a=13.401(2) Å, b=7.592(1) Å, c=7.598(1) Å, V=773.1(3) Å{sup 3}). The bismuth analogs of composition La{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} and Ce{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} crystallize with the La{sub 2}CuInSe{sub 5} structure type (space group Pnma (no. 62), Z=4). Lattice parameters for La{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5}: a=11.9213(5) Å, b=3.9967(2) Å, c=17.0537(8) Å, V=812.56(7) Å{sup 3}; lattice parameters formore » Ce{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5}: a=11.9179(15) Å, b=3.9596(5) Å, c=16.955(2) Å, V=800.13(17) Å{sup 3}). The similarities and the differences between the two structures are discussed. Electronic structure calculations for La{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} and La{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} are also presented; they suggest semiconducting behavior with energy gaps exceeding 1.7 eV. - Graphical abstract: La{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} crystallizes in a new structure type (space group Ima2 (no. 46). Its bismuth analog La{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} crystallizes in the La{sub 2}CuInSe{sub 5} structure type (space group Pnma (no. 62)). Z=4, a=11.9213(5) Å, b=3.9967(2) Å, c=17.0536(10) Å, V=813.53(10) Å{sup 3}). The structures are based on rare-earth metal atoms coordinated by S atoms in a trigonal-prismatic and/or square-antiprismatic fashion, Cu-centered tetrahedra, and pnictogen atoms in pyramidal or distorted octahedral coordination. - Highlights: • Ln{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} are complex quarternary phases crystallizing in their own structure type. • Ln{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} and Ce{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} are new compound in the respective ternary phase diagrams. • Ln{sub 2}CuSbS{sub 5} on one side, and Ln{sub 2}CuBiS{sub 5} on the other are not isotypic.« less

  14. Purification and Bicelle Crystallization for Structure Determination of the E. coli Outer Membrane Protein TamA.

    PubMed

    Gruss, Fabian; Hiller, Sebastian; Maier, Timm

    2015-01-01

    TamA is an Omp85 protein involved in autotransporter assembly in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. It comprises a C-terminal 16-stranded transmembrane β-barrel as well as three periplasmic POTRA domains, and is a challenging target for structure determination. Here, we present a method for crystal structure determination of TamA, including recombinant expression in E. coli, detergent extraction, chromatographic purification, and bicelle crystallization in combination with seeding. As a result, crystals in space group P21212 are obtained, which diffract to 2.3 Å resolution. This protocol also serves as a template for structure determination of other outer membrane proteins, in particular of the Omp85 family.

  15. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2000-04-20

    Edward Snell, a National Research Council research fellow at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), prepares a protein crystal for analysis by x-ray crystallography as part of NASA's structural biology program. The small, individual crystals are bombarded with x-rays to produce diffraction patterns, a map of the intensity of the x-rays as they reflect through the crystal.

  16. SKYLAB (SL)-3 - EXPERIMENT HARDWARE

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1973-11-08

    S74-19677 (April 1974) --- This crystal of Germanium Selenide (GeSe) was grown under weightless conditions in an electric furnace aboard the Skylab space station. Experiment M556, Vapor Growth of IV-VI Compounds, was conducted as a comparative test of GeSe crystals grown on Earth and those grown in a weightless environment. Skylab postflight results indicate that crystals grown in a zero-gravity situation demonstrate greater growth and better composite structure than those grown in ground-bases laboratories. The GeSe crystal shown here is 20 millimeters long, the largest crystal ever grown on Earth or in space. Principal Investigator for Experiment M556 is Dr. Harry Wiedemaier, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York. (See NASA photograph S74-19676 for an example of an Earth-grown Germanium Selenide crystal.) Photo credit: NASA

  17. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of pyruvate kinase from Bacillus stearothermophilus

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Suzuki, Kenichiro; Ito, Sohei; Shimizu-Ibuka, Akiko

    2005-08-01

    This report describes the crystallization and X-ray diffraction data collection of three types (wild-type, W416F/V435W and C9S/C268S) of B. stearothermophilus. Crystals of C9S/C268S belonged to space group P6{sub 2}22 and diffracted to a resolution of 2.4 Å. Pyruvate kinase (PK) from a moderate thermophile, Bacillus stearothermophilus (BstPK), is an allosteric enzyme activated by AMP and ribose 5-phosphate but not by fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). However, almost all other PKs are activated by FBP. The wild-type and W416F/V435W mutant BstPKs were crystallized by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. However, they were unsuitable for structural analysis because their data sets exhibited low completeness. Amore » crystal suitable for structural analysis was obtained using C9S/C268S enzyme. The crystal belonged to space group P6{sub 2}22, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 145.97, c = 118.03 Å.« less

  18. Synthesis and structural study of 4-(2-chlorophenyl)-2-ethoxy-5,6,7,8,9,10-hexahydrocycloocta[B] pyridine-3-carbonitrile

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Fathima, K. Saiadali; Vasumathi, M.; Anitha, K., E-mail: singlecrystalxrd@gmail.com

    2016-05-23

    The novel organic material C{sub 20}H{sub 21}ClN{sub 2}O was synthesized by One-Pot synthesis method and the single crystals were grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique. The crystal structure was elucidated by subjecting the grown crystals to the single crystal x-ray diffraction analysis and was refined by full matrix least-squares method to R=0.039 for 2746 reflections. Crystal system of the grown crystal was found to be monoclinic with the space group P2{sub 1}/a and a=9.196(4) Å, b=13.449(4) Å, c=14.818(4) Å, β= 101.542(3)°, V=1795.6(11) Å{sup 3} and Z=4. In this crystal structure, cyclooctanone prefers to reside in a chair-boat conformation. Themore » structure is stabilized by attractive molecular force such as CH/π interaction called hydrophobic interaction.« less

  19. Preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of SMU.573, a putative sugar kinase from Streptococcus mutans

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhou, Yan-Feng; Li, Lan-Fen; Yang, Cheng

    2008-01-01

    SMU.573 from S. mutans was expressed in E. coli and crystallized. The crystals belong to space group I4 and 2.5 Å resolution diffraction data were collected at an in-house chromium radiation source. SMU.573 from Streptococcus mutans is a structurally and functionally uncharacterized protein that was selected for structural biology studies. Native and SeMet-labelled proteins were expressed with an N-His tag in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) and purified by Ni{sup 2+}-chelating and size-exclusion chromatography. Crystals of the SeMet-labelled protein were obtained by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method and a 2.5 Å resolution diffraction data set was collected using an in-house chromium radiationmore » source. The crystals belong to space group I4, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 96.53, c = 56.26 Å, α = β = γ = 90°.« less

  20. Isothermal Crystallization Behavior of Cocoa Butter at 17 and 20 °C with and without Limonene.

    PubMed

    Rigolle, Annelien; Goderis, Bart; Van Den Abeele, Koen; Foubert, Imogen

    2016-05-04

    Differential scanning calorimetry and real-time X-ray diffraction using synchrotron radiation were used to elucidate isothermal cocoa butter crystallization at 17 and 20 °C in the absence and presence of different limonene concentrations. At 17 °C, a three-step crystallization process was visible for pure cocoa butter, whereby first an unknown structure with long spacings between a 2L and 3L structure was formed that rapidly transformed into the more stable α structure, which in turn was converted into more stable β' crystals. At 20 °C, an α-mediated β' crystallization was observed. The addition of limonene resulted in a reduction of the amount of unstable crystals and an acceleration of polymorphic transitions. At 17 °C, the crystallization process was accelerated due to the acceleration of the formation of more stable polymorphic forms, whereas there were insufficient α crystals for an α-mediated β' nucleation at 20 °C, resulting in a slower crystallization process.

  1. Synthesis, crystal and electronic structures and optical properties of (HIm) 2 Hg 3Cl 8 and (HIm)HgI 3 (HIm = imidazolium)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Nhalil, Hariharan; Whiteside, Vincent R.; Sellers, Ian R.

    Here, we report synthesis, crystal and electronic structures, and optical properties of two new Hg-based zero-dimensional hybrid organic-inorganic halides (HIm)2Hg3Cl8 and (HIm)HgI3 (HIm = imidazolium). (HIm) 2Hg 3Cl 8 crystallizes in the triclinic P-1 space group with a pseudo-layered structure made of organic imidazolium cation layers and anionic inorganic layers containing [Hg 2Cl 6] 2- units and linear [HgCl 2] 0 molecules. (HIm)HgI 3 crystallizes in the monoclinic P2 1/c space group featuring anionic [HgI 3]- units that are surrounded by imidazolium cations. Based on density functional theory calculations, (HIm) 2Hg 3Cl 8 has an indirect band gap, whereas (HIm)HgImore » 3 has a direct band gap with the measured onsets of optical absorption at 3.43 and 2.63 eV, respectively. (HIm) 2Hg 3Cl 8 and (HIm)HgI 3 are broadband light emitters with broad photoluminescence peaks centered at 548 nm (2.26 eV) and 582 nm (2.13 eV), respectively. In conclusion, following the crystal and electronic structure considerations, the PL peaks are assigned to self-trapped excitons.« less

  2. Synthesis, crystal structure, NLO and Hirshfeld surface analysis of 1,2,3-triazolyl chalcone single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shruthi, C.; Ravindrachary, V.; Guruswamy, B.; Lokanath, N. K.; Kumara, Karthik; Goveas, Janet

    2018-05-01

    Needle shaped brown coloured single crystal of the title compound was grown by slow evaporation technique using methanol as solvent. The grown crystal was characterized using FT-IR, Single crystal XRD, UV-visible and NLO studies. Crystal structure was confirmed by FT-IR study and the functional groups were identified. XRD study reveals that the crystal belongs to orthorhombic crystal system with pnaa space group and the corresponding cell parameters were calculated. UV-visible spectrum shows that the crystal is transparent in the entire visible region and absorption takes place in the UV-range. NLO efficiency of the crystal obtained 0.66 times that of urea was determined by SHG test. The intermolecular interaction and percentage contribution of each individual atom in the crystal lattice was quantized using Hirshfeld surface and 2D finger print analysis.

  3. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2000-04-20

    Cindy Barnes of University Space Research Association (USRA) at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center pipettes a protein solution in preparation to grow crystals as part of NASA's structural biology program. Research on Earth helps scientists define conditions and specimens they will use in space experiments.

  4. Direct observation of the ferroelectric polarization in the layered perovskite Bi{sub 4}Ti{sub 3}O{sub 12}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Urushihara, Daisuke; Asaka, Toru, E-mail: asaka.toru@nitech.ac.jp; Frontier Research Institute for Materials Science, Nagoya Institute of Technology, Nagoya 466-8555

    We investigated the crystal structure and ferroelectric domains of Bi{sub 4}Ti{sub 3}O{sub 12} (BTO) by means of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and single-crystal X-ray diffractometry. From the extinction rule, we determined that the space group in the ferroelectric phase of BTO is P1a1 rather than B2cb and B1a1 which have been proposed previously. We successfully refined the crystal structure based on the space group P1a1. The 180° and 90° ferroelectric domain structures were observed by the [001]-zone dark-field TEM imaging. In the 180° domain structure, we determined that one component of the polarization vector is parallel to the a-axis. Anmore » annular bright-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (ABF-STEM) was performed for the direct observation of the crystal structures. The ABF-STEM images displayed the contrasts with respect to every atomic position in spite of the highly distorted structure of BTO. We could evaluate the tilting and distortion of the [TiO{sub 6}] octahedra relatively. Therefore, we directly observed the ferroelectric displacements of Bi and Ti ions.« less

  5. Entropy as a Gene-Like Performance Indicator Promoting Thermoelectric Materials.

    PubMed

    Liu, Ruiheng; Chen, Hongyi; Zhao, Kunpeng; Qin, Yuting; Jiang, Binbin; Zhang, Tiansong; Sha, Gang; Shi, Xun; Uher, Ctirad; Zhang, Wenqing; Chen, Lidong

    2017-10-01

    High-throughput explorations of novel thermoelectric materials based on the Materials Genome Initiative paradigm only focus on digging into the structure-property space using nonglobal indicators to design materials with tunable electrical and thermal transport properties. As the genomic units, following the biogene tradition, such indicators include localized crystal structural blocks in real space or band degeneracy at certain points in reciprocal space. However, this nonglobal approach does not consider how real materials differentiate from others. Here, this study successfully develops a strategy of using entropy as the global gene-like performance indicator that shows how multicomponent thermoelectric materials with high entropy can be designed via a high-throughput screening method. Optimizing entropy works as an effective guide to greatly improve the thermoelectric performance through either a significantly depressed lattice thermal conductivity down to its theoretical minimum value and/or via enhancing the crystal structure symmetry to yield large Seebeck coefficients. The entropy engineering using multicomponent crystal structures or other possible techniques provides a new avenue for an improvement of the thermoelectric performance beyond the current methods and approaches. © 2017 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

  6. Expression, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of RNA-binding protein Hfq (YmaH) from Bacillus subtilis in complex with an RNA aptamer.

    PubMed

    Baba, Seiki; Someya, Tatsuhiko; Kawai, Gota; Nakamura, Kouji; Kumasaka, Takashi

    2010-05-01

    The Hfq protein is a hexameric RNA-binding protein which regulates gene expression by binding to RNA under the influence of diverse environmental stresses. Its ring structure binds various types of RNA, including mRNA and sRNA. RNA-bound structures of Hfq from Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus have been revealed to have poly(A) RNA at the distal site and U-rich RNA at the proximal site, respectively. Here, crystals of a complex of the Bacillus subtilis Hfq protein with an A/G-repeat 7-mer RNA (Hfq-RNA) that were prepared using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion technique are reported. The type 1 Hfq-RNA crystals belonged to space group I422, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 123.70, c = 119.13 A, while the type 2 Hfq-RNA crystals belonged to space group F222, with unit-cell parameters a = 91.92, b = 92.50, c = 114.92 A. Diffraction data were collected to a resolution of 2.20 A from both crystal forms. The hexameric structure of the Hfq protein was clearly shown by self-rotation analysis.

  7. Crystal structure of alpha poly-p-xylylene.

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kubo, S.; Wunderlich, B.

    1971-01-01

    A crystal structure of alpha poly-p-xylylene is proposed with the help of data of oriented crystals grown during polymerization. The unit cell is monoclinic with the parameters a = 8.57 A, b = 10.62 A, c = 6.54 A (chain axis), and beta = 101.3 deg. Four repeating units per cell lead to a calculated density of 1.185 g/cu cm and a packing density of 0.71. The probable space group is P2 sub 1/m.

  8. Expression, purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic study of isolated modules of the mouse coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Troffer-Charlier, Nathalie; Cura, Vincent; Hassenboehler, Pierre

    2007-04-01

    Isolated modules of mouse coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1 encompassing the protein arginine N-methyltransferase catalytic domain have been overexpressed, purified and crystallized. X-ray diffraction data have been collected and have enabled determination of the structures by multiple isomorphous replacement using anomalous scattering. Coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1 (CARM1) plays a crucial role in gene expression as a coactivator of several nuclear hormone receptors and also of non-nuclear receptor systems. Its recruitment by the transcriptional machinery induces protein methylation, leading to chromatin remodelling and gene activation. CARM1{sub 28–507} and two structural states of CARM1{sub 140–480} were expressed, purified and crystallized. Crystals of CARM1{submore » 28–507} belong to space group P6{sub 2}22, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 136.0, c = 125.3 Å; they diffract to beyond 2.5 Å resolution using synchrotron radiation and contain one monomer in the asymmetric unit. The structure of CARM1{sub 28–507} was solved by multiple isomorphous replacement and anomalous scattering methods. Crystals of apo CARM1{sub 140–480} belong to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 74.6, b = 99.0, c = 207.4 Å; they diffract to beyond 2.7 Å resolution and contain two monomers in the asymmetric unit. Crystals of CARM1{sub 140–480} in complex with S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine belong to space P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2, with unit-cell parameters a = 74.6, b = 98.65, c = 206.08 Å; they diffract to beyond 2.6 Å resolution and contain four monomers in the asymmetric unit. The structures of apo and holo CARM1{sub 140–480} were solved by molecular-replacement techniques from the structure of CARM1{sub 28–507}.« less

  9. Synthesis and structural study of N-isopropenylbenzimidazolone

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mondieig, D.; Negrier, Ph.; Leger, J. M.; Lakhrissi, L.; El Assyry, A.; Lakhrissi, B.; Essassi, E. M.; Benali, B.; Boucetta, A.

    2015-05-01

    The synthesis and the crystal structure of the N-isopropenylbenzimidazolone (C10H10N2O) are presented. The synthesis was performed by Meth-Cohen method by reaction of o-phenylenediamine with ethyl acetoacetate in refluxed xylene. The single crystal structure was determined at room temperature by means of X-rays diffraction. The crystal system is monoclinic, with space group C2/c and eight molecules per unit cell. The unit cell dimensions are: a = 15.978(1) Å, b = 6.100(2) Å, c = 18.222(2) Å, β = 90.16(1)° and V = 1776.0(6) Å3.

  10. Macromolecular Crystallization in Microfluidics for the International Space Station

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Monaco, Lisa A.; Spearing, Scott

    2003-01-01

    At NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, the Iterative Biological Crystallization (IBC) project has begun development on scientific hardware for macromolecular crystallization on the International Space Station (ISS). Currently ISS crystallization research is limited to solution recipes that were prepared on the ground prior to launch. The proposed hardware will conduct solution mixing and dispensing on board the ISS, be fully automated, and have imaging functions via remote commanding from the ground. Utilizing microfluidic technology, IBC will allow for on orbit iterations. The microfluidics LabChip(R) devices that have been developed, along with Caliper Technologies, will greatly benefit researchers by allowing for precise fluid handling of nano/pico liter sized volumes. IBC will maximize the amount of science return by utilizing the microfluidic approach and be a valuable tool to structural biologists investigating medically relevant projects.

  11. Synthesis, structural, thermal and Hirshfeld surface analysis of novel [1,2,4]triazolo[3,4-b][1,3,4] thiadiazine carrying 1,4-benzothiazine-3-one moiety

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shruthi, C.; Ravindrachary, V.; Guruswamy, B.; Lokanath, N. K.; Kumara, Karthik; Goveas, Janet

    2018-05-01

    Needle shaped single crystal of the title compound was grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique using ethanol as solvent. The grown single crystal was characterized using FT-IR, Single crystal XRD and Thermal analysis. The FT-IR spectrum confirms the molecular structure and identifies the different functional groups present in the compound. Single crystal XRD study reveals that the crystallized compound belongs to the monoclinic crystal system with P21/c space group and the corresponding cell parameters were identified. The thermal stability of the material was determined using both TGA and DTA analysis. The intermolecular interaction of each individual atom in the crystal lattice was estimated using Hirshfeld surface and finger print analysis.

  12. Symmetrical polyhedra (simple crystal forms) as orbits of noncrystallographic point symmetry groups

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ovsetsina, T. I.; Chuprunov, E. V.

    2017-09-01

    Simple crystal forms are analyzed as the orbits of noncrystallographic point symmetry groups on a set of smooth or structured ("hatched") planes of crystal space. Polyhedra with symmetrically equivalent faces, obtained using noncrystallographic point symmetry groups, are considered. All possible versions of simple forms for all noncrystallographic groups are listed in a unified table.

  13. X-ray Crystallography Facility

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2000-01-01

    Edward Snell, a National Research Council research fellow at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), prepares a protein crystal for analysis by x-ray crystallography as part of NASA's structural biology program. The small, individual crystals are bombarded with x-rays to produce diffraction patterns, a map of the intensity of the x-rays as they reflect through the crystal.

  14. Real-space study of the optical absorption in alternative phases of silicon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ong, Chin Shen; Coh, Sinisa; Cohen, Marvin L.; Louie, Steven G.

    2017-12-01

    We introduce a real-space approach to understand the relationship between optical absorption and crystal structure. We apply this approach to alternative phases of silicon, with a focus on the Si20 crystal phase as a case study. We find that about 83% of the changes in the calculated low-energy absorption in Si20 as compared to Si in the diamond structure can be attributed to reducing the differences between the on-site energies of the bonding and antibonding orbitals as well as increasing the hopping integrals for specific Si-Si bonds.

  15. Na, K, Rb, and Cs Exchange in Heulandite Single-Crystals: X-Ray Structure Refinements at 100 K

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yang, Ping; Armbruster, Thomas

    1996-04-01

    The crystal structures of Na-, K-, Rb-, and Cs-exchanged varieties of the zeolite heulandite with the simplified compositionM+9Al9Si27O72·nH2O were studied by single-crystal X-ray diffraction at 100 K. The structure refinements of Na-, K-, and Rb-exchanged heulandite were performed in space groupC2/mwith resultantRvalues of 3.8, 3.0, and 4.9%, respectively. Cs-exchanged heulandite was refined in space groupC[formula], yielding anRvalue of 3.4%. X-ray single-crystal data of the Cs-exchanged variety indicated that many reflections of typeh k lwere not equivalent toh -k las expected for monoclinic symmetry. With increasing radius of the incorporated channel cations, thebaxis increases from 17.93 to 18.09 Å leading to a slight widening of the channels. The number of H2O molecules also decreases with increasing cation radius due to space limitations. Three general cation positions (II-1,C3, andB4) were found in the four exchanged heulandite samples. For Rb- and Cs-exchanged crystals, the additional cation siteA2 occurs. In Cs-exchanged heulandite symmetry lowering is due to partial Si, Al ordering in the framework accompanied with a more asymmetric arrangement of channel Cs. Only if heavy elements in the channels are present the symmetry information of the framework is enforced, thus partial Si, Al ordering can be resolved.

  16. Coupling of free space sub-terahertz waves into dielectric slabs using PC waveguides.

    PubMed

    Ghattan, Z; Hasek, T; Shahabadi, M; Koch, M

    2008-04-28

    The paper presents theoretical and experimental results on photonic crystal structures which work under the self-collimation condition to couple free space waves into dielectric slabs in the sub-terahertz range. Using a standard machining process, two-dimensional photonic crystal structures consisting of a square array of air holes in the dielectric medium are fabricated. One of the structures has two adjacent parallel line-defects that improve the coupling efficiency. This leads to a combination of self-collimation and directional emission of electromagnetic waves. The experimental results are in good agreement with those of the Finite- Element-Method calculations. Experimentally we achieve a coupling efficiency of 63%.

  17. Hydrothermal synthesis and crystal structure of alkaline earth metal (Mg, Ca) based on 2,5-Dimethylbenzene-1,4-diylbis(methylene) diphosphonic acid

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xie, Y. C.; Cheng, Q. R.; Pan, Z. Q.

    2018-02-01

    New magnesium phosphonates Mg(H2L)31 (H4L = 2,5-dimethylbenzene-1,4 -diylbis(methylene)diphosphonic acid) and Ca(H2L)·2H2O 2 have been hydrothermally synthesized from H4L and the corresponding metal salts. Complex 1 and 2 have been characterized by IR, powder and single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods. Complex 1 crystallizes in trigonal space group R-3c and complex 2 belongs to the triclinic space group. The complexes both form two-dimensional (2D) network structure and show three-dimensional (3D) network through hydrogen bonds. Thermal stability of complex 1 and 2 have also been investigated. CCDC: 1534599 for 1; 1536423 for 2.

  18. Room temperature syntheses, crystal structures and properties of two new heterometallic polymers based on 3-ethoxy-2-hydroxybenzaldehyde ligand

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhang, Shu-Hua, E-mail: zsh720108@163.com; Zhao, Ru-Xiao; Li, Gui

    Two new heterometallic coordination polymers [ZnNa(ehbd){sub 2}(N{sub 3})]{sub n} (1) and [Cu{sub 3}Na{sub 2}(ehbd){sub 2}(N{sub 3}){sub 6}]{sub n} (2) (Hehbd is 3-ethoxy-2-hydroxybenzaldehyde) have been synthesized under room temperature and structurally characterized by elemental analysis, IR, UV, TG and single crystal X-ray diffraction. Complex 1 crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pbca, showing a one-dimensional (1-D) chain. Complex 2 crystallizes in the triclinic space group Pī, constructing a heterometallic 2D layer structure. Luminescent properties and magnetic properties have been studied for 1 and 2, respectively and the fluorescence quantum yield of 1 is 0.077. - Highlights: • Two novel complexes 1more » and 2 have been synthesized. • Complex 1 represents a novel qualitative change of luminescence property. • Complex 2 displays ferromagnetic interaction through symmetric μ{sub 1,1}–N{sub 3} bridges. • Complex 2 displays anti-ferromagnetic interaction through asymmetric μ{sub 1,1}–N{sub 3} bridges.« less

  19. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Aoki, Ken-ichi; Tanaka, Nobutada, E-mail: ntanaka@pharm.showa-u.ac.jp; Ishikura, Shuhei

    Pig heart carbonyl reductase has been crystallized in the presence of NADPH. Diffraction data have been collected using synchrotron radiation. Pig heart carbonyl reductase (PHCR), which belongs to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family, has been crystallized by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. Two crystal forms (I and II) have been obtained in the presence of NADPH. Form I crystals belong to the tetragonal space group P4{sub 2}, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 109.61, c = 94.31 Å, and diffract to 1.5 Å resolution. Form II crystals belong to the tetragonal space group P4{sub 1}2{sub 1}2, with unit-cell parameters amore » = b = 120.10, c = 147.00 Å, and diffract to 2.2 Å resolution. Both crystal forms are suitable for X-ray structure analysis at high resolution.« less

  20. Crystal structure and vibrational spectra of piperazinium bis(4-hydroxybenzenesulphonate) molecular-ionic crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Marchewka, M. K.; Pietraszko, A.

    2008-02-01

    The piperazinium bis(4-hydroxybenzenesulphonate) crystallizes from water solution at room temperature in P2 1/ c space group of monoclinic system. The crystals are built up of doubly protonated piperazinium cations and ionized 4-hydroxybenzenesulphonate anions that interact through weak hydrogen bonds of O-H⋯O and N-H⋯O type. Mutual orientation of anions is determined by non-conventional hydrogen bonds of C-H⋯π type. Room temperature powder FT IR and FT Raman measurements were carried out. The vibrational spectra are in full agreement with the structure obtained from X-ray crystallography. The big single crystals of the title salt can be grown.

  1. Crystal Structure Predictions Using Adaptive Genetic Algorithm and Motif Search methods

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ho, K. M.; Wang, C. Z.; Zhao, X.; Wu, S.; Lyu, X.; Zhu, Z.; Nguyen, M. C.; Umemoto, K.; Wentzcovitch, R. M. M.

    2017-12-01

    Material informatics is a new initiative which has attracted a lot of attention in recent scientific research. The basic strategy is to construct comprehensive data sets and use machine learning to solve a wide variety of problems in material design and discovery. In pursuit of this goal, a key element is the quality and completeness of the databases used. Recent advance in the development of crystal structure prediction algorithms has made it a complementary and more efficient approach to explore the structure/phase space in materials using computers. In this talk, we discuss the importance of the structural motifs and motif-networks in crystal structure predictions. Correspondingly, powerful methods are developed to improve the sampling of the low-energy structure landscape.

  2. Photonic crystal surface-emitting lasers

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Chua, Song Liang; Lu, Ling; Soljacic, Marin

    2015-06-23

    A photonic-crystal surface-emitting laser (PCSEL) includes a gain medium electromagnetically coupled to a photonic crystal whose energy band structure exhibits a Dirac cone of linear dispersion at the center of the photonic crystal's Brillouin zone. This Dirac cone's vertex is called a Dirac point; because it is at the Brillouin zone center, it is called an accidental Dirac point. Tuning the photonic crystal's band structure (e.g., by changing the photonic crystal's dimensions or refractive index) to exhibit an accidental Dirac point increases the photonic crystal's mode spacing by orders of magnitudes and reduces or eliminates the photonic crystal's distributed in-planemore » feedback. Thus, the photonic crystal can act as a resonator that supports single-mode output from the PCSEL over a larger area than is possible with conventional PCSELs, which have quadratic band edge dispersion. Because output power generally scales with output area, this increase in output area results in higher possible output powers.« less

  3. Effects of Convective Transport of Solute and Impurities on Defect-Causing Kinetics Instabilities in Protein Crystallization

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Vekilov, Peter G.

    2003-01-01

    Insight into the crystallization processes of biological macromolecules into crystals or aggregates can provide valuable guidelines in many fundamental and applied fields. Such insight will prompt new means to regulate protein phase transitions in-vivo, e.g., polymerization of hemoglobin S in the red cells, crystallization of crystallins in the eye lens, etc. Understanding of protein crystal nucleation will help achieve narrow crystallite size distributions, needed for sustained release of pharmaceutical protein preparations such as insulin or interferon. Traditionally, protein crystallization studies have been related to the pursuit of crystal perfection needed to improve the structure details provided by x-ray, electron or neutron diffraction methods. Crystallization trials for the purposes of structural biology carried out in space have posed an intriguing question related to the inconsistency of the effects of the microgravity growth on the quality of the crystals.

  4. Crystal structure and crystal growth of the polar ferrimagnet CaBaFe4O7

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Perry, R. S.; Kurebayashi, H.; Gibbs, A.; Gutmann, M. J.

    2018-05-01

    Magnetic materials are a cornerstone for developing spintronic devices for the transport of information via magnetic excitations. To date, relatively few materials have been investigated for the purpose of spin transport, mostly due to the paucity of suitable candidates as these materials are often chemically complex and difficult to synthesize. We present the crystal growth and a structure solution on the high-temperature crystal structure of the layered, polar ferrimagnet CaBaFe4O7 , which is a possible new contender for spintronics research. The space group is identified as P 3 by refinement of single crystal and powder neutron diffraction data. At 400 K, the trigonal lattice parameters are a =11.0114 (11 )Å and c =10.330 (3 )Å . The structure is similar to the low-temperature phase with alternating layers of triangular and Kagome-arranged Fe-O tetrahedra. We also present details of the crystal growth by traveling solvent method.

  5. Crystal structure, spectral, thermal and dielectric studies of a new zinc benzoate single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bijini, B. R.; Prasanna, S.; Deepa, M.; Nair, C. M. K.; Rajendra Babu, K.

    2012-11-01

    Single crystals of zinc benzoate with a novel structure were grown in gel media. Sodium metasilicate of gel density 1.04 g/cc at pH 6 was employed to yield transparent single crystals. The crystal structure of the compound was ascertained by single crystal X-ray diffractometry. It was noted that the crystal belongs to monoclinic system with space group P21/c with unit cell parameters a = 10.669(1) Å, b = 12.995(5) Å, c = 19.119(3) Å, and β = 94.926(3)°. The crystal was seen to possess a linear polymeric structure along b-axis; with no presence of coordinated or lattice water. CHN analysis established the stoichiometric composition of the crystal. The existence of functional groups present in the single crystal system was confirmed by FT-IR studies. The thermal characteristic of the sample was analysed by TGA-DTA techniques, and the sample was found to be thermally stable up to 280 °C. The kinetic and thermodynamic parameters were also determined. UV-Vis spectroscopy corroborated the transparency of the crystal and revealed the optical band gap to be 4 eV. Dielectric studies showed decrease in the dielectric constant of the sample with increase in frequency.

  6. Role of substrate quality on IC performance and yields

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Thomas, R. N.

    1981-01-01

    The development of silicon and gallium arsenide crystal growth for the production of large diameter substrates are discussed. Large area substrates of significantly improved compositional purity, dopant distribution and structural perfection on a microscopic as well as macroscopic scale are important requirements. The exploratory use of magnetic fields to suppress convection effects in Czochralski crystal growth is addressed. The growth of large crystals in space appears impractical at present however the efforts to improve substrate quality could benefit from the experiences gained in smaller scale growth experiments conducted in the zero gravity environment of space.

  7. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2001-01-24

    Experiments with colloidal solutions of plastic microspheres suspended in a liquid serve as models of how molecules interact and form crystals. For the Dynamics of Colloidal Disorder-Order Transition (CDOT) experiment, Paul Chaikin of Princeton University has identified effects that are attributable to Earth's gravity and demonstrated that experiments are needed in the microgravity of orbit. Space experiments have produced unexpected dendritic (snowflake-like) structures. To date, the largest hard sphere crystal grown is a 3 mm single crystal grown at the cool end of a ground sample. At least two more additional flight experiments are plarned aboard the International Space Station. This image is from a video downlink.

  8. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of two extracytoplasmic solute receptors of the DctP family from Bordetella pertussis

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Rucktooa, Prakash; Huvent, Isabelle; IFR 142, Institut Pasteur de Lille, 1 Rue du Professeur Calmette, BP 245, 59021 Lille CEDEX

    2006-10-01

    Sample preparation, crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis are reported for two B. pertussis extracytoplasmic solute receptors. DctP6 and DctP7 are two Bordetella pertussis proteins which belong to the extracytoplasmic solute receptors (ESR) superfamily. ESRs are involved in the transport of substrates from the periplasm to the cytosol of Gram-negative bacteria. DctP6 and DctP7 have been crystallized and diffraction data were collected using a synchrotron-radiation source. DctP6 crystallized in space group P4{sub 1}2{sub 1}2, with unit-cell parameters a = 108.39, b = 108.39, c = 63.09 Å, while selenomethionyl-derivatized DctP7 crystallized in space group P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2{sub 1}, with unit-cell parametersmore » a = 64.87, b = 149.83, c = 170.65 Å. The three-dimensional structure of DctP7 will be determined by single-wavelength anomalous diffraction, while the DctP6 structure will be solved by molecular-replacement methods.« less

  9. Crystal structures, in-silico study and anti-microbial potential of synthetic monocarbonyl curcuminoids

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ud Din, Zia; Serrano, N. F. G.; Ademi, Kastriot; Sousa, C. P.; Deflon, Victor Marcelo; Maia, Pedro Ivo da Silva; Rodrigues-Filho, Edson

    2017-09-01

    In this work the screening of 20 unsymmetrical chalcone and curcuminoids analogues in regard of their antimicrobial properties was conducted. Electron donating groups in the aromatic rings in the chalcone and curcuminoid derivatives produced higher antimicrobial effect. Compounds 1, 9 and 15 exhibited good activity against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. These compounds were further evaluated against nine micro-organisms of pathological interest. Pharmmaper was used for target fishing of compounds against important bacterial targets. Molecular Docking helped to verify the results of these compounds against the selected bacterial target D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase (PDB ID: 1PW1). The crystal structure of ligand and docked conformers in the active site of 1PW1 were analyzed. As a result structure-activity relationships are proposed. Structures of compounds 14 and 16 were obtained through single crystals X-ray diffraction studies. Compound 14 crystallizes in monoclinic space group P21/c with unit cell dimensions a = 13.1293(3) Å, b = 17.5364(4) Å, c = 15.1433(3) Å, β = 95.6440(10), V = 3469.70(13) Å3 and Z = 8. Compound 16 crystallizes in triclinic space group Pī with unit cell dimensions a = 6.8226(4) Å, b = 7.2256(4) Å, c = 18.1235(12) Å, β = 87.322(4), V = 850.57(9) Å3 and Z = 2.

  10. Crystal Growth and Optical Properties of Co2+ Doped SrLaGa3O7

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-01-01

    Electron Spin Resonance, absorption spectra, gallate crystals, thermal annealing. 1. INTRODUCTION SrLaGa307 (SLGO) belongs to the family of binary... gallates of alkaline and rare earth metals. Crystal of these compounds have the tetragonal gehlenite (Ca 2AS12SiO 7) structure (space group: P-421ml, D 3 2d

  11. Multiscale real-space quantum-mechanical tight-binding calculations of electronic structure in crystals with defects using perfectly matched layers

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Pourmatin, Hossein, E-mail: mpourmat@andrew.cmu.edu; Dayal, Kaushik, E-mail: kaushik@cmu.edu

    2016-10-15

    Graphical abstract: - Abstract: We consider the scattering of incident plane-wave electrons from a defect in a crystal modeled by the time-harmonic Schrödinger equation. While the defect potential is localized, the far-field potential is periodic, unlike standard free-space scattering problems. Previous work on the Schrödinger equation has been almost entirely in free-space conditions; a few works on crystals have been in one-dimension. We construct absorbing boundary conditions for this problem using perfectly matched layers in a tight-binding formulation. Using the example of a point defect in graphene, we examine the efficiency and convergence of the proposed absorbing boundary condition.

  12. Probing periodic potential of crystals via strong-field re-scattering

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    You, Yong Sing; Cunningham, Eric; Reis, David A.; Ghimire, Shambhu

    2018-06-01

    Strong-field ionization and re-scattering phenomena have been used to image angstrom-scale structures of isolated molecules in the gas phase. These methods typically make use of the anisotropic response of the participating molecular orbital. Recently, an anisotropic strong-field response has also been observed in high-order harmonic generation (HHG) from bulk crystals (2016 Nat. Phys. 13 345). In a (100) cut magnesium oxide crystal, extreme ultraviolet high-harmonics are found to depend strongly on the crystal structure and inter-atomic bonding. Here, we extend these measurements to other two important crystal orientations: (111) and (110). We find that HHG from these orientations is also strongly anisotropic. The underlying dynamics is understood using a real-space picture, where high-harmonics are produced via coherent collision of strong-field driven electrons from the atomic sites, including from the nearest neighbor atoms. We find that harmonic efficiency is enhanced when semi-classical electron trajectories connect to the concentrated valence charge distribution regions around the atomic cores. Similarly, the efficiency is suppressed when the trajectories miss the atomic cores. These results further support the real-space picture of HHG with implications for retrieving the periodic potential of the crystal, if not the wavefunctions in three-dimensions.

  13. Crystallographic and magnetic structure of the novel compound ErGe 1.83

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Oleksyn, O.; Schobinger-Papamantellos, P.; Ritter, C.; de Groot, C. H.; Buschow, K. H. J.

    1997-02-01

    The crystal structure and the magnetic ordering of the novel orthorhombic compound ErGe 2-x has been studied by neutron powder diffraction and magnetic measurements. The crystal structure belongs to the DyGe 1.85-type (space group Cmc2 1)·ErGe 2-x ( x = 0.17 (2)) orders antiferromagnetically below TN = 6 K and displays a metamagnetic behaviour. The magnetic cell has the same size as the chemical unit cell ( q = 0 ). The magnetic space group is Cmc2 1 (Sh 36173). At T = 1.5 K the magnetic moments of the two erbium sites have the same ordered magnetic moment values of 7.63 (6) μB/Er and are antiferromagnetically coupled leading to an uniaxial structure along the a direction.

  14. Automatic high-throughput screening of colloidal crystals using machine learning

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Spellings, Matthew; Glotzer, Sharon C.

    Recent improvements in hardware and software have united to pose an interesting problem for computational scientists studying self-assembly of particles into crystal structures: while studies covering large swathes of parameter space can be dispatched at once using modern supercomputers and parallel architectures, identifying the different regions of a phase diagram is often a serial task completed by hand. While analytic methods exist to distinguish some simple structures, they can be difficult to apply, and automatic identification of more complex structures is still lacking. In this talk we describe one method to create numerical ``fingerprints'' of local order and use them to analyze a study of complex ordered structures. We can use these methods as first steps toward automatic exploration of parameter space and, more broadly, the strategic design of new materials.

  15. Synthesis, crystal structure and luminescent properties of a new pyrochlore type tungstate CsGa0.333W1.667O6

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Dan; Zhao, Ji; Fan, Yun-Chang; Ma, Zhao; Zhang, Rui-Juan; Liu, Bao-Zhong

    2018-06-01

    High temperature solution reaction leads to a new tungstate compound CsGa0.333W1.667O6, whose structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The results show that it crystallizes in pyrochlore structure with cubic space group Fd-3m and a = 10.2529 (13) Å. In this structure, Ga and W atoms are in a statistical disorder manner. The self-activated luminescent properties CsGa0.333W1.667O6 were studied. Under the excitation of 323 nm, the emission spectrum exhibits a blue emission centered at 466 nm with the chromaticity coordinates (0.1838, 0.1814).

  16. Evaluation of structural vacancies for 1/1-Al-Re-Si approximant crystals by positron annihilation spectroscopy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yamada, K.; Suzuki, H.; Kitahata, H.; Matsushita, Y.; Nozawa, K.; Komori, F.; Yu, R. S.; Kobayashi, Y.; Ohdaira, T.; Oshima, N.; Suzuki, R.; Takagiwa, Y.; Kimura, K.; Kanazawa, I.

    2018-01-01

    The size of structural vacancies and structural vacancy density of 1/1-Al-Re-Si approximant crystals with different Re compositions were evaluated by positron annihilation lifetime and Doppler broadening measurements. Incident positrons were found to be trapped at the monovacancy-size open space surrounded by Al atoms. From a previous analysis using the maximum entropy method and Rietveld method, such an open space is shown to correspond to the centre of Al icosahedral clusters, which locates at the vertex and body centre. The structural vacancy density of non-metallic Al73Re17Si10 was larger than that of metallic Al73Re15Si12. The observed difference in the structural vacancy density reflects that in bonding nature and may explain that in the physical properties of the two samples.

  17. Structure and high-pressure behavior of 2,5-di-(4-aminophenyl)-1,3,4-oxadiazole

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Franco, Olga; Orgzall, Ingo; Reck, Günter; Stockhause, Sabine; Schulz, Burkhard

    2005-06-01

    The crystalline structures of two modifications of a compound containing the oxadiazole ring, 2,5-di-(4-aminophenyl)-1,3,4-oxadiazole (DAPO) were determined. One of these modifications contains water molecules in the crystal structure, which is observed for the first time for an oxadiazole crystal. Both crystals show an orthorhombic structure. The water free modification, DAPO I, belongs to the space group Pbca (61) and has the lattice parameters: a=13.461(5), b=7.937(3) and c=22.816(8) Å (CCDC 246608). The water containing pseudo-polymorph, DAPO II, has the space group Cmcm (63) and the lattice parameters: a=16.330(5), b=12.307(2) and c=6.9978(14) Å (CCDC 246609). To gain information on the inter molecular interactions within the crystals, X-ray experiments under compression at ambient temperature and under heating at vacuum conditions were performed. Neither DAPO I nor DAPO II undergo phase transitions in the ressure range up to 5 GPa, as could be concluded from X-ray and Raman experiments. X-ray and calorimetric studies indicate that DAPO II dehydrates into DAPO I under increasing temperature. Structural considerations suggest a two-stage process. The compression behavior of both substances is well described by the Murnaghan equation of state (MEOS) and the values of the bulk modulus and its pressure derivative are determined for these crystals. Additionally, in the case of DAPO I, also the thermal expansion coefficient α0 was measured.

  18. The Crystal and Molecular Structure of Acetatochlorobis(4-methylpyridine)oxovanadium (IV)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Schupp, John D.; Hepp, Aloysius F.; Duraj, Stan A.; Richman, Robert M.; Fanwick, Phillip E.; Hakimzadeh, Roshanak (Technical Monitor)

    2001-01-01

    The crystal and molecular structure of the title compound, VOCl(O2CCH3)(4-CH3C5H4N)2, has been determined by single-crystal x-ray diffraction. The material crystallizes in the space group P 1(bar) (#2) with a = 7.822(2), b = 8.023(l), c = 14.841(2) Angstroms, alpha = 99.73(l), beta = 91.41(l), and gamma = 117.13(l). The coordination geometry around the vanadium is a highly distorted octahedron. The molecule is remarkable for being a monomeric oxovanadium (IV) carboxylate. A generalized synthetic strategy is proposed for the preparation of oxovanadium (IV) monomers.

  19. Growth and structure of a new photonic crystal: Chlorine substituted chalcone

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sarveshwara, H. P.; Raghavendra, S.; A, Jayarama; Menezes, Anthoni Praveen; Dharmaprakash, S. M.

    2015-06-01

    A new organic photonic material 3-(2, 4-dichlorophenyl)-1-(2,5-dimethylthiophen-3-yl)propan-1-one(DMTP) has been synthesized and crystallised in acetone solution. The functional groups present in the new material were identified by FTIR spectroscopy. The material is optically transparent in the wavelength range of 400-1100 nm. The crystal structure of DMTP was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The title compound crystallizes in monoclinic system with a centrosymmetric space group P21/c. The Z-scan study revealed that the optical limiting property exhibited by the DMTP molecule is based on the reverse saturable absorption phenomena.

  20. Emission behaviors of unsymmetrical 1,3-diaryl-β-diketones: A model perfectly disclosing the effect of molecular conformation on luminescence of organic solids

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cheng, Xiao; Li, Feng; Han, Shenghua; Zhang, Yufei; Jiao, Chuanjun; Wei, Jinbei; Ye, Kaiqi; Wang, Yue; Zhang, Hongyu

    2015-03-01

    A series of unsymmetrical 1,3-diaryl-β-diketones 1-6 displaying molecular conformation-dependent fluorescence quantum yields have been synthesized. Crystals with planar molecular conformation such as 1, 2, 3 and 4 are highly fluorescent (φf: 39-53%), and the one holding slightly twisted conformation (5) is moderately luminescent (φf = 17%), while crystal 6 possessing heavily bent structure is completely nonluminous (φf ~ 0). The distinct fluorescence efficiencies are ascribed to their different molecular conformations, since all the crystals hold the same crystal system, space group and crystal packing structures. Additionally, the fluorescent crystals 1-5 display low threshold amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) with small full widths at half-maximum (FWHM: 3-7 nm), indicating their potential as candidates for organic crystal lasing devices.

  1. Protein crystal growth in microgravity: Temperature induced large scale crystallization of insulin

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Long, Marianna M.; Delucas, Larry J.; Smith, C.; Carson, M.; Moore, K.; Harrington, Michael D.; Pillion, D. J.; Bishop, S. P.; Rosenblum, W. M.; Naumann, R. J.

    1994-01-01

    One of the major stumbling blocks that prevents rapid structure determination using x-ray crystallography is macro-molecular crystal growth. There are many examples where crystallization takes longer than structure determination. In some cases, it is impossible to grow useful crystals on earth. Recent experiments conducted in conjuction with NASA on various Space Shuttle missions have demonstrated that protein crystals often grow larger and display better internal molecular order than their earth-grown counterparts. This paper reports results from three Shuttle flights using the Protein Crystallization Facility (PCF). The PCF hardware produced large, high-quality insulin crystals by using a temperature change as the sole means to affect protein solubility and thus, crystallization. The facility consists of cylinders/containers with volumes of 500, 200, 100, and 50 ml. Data from the three Shuttle flights demonstrated that larger, higher resolution crystals (as evidenced by x-ray diffraction data) were obtained from the microgravity experiments when compared to earth-grown crystals.

  2. Synthesis, structural characterization, and thermal stability studies of heteroleptic cadmium(II) dithiocarbamate with different pyridyl groups

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Onwudiwe, Damian C.; Hosten, Eric C.

    2018-01-01

    The synthesis, characterization and crystal structures of three chloroform solvated adducts of cadmium with mixed ligands of N-alkyl-N-phenyldithiocarbamate and pyridine, 2,2-bipyridine and 1, 10 phenanthroline represented as [CdL1L2 (py)2]·CHCl3(1), [CdL1L2bpy]•CHCl3(2), and [CdL1L2phen]•CHCl3(3) (LI = N-methyl-N-phenyldithiocarbamate, L2 = N-ethyl-N-phenyldithiocarbamate, py = pyridine, bpy = 2,2-bipyridine and phen = 1,10-phenanthroline) respectively are reported. Complex 1, which crystallized in the monoclinic space group P-1, is a centrosymmetric dimeric structure where each Cd center is bonded to two monodentate pyridine, a bidentate terminal dithiocarbamate, and another bidentate bridging dithiocarbamate to form a four-membered ring. Complex 2 crystallized in the monoclinic space group P21/c, with four discrete monomeric molecules in the asymmetric unit. The structure presents a cadmium atom coordinated by two sulphur atoms of a dithiocarbamate ligand and two nitrogen atoms of the 2,2‧-bipyridine to form a CdS4N2 fragment, thus giving the structure around the Cd atom a distorted trigonal prism geometry. Complex 3 contains two discrete monomeric molecules of (phenanthroline) (N, N-methyl phenyl-N, N-ethyl phenyl dithiocarbamato)cadmium (II) per unit cell, and the complex crystallized in the triclinic space group P-1. The structure showed that the Cd atom is bonded to two bidentate dithiocarbamate ligands and to one bidentate phenanthroline ligand in a distorted trigonal prism geometry. All the compounds resulted in CdS as residue upon thermal decomposition process conducted under inert atmosphere.

  3. Synthesis, crystal structure and electronic structure of the binary phase Rh2Cd5

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Koley, Biplab; Chatterjee, S.; Jana, Partha P.

    2017-02-01

    A new phase in the Rh-Cd binary system - Rh2Cd5 has been identified and characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction and Energy dispersive X-ray analysis. The stoichiometric compound Rh2Cd5 crystallizes with a unit cell containing 14 atoms, in the orthorhombic space group Pbam (55). The crystal structure of Rh2Cd5 can be described as a defect form of the In3Pd5 structure with ordered vacancies, formed of two 2D atomic layers with the stacking sequence: ABAB. The A type layers consist of (3.6.3.6)-Kagomé nets of Cd atoms while the B type layers consist of (35) (37)- nets of both Cd and Rh atoms. The stability of this line phase is investigated by first principle electronic structure calculations on the model of ordered Rh2Cd5.

  4. Protein Crystal Malic Enzyme

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1992-01-01

    Malic Enzyme is a target protein for drug design because it is a key protein in the life cycle of intestinal parasites. After 2 years of effort on Earth, investigators were unable to produce any crystals that were of high enough quality and for this reason the structure of this important protein could not be determined. Crystals obtained from one STS-50 were of superior quality allowing the structure to be determined. This is just one example why access to space is so vital for these studies. Principal Investigator is Larry DeLucas.

  5. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of the wild-type haloalkane dehalogenase DhaA and its variant DhaA13 complexed with different ligands.

    PubMed

    Stsiapanava, Alena; Chaloupkova, Radka; Fortova, Andrea; Brynda, Jiri; Weiss, Manfred S; Damborsky, Jiri; Smatanova, Ivana Kuta

    2011-02-01

    Haloalkane dehalogenases make up an important class of hydrolytic enzymes which catalyse the cleavage of carbon-halogen bonds in halogenated aliphatic compounds. There is growing interest in these enzymes owing to their potential use in environmental and industrial applications. The haloalkane dehalogenase DhaA from Rhodococcus rhodochrous NCIMB 13064 can slowly detoxify the industrial pollutant 1,2,3-trichloropropane (TCP). Structural analysis of this enzyme complexed with target ligands was conducted in order to obtain detailed information about the structural limitations of its catalytic properties. In this study, the crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of complexes of wild-type DhaA with 2-propanol and with TCP and of complexes of the catalytically inactive variant DhaA13 with the dye coumarin and with TCP are described. The crystals of wild-type DhaA were plate-shaped and belonged to the triclinic space group P1, while the variant DhaA13 can form prism-shaped crystals belonging to the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1) as well as plate-shaped crystals belonging to the triclinic space group P1. Diffraction data for crystals of wild-type DhaA grown from crystallization solutions with different concentrations of 2-propanol were collected to 1.70 and 1.26 Å resolution, respectively. A prism-shaped crystal of DhaA13 complexed with TCP and a plate-shaped crystal of the same variant complexed with the dye coumarin diffracted X-rays to 1.60 and 1.33 Å resolution, respectively. A crystal of wild-type DhaA and a plate-shaped crystal of DhaA13, both complexed with TCP, diffracted to atomic resolutions of 1.04 and 0.97 Å, respectively.

  6. Expression, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of RNA-binding protein Hfq (YmaH) from Bacillus subtilis in complex with an RNA aptamer

    PubMed Central

    Baba, Seiki; Someya, Tatsuhiko; Kawai, Gota; Nakamura, Kouji; Kumasaka, Takashi

    2010-01-01

    The Hfq protein is a hexameric RNA-binding protein which regulates gene expression by binding to RNA under the influence of diverse environmental stresses. Its ring structure binds various types of RNA, including mRNA and sRNA. RNA-bound structures of Hfq from Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus have been revealed to have poly(A) RNA at the distal site and U-rich RNA at the proximal site, respectively. Here, crystals of a complex of the Bacillus subtilis Hfq protein with an A/G-repeat 7-mer RNA (Hfq–RNA) that were prepared using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion technique are reported. The type 1 Hfq–RNA crystals belonged to space group I422, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 123.70, c = 119.13 Å, while the type 2 Hfq–RNA crystals belonged to space group F222, with unit-cell parameters a = 91.92, b = 92.50, c = 114.92 Å. Diffraction data were collected to a resolution of 2.20 Å from both crystal forms. The hexameric structure of the Hfq protein was clearly shown by self-rotation analysis. PMID:20445260

  7. Band structure analysis of leaky Bloch waves in 2D phononic crystal plates.

    PubMed

    Mazzotti, Matteo; Miniaci, Marco; Bartoli, Ivan

    2017-02-01

    A hybrid Finite Element-Plane Wave Expansion method is presented for the band structure analysis of phononic crystal plates with two dimensional lattice that are in contact with acoustic half-spaces. The method enables the computation of both real (propagative) and imaginary (attenuation) components of the Bloch wavenumber at any given frequency. Three numerical applications are presented: a benchmark dispersion analysis for an oil-loaded Titanium isotropic plate, the band structure analysis of a water-loaded Tungsten slab with square cylindrical cavities and a phononic crystal plate composed of Aurum cylinders embedded in an epoxy matrix. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  8. Integration of neutron time-of-flight single-crystal Bragg peaks in reciprocal space

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Schultz, Arthur J; Joergensen, Mads; Wang, Xiaoping

    2014-01-01

    The intensity of single crystal Bragg peaks obtained by mapping neutron time-of-flight event data into reciprocal space and integrating in various ways are compared. These include spherical integration with a fixed radius, ellipsoid fitting and integrating of the peak intensity and one-dimensional peak profile fitting. In comparison to intensities obtained by integrating in real detector histogram space, the data integrated in reciprocal space results in better agreement factors and more accurate atomic parameters. Furthermore, structure refinement using integrated intensities from one-dimensional profile fitting is demonstrated to be more accurate than simple peak-minus-background integration.

  9. Crystallized N-terminal domain of influenza virus matrix protein M1 and method of determining and using same

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Luo, Ming (Inventor); Sha, Bingdong (Inventor)

    2000-01-01

    The matrix protein, M1, of influenza virus strain A/PR/8/34 has been purified from virions and crystallized. The crystals consist of a stable fragment (18 Kd) of the M1 protein. X-ray diffraction studies indicated that the crystals have a space group of P3.sub.t 21 or P3.sub.2 21. Vm calculations showed that there are two monomers in an asymmetric unit. A crystallized N-terminal domain of M1, wherein the N-terminal domain of M1 is crystallized such that the three dimensional structure of the crystallized N-terminal domain of M1 can be determined to a resolution of about 2.1 .ANG. or better, and wherein the three dimensional structure of the uncrystallized N-terminal domain of M1 cannot be determined to a resolution of about 2.1 .ANG. or better. A method of purifying M1 and a method of crystallizing M1. A method of using the three-dimensional crystal structure of M1 to screen for antiviral, influenza virus treating or preventing compounds. A method of using the three-dimensional crystal structure of M1 to screen for improved binding to or inhibition of influenza virus M1. The use of the three-dimensional crystal structure of the M1 protein of influenza virus in the manufacture of an inhibitor of influenza virus M1. The use of the three-dimensional crystal structure of the M1 protein of influenza virus in the screening of candidates for inhibition of influenza virus M1.

  10. The Structure of Glycine Dihydrate: Implications for the Crystallization of Glycine from Solution and Its Structure in Outer Space

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Xu, Wenqian; Zhu, Qiang; Hu, Chunhua Tony

    2017-01-18

    Glycine, the simplest amino acid, is also the most polymorphous. Herein, we report the structure determination of an unknown phase of glycine which was firstly reported by Pyne and Suryanarayanan in 2001. To date, the new phase has only been prepared at 208 K as nanocrystals within ice. Through computational crystal structure prediction and powder X-ray diffraction methods, we identified this elusive phase as glycine dihydrate (GDH), representing a first report on a hydrated glycine structure. The structure of GDH has important implications for the state of glycine in aqueous solution, and the mechanisms of glycine crystallization. GDH may alsomore » be the form of glycine that comes to Earth from extraterrestrial sources.« less

  11. Synthesis of macroporous structures

    DOEpatents

    Stein, Andreas; Holland, Brian T.; Blanford, Christopher F.; Yan, Hongwei

    2004-01-20

    The present application discloses a method of forming an inorganic macroporous material. In some embodiments, the method includes: providing a sample of organic polymer particles having a particle size distribution of no greater than about 10%; forming a colloidal crystal template of the sample of organic polymer particles, the colloidal crystal template including a plurality of organic polymer particles and interstitial spaces therebetween; adding an inorganic precursor composition including a noncolloidal inorganic precursor to the colloidal crystal template such that the precursor composition permeates the interstitial spaces between the organic polymer particles; converting the noncolloidal inorganic precursor to a hardened inorganic framework; and removing the colloidal crystal template from the hardened inorganic framework to form a macroporous material. Inorganic macroporous materials are also disclosed.

  12. Studies on the syntheses, structural Characterization, antimicrobial of the CO-CRYSTAL 1,10-phenanthrolin-1-IUM(1,10-phenH+)-caffeine(caf)-hexafluorophosphate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    El Hamdani, H.; El Amane, M.; Duhayon, C.

    2018-03-01

    Co-crystal of 1,10-phenanthrolin-1-ium-caffeine-hexafluorophosphate was synthesized, studied by FTIR, 1H, 13C NMR, DSC and X-ray structure and crystallized in the monoclinic space group C2/c. The unit cell parameters are a = 19.3761 (3), b = 17.9548 (3), c = 13.8074 (3) with β = 117.8132 (10). The final R value is 0.069 for 29,522 measured reflections. The co-crystal structure analysis indicate the 1,10-phenanthroline is protonated by one nitrogen atom and formed the 1,10-phenanthrolin-1-ium cation, which is stabilized by hydrogen bonds N+-H…Odbnd C interaction with carbonyl and imidazol ring in caffeine molecule. The intermolecular hydrogen bonds: Csbnd H...O, Csbnd H...N, Nsbnd H...O, Csbnd H...F and intramolecular hydrogen bond: C1sbnd H12...O14, together play a vital role in stabilizing the structure of co-crystal. The X-ray structural analysis confirm the assignments of the structure from infrared, 1H, 13C NMR, spectroscopic data DSC and molar conductivity analysis. The antimicrobial activity of the co-crystal was studied.

  13. Structural phase transition of magnetic [Ni(dmit)2]- salts induced by supramolecular cation structures of (M+)([12]crown-4)2.

    PubMed

    Akutagawa, Tomoyuki; Motokizawa, Takeshi; Matsuura, Kazumasa; Nishihara, Sadafumi; Noro, Shin-ichiro; Nakamura, Takayoshi

    2006-03-30

    Sandwich-type supramolecular cation structures of (M(+))([12]crown-4)(2) complexes (M(+) = Li(+), Na(+), K(+), and Rb(+)) were introduced as countercations to the [Ni(dmit)(2)](-) anion, which bears an S = (1)/(2) spin, to form novel magnetic crystals (dmit(2-) = 2-thione-1,3-dithiole-4,5-dithiolate). The zigzag arrangement of Li(+)([12]crown-4)(2) cations in Li(+)([12]crown-4)(2)[Ni(dmit)(2)](-) salt induced weak intermolecular interactions of [Ni(dmit)(2)](-) dimers, whose magnetic spins were isolated from each other. The molecular arrangements of cations and anions in M(+)([12]crown-4)(2)[Ni(dmit)(2)](-) salts (M(+) = Na(+), K(+), and Rb(+)) were isostructural to each other. In the case of Na(+)([12]crown-4)(2)[Ni(dmit)(2)](-), the space group C2/m changed to C2/c with a lowering in temperature from 298 to 100 K. This structural change occurred at 222.5 K as a first-order phase transition. The space group C2/m (T = 298 K) in the salt K(+)([12]crown-4)(2)[Ni(dmit)(2)](-) also changed to C2/c (T = 100 K), which transition occurred at 270 K. Crystal structural analyses at 298 and 100 K revealed changes in both supramolecular cation conformation and [Ni(dmit)(2)](-) anion arrangements. The transition from C2/m to C2/c crystals generated a dipole moment in the Na(+)([12]crown-4)(2) and K(+)([12]crown-4)(2) structures, which were reconstructed to cancel the net dipole moment of the C2/c crystals. These cation transformations led to changes in intermolecular interactions between the [Ni(dmit)(2)](-) anions via structural rearrangements. The crystal structure of C2/c was stabilized in Rb(+)([12]crown-4)(2)[Ni(dmit)(2)](-) at 298 K. The [Ni(dmit)(2)](-) configuration in these salts with the C2/c space group was a one-dimensional uniform chain, which showed the temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility of a one-dimensional linear Heisenberg antiferromagnetic chain.

  14. Effect of the cation size on the framework structures of magnesium tungstate, A4Mg(WO4)3 (A = Na, K), R2Mg2(WO4)3 (R = Rb, Cs).

    PubMed

    Han, Shujuan; Wang, Ying; Jing, Qun; Wu, Hongping; Pan, Shilie; Yang, Zhihua

    2015-03-28

    A series of alkali metal magnesium tungstates, A4Mg(WO4)3 (A = Na, K), R2Mg2(WO4)3 (R = Rb, Cs), were synthesized from a high temperature solution, and their structures were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Interestingly, Na4Mg(WO4)3 crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/c, while K4Mg(WO4)3 having an identical stoichiometry with Na4Mg(WO4)3, exhibits a different framework structure belonging to triclinic symmetry with the space group P1[combining macron]. Isostructural Rb2Mg2(WO4)3 and Cs2Mg2(WO4)3 crystallize in the space group P213 of cubic symmetry and reveal a three dimensional framework composed of isolated WO4 tetrahedra, MgO6 octahedra and RO12 (R = Rb, Cs) polyhedra. The effect of the alkali metal cation size on the framework structures of magnesium tungstate has been discussed in detail. In addition, the infrared spectra, as well as the UV-Vis-NIR diffuse reflectance spectroscopy data, are reported. The first-principles theoretical studies are also carried out to aid the understanding of electronic structures and linear optical properties.

  15. Ordered distribution of I and Cl in the low-temperature crystal structure of mutnovskite, Pb{sub 4}As{sub 2}S{sub 6}ICl: An X-ray single-crystal study

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bindi, Luca; Garavelli, Anna; Pinto, Daniela

    2008-02-15

    To study the temperature-dependent structural changes and to analyze the crystal chemical behavior of the halogens as a function of temperature, a crystal of the recently discovered mineral mutnovskite, ideally Pb{sub 2}AsS{sub 3}(I,Cl,Br), has been investigated by X-ray single-crystal diffraction methods at 300 and 110 K. At room temperature (RT) mutnovskite was confirmed to possess a centrosymmetric structure-type, space group Pnma, while at low temperature (110 K) it adopts a non-centrosymmetric orthorhombic structure-type, space group Pnm2{sub 1}, with a=11.5394(9) A, b=6.6732(5) A, c=9.3454(7) A, V=719.64(9) A{sup 3} and Z=2. Mutnovskite reconverts to the centrosymmetric-type upon returning to RT thus indicatingmore » that the phase transition is completely reversible in character. The refinement of the LT-structure leads to a residual factor R=0.0336 for 1827 independent observed reflections [F{sub o}>4{sigma}(F{sub o})] and 80 variables. The crystal structure of cooled mutnovskite is topologically identical to that observed at RT and the slight structural changes occurring during the phase transition Pnma{yields}Pnm2{sub 1} are mainly restricted to the coordination polyhedra around Pb. The structure solution revealed that I and Cl are ordered into two specific sites. Indeed, the unique mixed (I,Cl) position in the RT-structure (Wyckoff position 4c) transforms into two 2a Wyckoff positions in the LT-structure hosting I and Cl, respectively. - Graphical abstract: In the crystal structure of mutnovskite at 110 K the two halogens I and Cl are ordered into two specific sites and only slight changes in the coordination environment around Pb atoms occur during the phase transition Pnma{yields}Pnm2{sub 1} from the RT-structure to the LT-structure. Two kinds of layers alternating along a are present in the LT-structure: Layer I contains Cl atoms and [001] columns of Pb1 and Pb4 prisms, layer II contains I atoms and [001] columns of Pb2 and Pb3 prisms.« less

  16. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of the lectin from Dioclea rostrata Benth seeds

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Delatorre, Plínio; Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Regional do Cariri, Crato, CE 63195-000; Nascimento, Kyria Santiago

    2006-02-01

    D. rostrata lectin was crystallized by hanging-drop vapor diffusion. The crystal belongs to the orthorhombic space group I222 and diffracted to 1.87 Å resolution. Lectins from the Diocleinae subtribe (Leguminosae) are highly similar proteins that promote various biological activities with distinctly differing potencies. The structural basis for this experimental data is not yet fully understood. Dioclea rostrata lectin was purified and crystallized by hanging-drop vapour diffusion at 293 K. The crystal belongs to the orthorhombic space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 61.51, b = 88.22, c = 87.76 Å. Assuming the presence of one monomer per asymmetric unit,more » the solvent content was estimated to be about 47.9%. A complete data set was collected at 1.87 Å resolution.« less

  17. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of copper amine oxidase from Escherichia coli K-12.

    PubMed

    Roh, J H; Suzuki, H; Kumagai, H; Yamashita, M; Azakami, H; Murooka, Y; Mikami, B

    1994-05-13

    Copper-containing monoamine oxidase (MAO) from Escherichia coli was overproduced in the periplasmic space by expression of the cloned gene. The purified MAO has been crystallized by means of the hanging drop technique using sodium citrate as a precipitant. The crystals belong to the orthorhombic system, space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with unit cell dimensions of a = 136.1 A, b = 168.4 A and c = 81.6 A. The asymmetric unit contains one molecule of MAO, with a crystal volume per protein mass (Vm) of 2.88 A3/Da and a solvent content of 58% by volume. The crystals diffract X-rays to a resolution limit of at least 2.7 A and are resistant to X-ray radiation damage. They appear to be suitable for X-ray structure analysis.

  18. Effects of scandium substitution on the crystal structure and luminescence properties of LuBO{sub 3}: Ce{sup 3+}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wu, Yuntao, E-mail: caswyt@hotmail.com; Ren, Guohao, E-mail: rgh@mail.sic.ac.cn; Ding, Dongzhou

    2012-10-15

    The calcite phase of LuBO{sub 3} and ScBO{sub 3} polycrystalline powders were synthesized by solid state reaction method, and the Lu{sub 1-x}Sc{sub x}BO{sub 3}:Ce (x=0.2, 0.5, 0.7) single crystals were grown by the Czochralski method. A large composition deviation between the initial polycrystalline powders and final single crystal was confirmed by electron probe micro-analysis. Raman spectroscopy revealed that moderate lattice disorder was induced by scandium substitution. However, based on the single crystal X-ray study, we finally concluded that the crystal structure of lutetium scandium orthoborate still crystallized in the rhombohedral system belonging to R3{sup -}c. Furthermore, the relationship between themore » energies of the five 5d levels of Ce{sup 3+} and the crystalline environment was revealed. The total redshift, total crystal field splitting, and centroid shift of Lu{sub 1-x}Sc{sub x}BO{sub 3}:Ce{sup 3+} were calculated based on their VUV excitation spectra. The variations trend of these observed spectroscopic parameters was in accordance with the predicted ones. - Graphical abstract: The crystal structure of Lu{sub 1-x}Sc{sub x}BO{sub 3}:Ce is rhombohedral system with R3{sup -}c space group. The relationship between the energies of the five Ce{sup 3+} 5d levels and the crystalline environment is established. Highlights: Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Moderate lattice disorder is induced by scandium doping. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer The crystal structure of Lu{sub 1-x}Sc{sub x}BO{sub 3}:Ce is rhombohedral system with R3{sup -}c space group. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer Relationship between energies of Ce{sup 3+} 5d levels and crystalline environment is established. Black-Right-Pointing-Pointer The spectroscopic parameters are experimentally and theoretically calculated.« less

  19. Structural and magnetic characterization of the one-dimensional S = 5/2 antiferromagnetic chain system SrMn(VO 4)(OH)

    DOE PAGES

    Sanjeewa, Liurukara D.; Garlea, Vasile O.; McGuire, Michael A.; ...

    2016-06-06

    The descloizite-type compound, SrMn(VO 4)(OH), was synthesized as large single crystals (1-2mm) using a high-temperature high-pressure hydrothermal technique. X-ray single crystal structure analysis reveals that the material crystallizes in the acentric orthorhombic space group of P2 12 12 1 (no. 19), Z = 4. The structure exhibits a one-dimensional feature, with [MnO 4] chains propagating along the a-axis which are interconnected by VO 4 tetrahedra. Raman and infrared spectra were obtained to identify the fundamental vanadate and hydroxide vibrational modes. Magnetization data reveal a broad maximum at approximately 80 K, arising from one-dimensional magnetic correlations with intrachain exchange constant ofmore » J/k B = 9.97(3) K between nearest Mn neighbors and a canted antiferromagnetic behavior below T N = 30 K. Single crystal neutron diffraction at 4 K yielded a magnetic structure solution in the lower symmetry of the magnetic space group P2 1 with two unique chains displaying antiferromagnetically ordered Mn moments oriented nearly perpendicular to the chain axis. Lastly, the presence of the Dzyaloshinskii Moriya antisymmetric exchange interaction leads to a slight canting of the spins and gives rise to a weak ferromagnetic component along the chain direction.« less

  20. Luminescence, magnetic and vibrational properties of novel heterometallic niccolites [(CH3)2NH2][CrIIIMII(HCOO)6] (MII=Zn, Ni, Cu) and [(CH3)2NH2][AlIIIZnII(HCOO)6]:Cr3+

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mączka, Mirosław; Pietraszko, Adam; Pikul, Adam; Hermanowicz, Krzysztof

    2016-01-01

    We report synthesis of three novel heterometallic MOFs, [(CH3)2NH2][CrIIIMII(HCOO)6] with M=Zn (DMCrZn), Ni (DMCrNi) and Cu (DMCrCu), crystallizing in the niccolite type structure. We also successfully synthesized [(CH3)2NH2][AlCu(HCOO)6] (DMAlCu) and [(CH3)2NH2][AlZn(HCOO)6] doped with 5.8 mol% of Cr3+ (DMAlZn: Cr). X-ray diffraction shows that DMCrZn, DMCrNi and DMAlZn: Cr3+ crystallize in the trigonal structure (space group P 3 bar1c) while DMCrCu and DMAlCu crystallize in the monoclinic structure (space group C2/c). Magnetic investigation of the chromium-based niccolites reveals no magnetic order in DMCrZn and ferromagnetic order in DMCrNi and DMCrCu below 23 and 11 K, respectively. Optical studies show that DMCrZn and DMAlZn: Cr samples exhibit efficient emission typical for chromium ions located at sites of strong crystal field with the Dq/B values 2.62 and 2.67, respectively. We also discuss role of geometrical parameters in stability of the perovskite and niccolite structures.

  1. Average and local crystal structures of (Ga 1–xZn x)(N 1–xO x) solid solution nanoparticles

    DOE PAGES

    Feygenson, Mikhail; Neuefeind, Joerg C.; Tyson, Trevor A.; ...

    2015-11-06

    We report the comprehensive study of the crystal structure of (Ga 1–xZn x)(N 1–xO x) solid solution nanoparticles by means of neutron and synchrotron x-ray scattering. In our study we used four different types of (Ga 1–xZn x)(N 1–xO x) nanoparticles, with diameters of 10–27 nm and x = 0.075–0.51, which show the narrow energy-band gaps from 2.21 to 2.61 eV. The Rietveld analysis of the neutron diffraction data revealed that the average crystal structure is the hexagonal wurtzite (space group P6 3mc), in agreement with previous reports on similar bulk materials. The pair-distribution function (PDF) analysis of the samemore » data found that the local structure is more disordered than the average one. It is best described by the model with a lower symmetry space group P1, where atoms are quasirandomly distorted from their nominal positions in the hexagonal wurtzite lattice.« less

  2. Structures of Astromaterials Revealed by EBSD

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Zolensky, M.

    2018-01-01

    Groups at the Johnson Space Center and the University of Tokyo have been using electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD) to reveal the crystal structures of extraterrestrial minerals for many years. Even though we also routinely use transmission electron microscopy, synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SXRD), and conventional electron diffraction, we find that EBSD is the most powerful technique for crystal structure elucidation in many instances. In this talk I describe a few of the cases where we have found EBSD to provide crucial, unique information. See attachment.

  3. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2000-05-05

    This computer graphic depicts the relative complexity of crystallizing large proteins in order to study their structures through x-ray crystallography. Insulin is a vital protein whose structure has several subtle points that scientists are still trying to determine. Large molecules such as insuline are complex with structures that are comparatively difficult to understand. For comparison, a sugar molecule (which many people have grown as hard crystals in science glass) and a water molecule are shown. These images were produced with the Macmolecule program. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  4. Growth, structural, optical, thermal and laser damage threshold studies of an organic single crystal: 1,3,5 – triphenylbenzene (TPB)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Raja, R. Subramaniyan; Babu, G. Anandha; Ramasamy, P., E-mail: E-mail-ramasamyp@ssn.edu.in

    2016-05-23

    Good quality single crystals of pure hydrocarbon 1,3,5-Triphenylbenzene (TPB) have been successfully grown using toluene as a solvent using controlled slow cooling solution growth technique. TPB crystallizes in orthorhombic structure with the space group Pna2{sub 1}. The structural perfection of the grown crystal has been analysed by high resolution X-ray diffraction measurements. The range and percentage of the optical transmission are ascertained by recording the UV-vis spectrum. Thermo gravimetric analysis (TGA) and differential thermal analysis (DTA) were used to study its thermal properties. Powder second harmonic generation studies were carried out to explore its NLO properties. Laser damage threshold valuemore » has been determined using Nd:YAG laser operating at 1064 nm.« less

  5. Overexpression, crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of the phosphotriesterase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

    PubMed

    Zhang, Liang; Chen, Ruyi; Dong, Zhe; Li, Xin

    2013-01-01

    Organophosphates (OPs) are extremely toxic compounds that are used as insecticides or even as chemical warfare agents. Phosphotriesterases (PHPs) are responsible for the detoxification of OPs by catalysing their degradation. Almost 100 PHP structures have been solved to date, yet the crystal structure of the phosphotriesterase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mPHP) remains unavailable. This study reports the first crystallization of mPHP. The crystal belonged to space group C222(1), with unit-cell parameters a = 68.03, b = 149.60, c = 74.23 Å, α = β = γ = 90°. An analytical ultracentrifugation experiment suggested that mPHP exists as a dimer in solution, even though one molecule is calculated to be present in the asymmetric unit according to the structural data.

  6. Overexpression, crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of the phosphotriesterase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis

    PubMed Central

    Zhang, Liang; Chen, Ruyi; Dong, Zhe; Li, Xin

    2013-01-01

    Organophosphates (OPs) are extremely toxic compounds that are used as insecticides or even as chemical warfare agents. Phosphotriesterases (PHPs) are responsible for the detoxification of OPs by catalysing their degradation. Almost 100 PHP structures have been solved to date, yet the crystal structure of the phosphotriesterase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mPHP) remains unavailable. This study reports the first crystallization of mPHP. The crystal belonged to space group C2221, with unit-cell parameters a = 68.03, b = 149.60, c = 74.23 Å, α = β = γ = 90°. An analytical ultracentrifugation experiment suggested that mPHP exists as a dimer in solution, even though one molecule is calculated to be present in the asymmetric unit according to the structural data. PMID:23295488

  7. CFA-2 and CFA-3 (Coordination Framework Augsburg University-2 and -3); novel MOFs assembled from trinuclear Cu(I)/Ag(I) secondary building units and 3,3',5,5'-tetraphenyl-bipyrazolate ligands.

    PubMed

    Grzywa, Maciej; Geßner, Christof; Denysenko, Dmytro; Bredenkötter, Björn; Gschwind, Fabienne; Fromm, Katharina M; Nitek, Wojciech; Klemm, Elias; Volkmer, Dirk

    2013-05-21

    The syntheses of H2-phbpz, [Cu2(phbpz)]·2DEF·MeOH (CFA-2) and [Ag2(phbpz)] (CFA-3) (H2-phbpz = 3,3',5,5'-tetraphenyl-1H,1'H-4,4'-bipyrazole) compounds and their crystal structures are described. The Cu(I) containing metal-organic framework CFA-2 crystallizes in the tetragonal crystal system, within space group I4(1)/a (no. 88) and the following unit cell parameters: a = 30.835(14), c = 29.306(7) Å, V = 27 865(19) Å(3). CFA-2 features a flexible 3-D three-connected two-fold interpenetrated porous structure constructed of triangular Cu(I) subunits. Upon exposure to different kinds of liquids (MeOH, EtOH, DMF, DEF) CFA-2 shows pronounced breathing effects. CFA-3 crystallizes in the monoclinic crystal system, within space group P2(1)/c (no. 14) and the following unit cell parameters: a = 16.3399(3), b = 32.7506(4), c = 16.2624(3) Å, β = 107.382(2)°, V = 8305.3(2) Å(3). In contrast to the former compound, CFA-3 features a layered 2-D three-connected structure constructed from triangular Ag(i) subunits. Both compounds are characterized by elemental and thermogravimetric analyses, single crystal structure analysis and X-ray powder diffraction, FTIR- and fluorescence spectroscopy. Preliminary results on oxygen activation in CFA-2 are presented and potential improvements in terms of framework robustness and catalytic efficiency are discussed.

  8. The Structure of Glycine Dihydrate: Implications for the Crystallization of Glycine from Solution and Its Structure in Outer Space.

    PubMed

    Xu, Wenqian; Zhu, Qiang; Hu, Chunhua Tony

    2017-02-13

    Glycine, the simplest amino acid, is also the most polymorphous. Herein, we report the structure determination of a long unknown phase of glycine, which was first reported by Pyne and Suryanarayanan in 2001. To date, this phase has only been prepared at 208 K as nanocrystals within ice. Through computational crystal-structure prediction and powder X-ray diffraction methods, we identified this elusive phase as glycine dihydrate (GDH), representing the first report on the structure of a hydrated glycine structure. The structure of GDH has important implications for the state of glycine in aqueous solution and the mechanisms of glycine crystallization. GDH may also be the form of glycine that comes to Earth from extraterrestrial sources. © 2017 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

  9. Topological photonic crystal with ideal Weyl points

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Luyang; Jian, Shao-Kai; Yao, Hong

    Weyl points in three-dimensional photonic crystals behave as monopoles of Berry flux in momentum space. Here, based on symmetry analysis, we show that a minimal number of symmetry-related Weyl points can be realized in time-reversal invariant photonic crystals. We propose to realize these ``ideal'' Weyl points in modified double-gyroid photonic crystals, which is confirmed by our first-principle photonic band-structure calculations. Photonic crystals with ideal Weyl points are qualitatively advantageous in applications such as angular and frequency selectivity, broadband invisibility cloaking, and broadband 3D-imaging.

  10. Preparation and crystal structure of U3Fe2C5: An original uranium-iron carbide

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Henriques, M. S.; Paixão, J. A.; Henriques, M. S. C.; Gonçalves, A. P.

    2015-09-01

    The U3Fe2C5 compound was prepared from the elements by arc-melting, followed by an heat-treatment in an induction furnace, at 1250 °C for 1 h and 1300 °C for 2 h. The crystal structure of this phase was determined by direct methods from single crystal X-ray diffraction data. U3Fe2C5 crystallizes in an original tetragonal crystal structure, with space group I4/mmm, a = 3.4980(3) Å and c = 19.8380(15) Å as lattice constants and two formula units per cell. This new type structure is characterized by the simultaneous presence of isolated and pairs of carbon atoms, the interatomic distances in the pairs being similar to a typical carbon-carbon double bond length found in a molecule. U3Fe2C5 is closely related to UC and UFeC2, and can be seen as build from two (distorted) UFeC2 unit cells and a UC layer.

  11. Structural investigation of spherical hollow excipient Mannit Q by X-ray microtomography.

    PubMed

    Kajihara, Ryusuke; Noguchi, Shuji; Iwao, Yasunori; Yasuda, Yuki; Segawa, Megumi; Itai, Shigeru

    2015-11-10

    The structure of Mannit Q particles, an excipient made by spray-drying a d-mannitol solution, and Mannit Q tablets were investigated by synchrotron X-ray microtomography. The Mannit Q particles had a spherical shape with a hollow core. The shells of the particles consisted of fine needle-shaped crystals, and columnar crystals were present in the hollows. These structural features suggested the following formation mechanism for the hollow particles:during the spray-drying process, the solvent rapidly evaporated from the droplet surface, resulting in the formation of shells made of fine needle-shaped crystals.Solvent remaining inside the shells then evaporated slowly and larger columnar crystals grew as the hollows formed. Although most of the Mannit Q particles were crushed on tableting, some of the particles retained their hollow structures, probably because the columnar crystals inside the hollows functioned as props. This demonstrated that the tablets with porous void spaces may be readily manufactured using Mannit Q. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  12. Instrument and method for focusing x rays, gamma rays, and neutrons

    DOEpatents

    Smither, R.K.

    1981-04-20

    A crystal diffraction instrument is described which has an improved crystalline structure having a face for receiving a beam of photons or neutrons and diffraction planar spacing along that face with the spacing increasing progressively along the face to provide a decreasing Bragg angle and thereby increasing the usable area and acceptance angle. The increased planar spacing is provided by the use of a temperature differential across the crystalline structure, by assembling a plurality of crystalline structure with different compositions, by an individual crystalline structure with a varying composition and thereby a changing planar spacing along its face, and by combinations of these techniques.

  13. Brownmillerite Ca 2 Co 2 O 5 : Synthesis, Stability, and Re-entrant Single Crystal to Single Crystal Structural Transitions

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zhang, Junjie; Zheng, Hong; Malliakas, Christos D.

    2014-11-20

    We synthesized Ca 2Co 2O 5 in the brownmillerite form using a high-pressure optical-image floating zone furnace, and single crystals with dimensions up to 1.4×0.8×0.5 mm 3 were obtained. At room temperature, Ca 2Co 2O 5 crystallizes as a fully ordered brownmillerite variant in the orthorhombic space group Pcmb (No. 57) with unit cell parameters a=5.28960(10) Å, b=14.9240(2) Å, and c=10.9547(2) Å. Furthermore, with decreasing temperature, it undergoes re-entrant sequence of first-order structural phase transitions (Pcmb→ P2/c11→ P121/m1→ Pcmb) that is unprecedented among brownmillerites, broadening the family of space groups available to these materials and challenging current approaches for sortingmore » the myriad variants of brownmillerite structures. Magnetic susceptibility data indicate antiferromagnetic ordering in Ca 2Co 2O 5 occurs near 240 K, corroborated by neutron powder diffraction. Below 140 K, Ca 2Co 2O 5 shows a weak ferromagnetic component directed primarily along the b axis, and it also exhibits thermal and magnetic history dependence in magnetization.« less

  14. Towards solution and refinement of organic crystal structures by fitting to the atomic pair distribution function.

    PubMed

    Prill, Dragica; Juhás, Pavol; Billinge, Simon J L; Schmidt, Martin U

    2016-01-01

    A method towards the solution and refinement of organic crystal structures by fitting to the atomic pair distribution function (PDF) is developed. Approximate lattice parameters and molecular geometry must be given as input. The molecule is generally treated as a rigid body. The positions and orientations of the molecules inside the unit cell are optimized starting from random values. The PDF is obtained from carefully measured X-ray powder diffraction data. The method resembles `real-space' methods for structure solution from powder data, but works with PDF data instead of the diffraction pattern itself. As such it may be used in situations where the organic compounds are not long-range-ordered, are poorly crystalline, or nanocrystalline. The procedure was applied to solve and refine the crystal structures of quinacridone (β phase), naphthalene and allopurinol. In the case of allopurinol it was even possible to successfully solve and refine the structure in P1 with four independent molecules. As an example of a flexible molecule, the crystal structure of paracetamol was refined using restraints for bond lengths, bond angles and selected torsion angles. In all cases, the resulting structures are in excellent agreement with structures from single-crystal data.

  15. [Crystal structure of SMU.2055 protein from Streptococcus mutans and its small molecule inhibitors design and selection].

    PubMed

    Xiaodan, Chen; Xiurong, Zhan; Xinyu, Wu; Chunyan, Zhao; Wanghong, Zhao

    2015-04-01

    The aim of this study is to analyze the three-dimensional crystal structure of SMU.2055 protein, a putative acetyltransferase from the major caries pathogen Streptococcus mutans (S. mutans). The design and selection of the structure-based small molecule inhibitors are also studied. The three-dimensional crystal structure of SMU.2055 protein was obtained by structural genomics research methods of gene cloning and expression, protein purification with Ni²⁺-chelating affinity chromatography, crystal screening, and X-ray diffraction data collection. An inhibitor virtual model matching with its target protein structure was set up using computer-aided drug design methods, virtual screening and fine docking, and Libdock and Autodock procedures. The crystal of SMU.2055 protein was obtained, and its three-dimensional crystal structure was analyzed. This crystal was diffracted to a resolution of 0.23 nm. It belongs to orthorhombic space group C222(1), with unit cell parameters of a = 9.20 nm, b = 9.46 nm, and c = 19.39 nm. The asymmetric unit contained four molecules, with a solvent content of 56.7%. Moreover, five small molecule compounds, whose structure matched with that of the target protein in high degree, were designed and selected. Protein crystallography research of S. mutans SMU.2055 helps to understand the structures and functions of proteins from S. mutans at the atomic level. These five compounds may be considered as effective inhibitors to SMU.2055. The virtual model of small molecule inhibitors we built will lay a foundation to the anticaries research based on the crystal structure of proteins.

  16. Crystal structures of the ionic conductors Bi{sub 46}M{sub 8}O{sub 89} (M=P, V) related to the fluorite-type structure

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Darriet, J.; Launay, J.C.; Zuniga, F.J.

    2005-06-15

    The crystal structures of the two oxides Bi{sub 46}M{sub 8}O{sub 89} (M=P, V) have been solved from single crystals X-ray data at room temperature. Bi{sub 46}P{sub 8}O{sub 89} crystallizes in the monoclinic symmetry (space group C2/m) with the cell parameters a=19.6073(4)A, b=11.4181(4)A, c=21.1119(4)A and {beta}=112.14(3){sup o}. The symmetry of Bi{sub 46}V{sub 8}O{sub 89} is also monoclinic but the space group is P2{sub 1}/c with the unit-cell parameters: a=20.0100(4)A, b=11.6445(4)A, c=20.4136(4)A and {beta}=107.27(3){sup o}. Both structures derive from an oxygen deficient fluorite-type structure where the Bi and M cations (M=P, V) are ordered in the framework. The structures are characterised bymore » isolated MO{sub 4} tetrahedra (M=P, V) which contradicts the previous results. The difference between the two structures is only due to a different order of the M atoms (M=P, V) in the fluorite-type superstructure. It will be shown that some oxygen sites are partially occupied in both structures which can explain the ion conduction properties of these phases. A structural building principle will be proposed that can explain the large domain of solid solution related to the fluorite-type observed in both systems.« less

  17. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of ω-amino acid:pyruvate transaminase from Chromobacterium violaceum

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sayer, Christopher; Isupov, Michail N.; Littlechild, Jennifer A., E-mail: j.a.littlechild@exeter.ac.uk

    2007-02-01

    An ω-amino acid:pyruvate transaminase from C. violaceum has been purified and crystallized in two crystal forms. The structure has been solved using molecular replacement. The enzyme ω-transaminase catalyses the conversion of chiral ω-amines to ketones. The recombinant enzyme from Chromobacterium violaceum has been purified to homogeneity. The enzyme was crystallized from PEG 4000 using the microbatch method. Data were collected to 1.7 Å resolution from a crystal belonging to the triclinic space group P1, with unit-cell parameters a = 58.9, b = 61.9, c = 63.9 Å, α = 71.9, β = 87.0, γ = 74.6°. Data were also collectedmore » to 1.95 Å from a second triclinic crystal form. The structure has been solved using the molecular-replacement method.« less

  18. Synthesis, structure and characterization of a hybrid centrosymmetric material (4-dimethylaminopyridinium nitrate gallic acid monohydrate) well-designed for non-linear optics

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ennaceur, Nasreddine; Jalel, Boutheina; Henchiri, Rokaya; Cordier, Marie; Ledoux-Rak, Isabelle

    2018-01-01

    Hybrid material: 4-Dimethylaminopyridinium nitrate gallic acid monohydrate abbreviated DNGA monohydrate has been successfully synthesized by slow evaporation method at room temperature. X-ray diffraction (XRD) on a single crystal showed that the latter was crystallized in P-1 space group. Likewise, thermal analyses demonstrated the stability of our crystal up to 80 °C. Besides, the analysis of the infrared spectrum (FTIR), allowed us to confirm the presence of the different groups present in the structure. Furthermore, by studying the UV-Visible spectrum, the transparency of our crystal was proven. Despite the fact that of having a centrosymmetric structure, the nonlinear optical properties of our single crystal, which was tested by Kurtz-Perry technique, proved that its second harmonic generation efficiency was 1.22 times more than that of KDP (potassium dihydrogen phosphate) single crystal. This nonlinear optical behavior of the studied compound was also determined through the calculations of polarizability and first hyperpolarizability values.

  19. Studies on synthesis, growth, structural, thermal, linear and nonlinear optical properties of organic picolinium maleate single crystals.

    PubMed

    Pandi, P; Peramaiyan, G; Sudhahar, S; Chakkaravarthi, G; Mohan Kumar, R; Bhagavannarayana, G; Jayavel, R

    2012-12-01

    Picolinium maleate (PM), an organic material has been synthesised and single crystals were grown by slow evaporation technique. The structure of the grown crystal was elucidated by using single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. PM crystal belongs to the monoclinic crystallographic system with space group P2(1)/c. The crystalline perfection of the grown crystals was analyzed by high-resolution X-ray diffraction rocking curve measurements. The presence of functional groups in PM was identified by FTIR and FT-NMR spectral analyses. Thermal behaviour and stability of picolinium maleate were studied by TGA/DTA analyses. UV-Vis spectral studies reveal that PM crystals are transparent in the wavelength region 327-1100 nm. The laser damage threshold value of PM crystal was found to be 4.3 GW/cm(2) using Nd:YAG laser. The Kurtz and Perry powder second harmonic generation technique confirms the nonlinear optical property of the grown crystal. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  20. Photonic crystal surface-emitting lasers enabled by an accidental Dirac point

    DOEpatents

    Chua, Song Liang; Lu, Ling; Soljacic, Marin

    2014-12-02

    A photonic-crystal surface-emitting laser (PCSEL) includes a gain medium electromagnetically coupled to a photonic crystal whose energy band structure exhibits a Dirac cone of linear dispersion at the center of the photonic crystal's Brillouin zone. This Dirac cone's vertex is called a Dirac point; because it is at the Brillouin zone center, it is called an accidental Dirac point. Tuning the photonic crystal's band structure (e.g., by changing the photonic crystal's dimensions or refractive index) to exhibit an accidental Dirac point increases the photonic crystal's mode spacing by orders of magnitudes and reduces or eliminates the photonic crystal's distributed in-plane feedback. Thus, the photonic crystal can act as a resonator that supports single-mode output from the PCSEL over a larger area than is possible with conventional PCSELs, which have quadratic band edge dispersion. Because output power generally scales with output area, this increase in output area results in higher possible output powers.

  1. Unusual structural phase transition in [N(C2H5)4][N(CH3)4][ZnBr4

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Krawczyk, Monika K.; Ingram, Adam; Cach, Ryszard; Czapla, Zbigniew; Czupiński, Olaf; Dacko, Sławomir; Staniorowski, Piotr

    2018-04-01

    The new hybrid organic-inorganic crystal [N(C2H5)4][N(CH3)4][ZnBr4] was grown and its physical properties and structural phase transition are presented. On the basis of thermal analysis (DSC (differential scanning calorimetry), DTA (differential thermal analysis), DTG), X-ray structural, dilatometric and dielectric studies as well as optical observation, the reversible first-order phase transition at 490/488 K on heating and cooling run, respectively, has been found. An appearance of domain structure of ferroelastic type gives evidence for an untypical lowering of crystal symmetry during the phase transition. At room temperature, the satisfying crystal structure solution was found in the tetragonal system, in the P?21m space group.

  2. Crystal structure of κ-Ag2Mg5

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Castro, Facundo J.; Primo, Gastón A.; Urretavizcaya, Guillermina

    2018-02-01

    The structure of κ-Ag2Mg5 has been refined based on X-ray powder diffraction measurements (Rwp = 0.083). The compound has been prepared by combining mechanical alloying techniques and thermal treatments. The intermetallic presents the prototypical structure of Co2Al5, an hexagonal crystal with the symmetries of space group P63/mmc, and belongs to the family of kappa-phase structure compounds. The unit cell dimensions are a=8.630(1) Å and c=8.914(1) Å. Five crystallographically independent sites are occupied, Wyckoff positions 12k, 6h and 2a are filled with Mg, another 6h site is occupied with Ag, and the 2c site presents mixed Ag/Mg occupancy. The crystal chemistry of the structure and bonding are briefly discussed in the paper.

  3. Protein Innovations Advance Drug Treatments, Skin Care

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2012-01-01

    Dan Carter carefully layered the sheets of tracing paper on the light box. On each sheet were renderings of the atomic components of an essential human protein, one whose structure had long been a mystery. With each layer Carter laid down, a never-before-seen image became clearer. Carter joined NASA s Marshall Space Flight Center in 1985 and began exploring processes of protein crystal growth in space. By bouncing intense X-rays off the crystals, researchers can determine the electron densities around the thousands of atoms forming the protein molecules, unveiling their atomic structures. Cultivating crystals of sufficient quality on Earth was problematic; the microgravity conditions of space were far more accommodating. At the time, only a few hundred protein structures had been mapped, and the methods were time consuming and tedious. Carter hoped his work would help reveal the structure of human serum albumin, a major protein in the human circulatory system responsible for ferrying numerous small molecules in the blood. More was at stake than scientific curiosity. Albumin has a high affinity for most of the world s pharmaceuticals, Carter explains, and its interaction with drugs can change their safety and efficacy. When a medication enters the bloodstream a cancer chemotherapy drug, for example a majority of it can bind with albumin, leaving only a small percentage active for treatment. How a drug interacts with albumin can influence considerations like the necessary effective dosage, playing a significant role in the design and application of therapeutic measures. In spite of numerous difficulties, including having no access to microgravity following the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, the image Carter had hoped to see was finally clarifying. In 1988, his lab had acquired specialized X-ray and detection equipment a tipping point. Carter and his colleagues began to piece together albumin s portrait, the formation of its electron densities coalescing on the sheets of tracing paper he arranged on the light box. While space-grown crystals were ultimately not involved in the achievement, a year later, Carter says, we were on the cover of Science magazine, having determined the atomic structure of albumin.

  4. Lysozyme Crystal

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2004-01-01

    To the crystallographer, this may not be a diamond but it is just as priceless. A Lysozyme crystal grown in orbit looks great under a microscope, but the real test is X-ray crystallography. The colors are caused by polarizing filters. Proteins can form crystals generated by rows and columns of molecules that form up like soldiers on a parade ground. Shining X-rays through a crystal will produce a pattern of dots that can be decoded to reveal the arrangement of the atoms in the molecules making up the crystal. Like the troops in formation, uniformity and order are everything in X-ray crystallography. X-rays have much shorter wavelengths than visible light, so the best looking crystals under the microscope won't necessarily pass muster under the X-rays. In order to have crystals to use for X-ray diffraction studies, crystals need to be fairly large and well ordered. Scientists also need lots of crystals since exposure to air, the process of X-raying them, and other factors destroy them. Growing protein crystals in space has yielded striking results. Lysozyme's structure is well known and it has become a standard in many crystallization studies on Earth and in space.

  5. Crystal structure of methylprednisolone acetate form II, C 24H 32O 6

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wheatley, Austin M.; Kaduk, James A.; Gindhart, Amy M.

    The crystal structure of methylprednisolone acetate form II, C 24H 32O 6, has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional techniques. Methylprednisolone acetate crystallizes in space groupP2 12 12 1(#19) witha= 8.17608(2),b= 9.67944(3),c= 26.35176(6) Å,V= 2085.474(6) Å 3, andZ= 4. Both hydroxyl groups act as hydrogen bond donors, resulting in a two-dimensional hydrogen bond network in theabplane. C–H…O hydrogen bonds also contribute to the crystal energy. The powder pattern is included in the Powder Diffraction File™ as entry 00-065-1412.

  6. Crystallization dynamics on curved surfaces

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    García, Nicolás A.; Register, Richard A.; Vega, Daniel A.; Gómez, Leopoldo R.

    2013-07-01

    We study the evolution from a liquid to a crystal phase in two-dimensional curved space. At early times, while crystal seeds grow preferentially in regions of low curvature, the lattice frustration produced in regions with high curvature is rapidly relaxed through isolated defects. Further relaxation involves a mechanism of crystal growth and defect annihilation where regions with high curvature act as sinks for the diffusion of domain walls. The pinning of grain boundaries at regions of low curvature leads to the formation of a metastable structure of defects, characterized by asymptotically slow dynamics of ordering and activation energies dictated by the largest curvatures of the system. These glassylike ordering dynamics may completely inhibit the appearance of the ground-state structures.

  7. The high pressure crystal structures of tin sulphate: a case study for maximal information recovery from 2D powder diffraction data

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Hinrichsen, Bernd; Dinnebier, Robert E.; Liu, Haozhe

    2008-12-09

    Our recently proposed method for automatic detection, calibration and evaluation of Debye-Scherrer ellipses using pattern recognition techniques and advanced signal filtering was applied to 2D powder diffraction data of tin sulphate in dependence on pressure. Three phase transitions towards higher pressure could be identified, and their respective crystal structures have been determined. The high pressure behaviour of the stereoactive lone pair of Sn{sup 2+} was investigated. At ambient conditions, SnSO{sub 4} crystallizes in a strongly distorted Barite structure type in space group Pnma (phase I). In the pressure range between P = 0.15 and P = 0.2 GPa, it exhibitsmore » a displacive second order phase transition into a structure with space group P112{sub 1}/a (phase II at P = 0.2 GPa: a = 8.7022(9) {angstrom}, b = 5.3393(5) {angstrom}, c = 7.0511(6) A, y = 89.90(1){sup o}). A second displacive phase transition occurs between P = 4.40 and P = 5.07 GPa into another structure with space group PI (phase III at P = 13.5 GPa: a = 8.067(3) {angstrom}, b = 5.141(2) {angstrom}, c = 6.609(2) {angstrom}, a = 90.56(3){sup o}, {beta} = 90.65(2){sup o}, y = 89.46(2){sup o}). A third displacive phase transition towards another crystal structure in space group P1 occurs between P = 13.6 and P = 15.3 GPa (phase IV at P = 20.5 GPa: a = 7.889(5) {angstrom}, b = 5.028(3) {angstrom}, c = 6.462(3) {angstrom}, a = 90.99(3){sup o}, {beta}=91.01(3){sup o}, y = 89.89(4){sup o}). A non-linear compression behaviour over the entire pressure range is observed, which can be described by three Vinet relations in the ranges from P = 0.21 to 4.4 GPa, from P = 5.07 to 13.55 GPa and from P = 15.26 to 20.5 GPa. The extrapolated bulk moduli of the high-pressure phases were determined to K{sub 0} = 48(1) GPa for phase II, K{sub 0} = 56(2) GPa for phase III, and K{sub 0} = 51(13) GPa for phase IV. The crystal structures of all phases are refined against X-ray powder diffraction data measured at several pressures between 0.15 and 20.5 GPa. The structural phase transitions of SnSO{sub 4} are mainly characterized by a reorientation of the SO{sub 4} tetrahedra, in order to optimize crystal packing. With increasing pressure, the lone pair which is localized at Sn{sup 2+} increasingly adopts pure s-character.« less

  8. L-Nitroargininium picrate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Apreyan, R. A.; Fleck, M.; Atanesyan, A. K.; Sukiasyan, R. P.; Petrosyan, A. M.

    2015-12-01

    L-Nitroargininium picrate has been obtained from an aqueous solution containing equimolar quantities of L-nitroarginine and picric acid by slow evaporation. Single crystal was grown by evaporation method. Crystal structure was determined at room temperature. The salt crystallizes in monoclinic crystal system (space group P21). Vibrational spectra and thermal properties were studied. Second harmonic generation efficiency measured by powder method is found to be four times higher than in L-nitroarginine, which in turn is ten times more efficient than KDP (KH2PO4).

  9. Superlattice Structures, Electronic Properties, and Spin Dynamics of the Partially Cu-Extracted Phase for the Composite Crystal System CuxV4O11

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Onoda, Masashige; Tamura, Asato

    2017-02-01

    The crystal structures, electronic properties, and spin dynamics of CuxV4O11 with 1.2 ≤ x < 2, classified as the partially Cu-extracted phase for the composite crystal system, are explored through measurements of x-ray four-circle diffraction, electrochemistry, electrical resistivity, thermoelectric power, magnetization, and electron paramagnetic resonance. This system has superlattice structures mainly ascribed to the partial ordering of Cu ions. Cu1.78V4O11 is triclinic with space group Pbar{1} and the double supercell of the V4O11 substructure of the composite crystal. The significantly Cu-extracted crystal Cu1.40V4O11 has a quadruple supercell with space group P1. The electron transport for V ions is nonmetallic owing to the polaronic nature and/or phonon softening and to the random potential of Cu ions. The Curie-Weiss-type paramagnetism basically originates from the Cu2+ chain coordinated octahedrally, and the EPR relaxation at low temperatures is understood through the exchange mechanism for the dipole-dipole and anisotropic exchange interactions. The near absence of paramagnetic behaviors of V4+ ions might be due to the spin-singlet ladder model or alternating-exchange chain model depending on the superlattice structure and valence distribution. The electrochemical performance of Li rechargeable batteries using this superlattice system is about 300 A h kg-1 at voltages above 2 V.

  10. RandSpg: An open-source program for generating atomistic crystal structures with specific spacegroups

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Avery, Patrick; Zurek, Eva

    2017-04-01

    A new algorithm, RANDSPG, that can be used to generate trial crystal structures with specific space groups and compositions is described. The program has been designed for systems where the atoms are independent of one another, and it is therefore primarily suited towards inorganic systems. The structures that are generated adhere to user-defined constraints such as: the lattice shape and size, stoichiometry, set of space groups to be generated, and factors that influence the minimum interatomic separations. In addition, the user can optionally specify if the most general Wyckoff position is to be occupied or constrain select atoms to specific Wyckoff positions. Extensive testing indicates that the algorithm is efficient and reliable. The library is lightweight, portable, dependency-free and is published under a license recognized by the Open Source Initiative. A web interface for the algorithm is publicly accessible at http://xtalopt.openmolecules.net/randSpg/randSpg.html. RANDSPG has also been interfaced with the XTALOPT evolutionary algorithm for crystal structure prediction, and it is illustrated that the use of symmetric lattices in the first generation of randomly created individuals decreases the number of structures that need to be optimized to find the global energy minimum.

  11. Testing the limits of sensitivity in a solid-state structural investigation by combined X-ray powder diffraction, solid-state NMR, and molecular modelling.

    PubMed

    Filip, Xenia; Borodi, Gheorghe; Filip, Claudiu

    2011-10-28

    A solid state structural investigation of ethoxzolamide is performed on microcrystalline powder by using a multi-technique approach that combines X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) data analysis based on direct space methods with information from (13)C((15)N) solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (SS-NMR) and molecular modeling. Quantum chemical computations of the crystal were employed for geometry optimization and chemical shift calculations based on the Gauge Including Projector Augmented-Wave (GIPAW) method, whereas a systematic search in the conformational space was performed on the isolated molecule using a molecular mechanics (MM) approach. The applied methodology proved useful for: (i) removing ambiguities in the XRPD crystal structure determination process and further refining the derived structure solutions, and (ii) getting important insights into the relationship between the complex network of non-covalent interactions and the induced supra-molecular architectures/crystal packing patterns. It was found that ethoxzolamide provides an ideal case study for testing the accuracy with which this methodology allows to distinguish between various structural features emerging from the analysis of the powder diffraction data. This journal is © the Owner Societies 2011

  12. Tailoring the spatiotemporal structure of biphoton entanglement in type-I parametric down-conversion

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Caspani, L.; Brambilla, E.; Gatti, A.

    2010-03-15

    We investigate the spatiotemporal structure of the biphoton entangled state produced by parametric down-conversion (PDC) at the output face of the nonlinear crystal. We analyze the geometry of biphoton correlation for different gain regimes (from ultralow to high), different crystal lengths, and different tuning angles of the crystal. While for collinear or quasicollinear phase matching a X-shaped geometry, nonfactorizable in space and time, dominates, in the highly noncollinear conditions we observe a remarkable transition to a factorizable geometry. We show that the geometry of spatiotemporal correlation is a consequence of the angle-frequency relationship imposed by phase matching and that themore » fully spatiotemporal analysis provides a key to control the spatiotemporal properties of the PDC entangled state and in particular to access a biphoton localization in time and space in the femtosecond and micrometer range, respectively.« less

  13. 1-Nitro-4-(4-nitro-phen-oxy)benzene: a second monoclinic polymorph.

    PubMed

    Naz, Mehwish; Akhter, Zareen; McKee, Vickie; Nadeem, Arif

    2013-11-06

    In the title compound, C12H8N2O5, the aromatic rings are inclined to one another by 56.14 (7)°. The nitro groups are inclined by to the benzene rings to which they are attached by 3.86 (17) and 9.65 (15)°. In the crystal, mol-ecules are linked by C-H⋯O hydrogen bonds, forming a three-dimensional structure. The title compound is a new monoclinic polymorph, crystallizing in space group P21/c. The first polymorph crystallized in space group C2/c and the mol-ecule possesses twofold rotation symmetry. Two low-temperature structures of this polymorph (150 K and 100 K, respectively) have been reported [Meciarova et al. (2004). Private Communication (refcode IXOGAD). CCDC, Cambridge, England, and Dey & Desiraju (2005). Chem. Commun. pp. 2486-2488].

  14. Crystal structure, electronic structure, optical and scintillation properties of self-activated Cs 4YbI 6 [Crystal structure, optical and scintillation properties of self-activated Cs 4YbI 6

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wu, Yuntao; Chakoumakos, Bryan C.; Shi, Hongliang

    A self-activated Cs 4YbI 6 single crystal was grown by the vertical Bridgman method. Crystal structure refinements verified the phase purity and the trigonal crystal system with a space group of more » $$\\bar{R}$$3 c. By using differential scanning calorimetry, the melting and crystallization points were determined to be 550 and 510 °C, respectively. Luminescence and scintillation properties were systematically studied. Upon ultraviolet light (360 nm) excitation, the Cs 4YbI 6 crystal exhibits bluish-green emission centered at 450 and 480 nm due to spin-allowed and spin-forbidden transitions of Yb 2+ activators. The lifetimes of the corresponding emission bands at room temperature are tens and hundreds of nanoseconds, respectively. X-ray excited radioluminescence spectrum is dominated by the spin-forbidden transition of Yb 2+ at 480 nm. The absolute light yield is 2700 ± 200 photons/MeV with a principal scintillation decay time of 33 ns. In conclusion, the physical explanation for the low light yield observed is proposed from experimental and theoretical insights.« less

  15. Crystal structure, electronic structure, optical and scintillation properties of self-activated Cs 4YbI 6 [Crystal structure, optical and scintillation properties of self-activated Cs 4YbI 6

    DOE PAGES

    Wu, Yuntao; Chakoumakos, Bryan C.; Shi, Hongliang; ...

    2018-05-14

    A self-activated Cs 4YbI 6 single crystal was grown by the vertical Bridgman method. Crystal structure refinements verified the phase purity and the trigonal crystal system with a space group of more » $$\\bar{R}$$3 c. By using differential scanning calorimetry, the melting and crystallization points were determined to be 550 and 510 °C, respectively. Luminescence and scintillation properties were systematically studied. Upon ultraviolet light (360 nm) excitation, the Cs 4YbI 6 crystal exhibits bluish-green emission centered at 450 and 480 nm due to spin-allowed and spin-forbidden transitions of Yb 2+ activators. The lifetimes of the corresponding emission bands at room temperature are tens and hundreds of nanoseconds, respectively. X-ray excited radioluminescence spectrum is dominated by the spin-forbidden transition of Yb 2+ at 480 nm. The absolute light yield is 2700 ± 200 photons/MeV with a principal scintillation decay time of 33 ns. In conclusion, the physical explanation for the low light yield observed is proposed from experimental and theoretical insights.« less

  16. Optical Interface States Protected by Synthetic Weyl Points

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Qiang; Xiao, Meng; Liu, Hui; Zhu, Shining; Chan, C. T.

    2017-07-01

    Weyl fermions have not been found in nature as elementary particles, but they emerge as nodal points in the band structure of electronic and classical wave crystals. Novel phenomena such as Fermi arcs and chiral anomaly have fueled the interest in these topological points which are frequently perceived as monopoles in momentum space. Here, we report the experimental observation of generalized optical Weyl points inside the parameter space of a photonic crystal with a specially designed four-layer unit cell. The reflection at the surface of a truncated photonic crystal exhibits phase vortexes due to the synthetic Weyl points, which in turn guarantees the existence of interface states between photonic crystals and any reflecting substrates. The reflection phase vortexes have been confirmed for the first time in our experiments, which serve as an experimental signature of the generalized Weyl points. The existence of these interface states is protected by the topological properties of the Weyl points, and the trajectories of these states in the parameter space resembles those of Weyl semimetal "Fermi arc surface states" in momentum space. Tracing the origin of interface states to the topological character of the parameter space paves the way for a rational design of strongly localized states with enhanced local field.

  17. Crystal structure and phase transformations of calcium yttrium orthophosphate, Ca 3Y(PO 4) 3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fukuda, Koichiro; Iwata, Tomoyuki; Niwa, Takahiro

    2006-11-01

    Crystal structure and phase transformations of calcium yttrium orthophosphate Ca 3Y(PO 4) 3 were investigated by X-ray powder diffraction, selected-area electron diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and optical microscopy. The high-temperature phase is isostructural with eulytite, cubic (space group I4¯3d) with a=0.983320(5) nm, V=0.950790(8) nm 3, Z=4 and D x=3.45 Mg m -3. The crystal structure was refined with a split-atom model, in which the oxygen atoms are distributed over two partially occupied sites. Below the stable temperature range of eulytite, the crystal underwent a martensitic transformation, which is accompanied by the formation of platelike surface reliefs. The inverted crystal is triclinic (space group P1) with a=1.5726(1) nm, b=0.84267(9) nm, c=0.81244(8) nm, α=109.739(4)°, β=90.119(5)°, γ=89.908(7)°, V=1.0134(1) nm 3, Z=4 and D x=3.24 Mg m -3. The crystal grains were composed of pseudo-merohedral twins. The adjacent twin domains were related by the pseudo-symmetry mirror planes parallel to {101¯} with the composition surface {101¯}. When the eulytite was cooled relatively slowly from the stable temperature range, the decomposition reaction of Ca 3Y(PO 4) 3→ β-Ca 3(PO 4) 2+YPO 4 occurred.

  18. Crystal Structure of 8β-Hydroxyeremophil-7(11)-ene-12,8α(4β,6α)-diolide

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xue, Hui-qing; Xue, Hui-feng; Wu, Biao; Wang, Han-qing; Xin, Xue-lei; Wu, Shui-xian

    2006-12-01

    8β-Hydroxyeremophil-7(11)-ene-12,8α(4β,6α)-diolide was isolated from the Ligularia intermedia and characterized by MS, multi NMR and X-ray single crystal diffraction. Its crystal structure was determined as in a orthorhombic type, with space group P212121 with a=6.8519(5), b=10.7191(8), c=18.5942(14) Å, V =1365.67(18) Å3, Z=4, and the calculated density is 1.354 mg/m3. F(000)=592, µ=0.101 mm-1.

  19. Crystal Structure, Electric Polarization and Heat Capacity Measurements on Small R-Ion Multiferroic Hexagonal RMnO3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yu, Tian; Gao, Peng; Wu, Tao; Tyson, Trevor; Lalancette, Roger

    2013-03-01

    Crystal structure, electric polarization and heat capacity measurements on the hexagonal multiferroic RMnO3 reveal that small R ion (Lu and lower cation size) systems are ferroelectric and possess the same space-group as YMnO3. Combined local and long range structural measurements were conducted by XAFS, PDF and single crystal and powder XRD methods. The influence of the Mn-O and R-O distribution on the electric polarization is discussed. Point charge estimates of the electrical polarization are given for comparison with the YMnO3 system. This work is supported by DOE Grant DE-FG02-07ER46402.

  20. Crystal growth, structure and morphology of hydrocortisone methanol solvate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chen, Jianxin; Wang, Jiangkang; Zhang, Ying; Wu, Hong; Chen, Wei; Guo, Zhichao

    2004-04-01

    Hydrocortisone (HC), an important grucocorticoid, was crystallized from methanol solvent in the form of its methanol solvate. Its crystal structure belongs to orthorhombic, space group P2 12 12 1, with the unit cell parameters a=7.712(3) Å, b=14.392(5) Å, c=18.408(6) Å, Z=4. The methanol takes part in intermolecular hydrogen bonding, so if we change the solvent, the crystal habit of HC maybe different. The long parallelepiped morphology was also predicted by Cerius 2TM simulation program. The influence of intermolecular interaction was taken into account in the attachment energy model. The morphology calculation performed on the potential energy minimized model using a generic DREIDING 2.21 force field and developed minimization protocol with derived partial charges fits the experimental crystal shape well.

  1. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of the small laccase from Streptomyces coelicolor

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Skálová, Tereza, E-mail: skalova@imc.cas.cz; Dohnálek, Jan; Institute of Physics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Cukrovarnicka 10, 162 53 Praha 6

    2007-12-01

    The expression, purification and crystallization of the small laccase from S. coelicolor are reported. Diffraction data were collected to 3 Å resolution. The small bacterial laccase from the actinobacterium Streptomyces coelicolor which lacks the second of the three domains of the laccases structurally characterized to date was crystallized. This multi-copper phenol oxidase crystallizes in a primitive tetragonal lattice, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 179.8, c = 175.3 Å. The crystals belong to either space group P4{sub 1}2{sub 1}2 or P4{sub 3}2{sub 1}2. The self-rotation function shows the presence of a noncrystallographic threefold axis in the structure. Phases willmore » be determined from the anomalous signal of the natively present copper ions.« less

  2. The Crystal Structure Analysis of Group B Streptococcus Sortase C1: A Model for the ;Lid; Movement upon Substrate Binding

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Khare, Baldeep; Fu, Zheng-Qing; Huang, I-Hsiu

    2012-02-07

    A unique feature of the class-C-type sortases, enzymes essential for Gram-positive pilus biogenesis, is the presence of a flexible 'lid' anchored in the active site. However, the mechanistic details of the 'lid' displacement, suggested to be a critical prelude for enzyme catalysis, are not yet known. This is partly due to the absence of enzyme-substrate and enzyme-inhibitor complex crystal structures. We have recently described the crystal structures of the Streptococcus agalactiae SAG2603 V/R sortase SrtC1 in two space groups (type II and type III) and that of its 'lid' mutant and proposed a role of the 'lid' as a protectormore » of the active-site hydrophobic environment. Here, we report the crystal structures of SAG2603 V/R sortase C1 in a different space group (type I) and that of its complex with a small-molecule cysteine protease inhibitor. We observe that the catalytic Cys residue is covalently linked to the small-molecule inhibitor without lid displacement. However, the type I structure provides a view of the sortase SrtC1 lid displacement while having structural elements similar to a substrate sorting motif suitably positioned in the active site. We propose that these major conformational changes seen in the presence of a substrate mimic in the active site may represent universal features of class C sortase substrate recognition and enzyme activation.« less

  3. Crystallization of lanthanum and yttrium aluminosilicate glasses

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sadiki, Najim; Coutures, Jean Pierre; Fillet, Catherine; Dussossoy, Jean Luc

    2006-01-01

    The crystallization behaviour of aluminosilicate glasses of lanthanum (LAS) and yttrium (YAS) containing 2-8 mol% of Ln 2O 3 (Ln = La or Y), 12-30 mol% of Al 2O 3, and 64-80 mol% of SiO 2 has been studied by DTA, XRD and SEM-EDX analysis. X-ray diffraction results indicate the presence of the mullite phase and La 2Si 2O 7 in the monoclinic high-temperature G form (group space P2 1/c) for the LAS glasses, and mullite y-Y 2Si 2O 7 in the monoclinic structure (group space C2/m) and a small amount of β-Y 2Si 2O 7 in the orthorhombic structure (space group Pna2) for the YAS. For both cases, very little tridymite phase is observed. The results also show that the values of Tg for YAS are higher than those for LAS glasses. The crystallization of LAS glasses is more difficult than that of YAS. For all samples, we observed only one kind of mullite (Al/Si = 3.14).

  4. KMo12S14

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Melnichenko-Koblyuk, N.; Pavlyuk, O.; Savysyuk, I.; Stoyko, S.; Sysa, L.

    This document is part of Subvolume A6 `Structure Types. Part 6: Space Groups (166) R-3m - (160) R3m' of Volume 43 `Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III `Condensed Matter'.

  5. NaGa3Te5

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.

    This document is part of Subvolume A8 `Structure Types. Part 8: Space Groups (156) P3m1 - (148) R-3' of Volume 43 `Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III `Condensed Matter'.

  6. Cloning, preparation and preliminary crystallographic studies of penicillin V acylase autoproteolytic processing mutants

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Chandra, P. Manish; Brannigan, James A., E-mail: jab@ysbl.york.ac.uk; Prabhune, Asmita

    The production, crystallization and characterization of three inactive mutants of penicillin V acylase from B. sphaericus in their respective precursor and processed forms are reported. The space groups are different for the native enzyme and the mutants. The crystallization of three catalytically inactive mutants of penicillin V acylase (PVA) from Bacillus sphaericus in precursor and processed forms is reported. The mutant proteins crystallize in different primitive monoclinic space groups that are distinct from the crystal forms for the native enzyme. Directed mutants and clone constructs were designed to study the post-translational autoproteolytic processing of PVA. The catalytically inactive mutants willmore » provide three-dimensional structures of precursor PVA forms, plus open a route to the study of enzyme–substrate complexes for this industrially important enzyme.« less

  7. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2000-05-01

    The structure of the Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Viurus (STMV)--one of the smallest viruses known--has been successfully reduced using STMV crystals grown aboard the Space Shuttle in 1992 and 1994. The STMV crystals were up to 30 times the volume of any seen in the laboratory. At the time they gave the best resolution data ever obtained on any virus crystal. STMV is a small icosahedral plant virus, consisting of a protein shell made up of 60 identical protein subunits of molecular weight 17,500. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that, in contrast to the crystals grown on Earth, the crystals grown under microgravity conditions were visually perfect, with no striations or clumping of crystals. Furthermore, the x-ray diffraction data obtained from the space-grown crystals was of a much higher quality than the best data available at that time from ground-based crystals. This stylized ribbon model shows the protein coat in white and the nucleic acid in yellow. STMV is used because it is a simple protein to work with; studies are unrelated to tobacco. Credit: Dr. Alex McPherson, University of California at Irvin.

  8. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2000-05-01

    The structure of the Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Virus (STMV)--one of the smallest viruses known--has been successfully deduced using STMV crystals grown aboard the Space Shuttle in 1992 and 1994. The STMV crystals were up to 30 times the volume of any seen in the laboratory. At the same time they gave the best resolution data ever obtained on any virus crystal. STMV is a small icosahedral plant virus, consisting of a protein shell made up of 60 identical protein subunits of molecular weight 17,500. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that, in contrast to the crystal grown on Earth, the crystals grown under microgravity conditions were viusally perfect, with no striations or clumping of crystals. Furthermore, the X-ray diffraction data obtained from the space-grown crystals was of a much higher quality than the best data available at that time from ground-based crystals. This computer model shows the external coating or capsid. STMV is used because it is a simple protein to work with; studies are unrelated to tobacco. Credit: Dr. Alex McPherson, Univeristy of California at Irvin.

  9. Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Virus (STMV)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2000-01-01

    The structure of the Satellite Tobacco Mosaic Virus (STMV)--one of the smallest viruses known--has been successfully deduced using STMV crystals grown aboard the Space Shuttle in 1992 and 1994. The STMV crystals were up to 30 times the volume of any seen in the laboratory. At the same time they gave the best resolution data ever obtained on any virus crystal. STMV is a small icosahedral plant virus, consisting of a protein shell made up of 60 identical protein subunits of molecular weight 17,500. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that, in contrast to the crystal grown on Earth, the crystals grown under microgravity conditions were viusally perfect, with no striations or clumping of crystals. Furthermore, the X-ray diffraction data obtained from the space-grown crystals was of a much higher quality than the best data available at that time from ground-based crystals. This computer model shows the external coating or capsid. STMV is used because it is a simple protein to work with; studies are unrelated to tobacco. Credit: Dr. Alex McPherson, Univeristy of California at Irvin.

  10. Purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray structural studies of a 7.2 kDa cytotoxin isolated from the venom of Daboia russelli russelli of the Viperidae family

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Roy Choudhury, Subhasree; Gomes, Aparna; Gomes, Antony

    2006-03-01

    A cytotoxin from Indian Russell’s viper (D. russelli russelli) venom having multifunctional activity has been crystallized in space group P4{sub 1}. Larger crystals diffracted to 1.5 Å but were found to be twinned; preliminary data were therefore collected (2.93 Å) from a smaller crystal. A cytotoxin (MW 7.2 kDa) from Indian Russell’s viper (Daboia russelli russelli) venom possessing antiproliferative activity, cardiotoxicity, neurotoxicity and myotoxicity has been purified, characterized and crystallized. The crystals belong to the tetragonal space group P4{sub 1}, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 47.94, c = 50.2 Å. Larger crystals, which diffracted to 1.5 Å, weremore » found to be twinned; diffraction data were therefore collected to 2.93 Å resolution using a smaller crystal. Molecular-replacement calculations identified two molecules of the protein in the asymmetric unit, which is in accordance with the calculated V{sub M} value.« less

  11. Lab-on-a-Chip Based Protein Crystallization

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    vanderWoerd, Mark J.; Brasseur, Michael M.; Spearing, Scott F.; Whitaker, Ann F. (Technical Monitor)

    2001-01-01

    We are developing a novel technique with which we will grow protein crystals in very small volumes, utilizing chip-based, microfluidic ("LabChip") technology. This development, which is a collaborative effort between NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and Caliper Technologies Corporation, promises a breakthrough in the field of protein crystal growth. Our initial results obtained from two model proteins, Lysozyme and Thaumatin, show that it is feasible to dispense and adequately mix protein and precipitant solutions on a nano-liter scale. The mixtures have shown crystal growth in volumes in the range of 10 nanoliters to 5 microliters. In addition, large diffraction quality crystals were obtained by this method. X-ray data from these crystals were shown to be of excellent quality. Our future efforts will include the further development of protein crystal growth with LabChip(trademark) technology for more complex systems. We will initially address the batch growth method, followed by the vapor diffusion method and the liquid-liquid diffusion method. The culmination of these chip developments is to lead to an on orbit protein crystallization facility on the International Space Station. Structural biologists will be invited to utilize the on orbit Iterative Biological Crystallization facility to grow high quality macromolecular crystals in microgravity.

  12. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2004-04-15

    To the crystallographer, this may not be a diamond but it is just as priceless. A Lysozyme crystal grown in orbit looks great under a microscope, but the real test is X-ray crystallography. The colors are caused by polarizing filters. Proteins can form crystals generated by rows and columns of molecules that form up like soldiers on a parade ground. Shining X-rays through a crystal will produce a pattern of dots that can be decoded to reveal the arrangement of the atoms in the molecules making up the crystal. Like the troops in formation, uniformity and order are everything in X-ray crystallography. X-rays have much shorter wavelengths than visible light, so the best looking crystals under the microscope won't necessarily pass muster under the X-rays. In order to have crystals to use for X-ray diffraction studies, crystals need to be fairly large and well ordered. Scientists also need lots of crystals since exposure to air, the process of X-raying them, and other factors destroy them. Growing protein crystals in space has yielded striking results. Lysozyme's structure is well known and it has become a standard in many crystallization studies on Earth and in space.

  13. The crystal structures of Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}Zn and Ni{sub 6+x}Sn{sub 8}Zn and their structural relations to Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}, NiSn and Ni{sub 5−δ}ZnSn{sub 4}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Schmetterer, Clemens, E-mail: clemens.schmetterer@univie.ac.at; Effenberger, Herta Silvia; Rajamohan, Divakar

    2016-06-15

    The crystal structures of two new compounds were determined from single-crystal X-ray diffraction measurements: Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}Zn, (x~1.35, a=7.110(2) Å, b=4.123(1) Å, c=10.346(3) Å, β=90.23(2)°, space group I2/m, Z=2. R1=0.025, wR2=0.059 for 748 unique reflections, 35 variable parameters) and Ni{sub 6+x}Sn{sub 8}Zn, x~1.35 (a=12.379(3) Å, b=4.095(1) Å, c=12.155(3) Å, β=116.25(3)°, space group C2/m, Z=2. R1=0.026, wR2=0.052 for 1346 unique reflections, 60 variable parameters). In addition, a structural refinement was performed for Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}, x~0.13 (a=12.264(3) Å, b=4.066(1) Å, c=5.223(2) Å, β=104.85(3)°, space group C2/m, Z=2. R1=0.019, wR2=0.046 for 617 unique reflections, 29 variable parameters). The three compounds show pronouncedmore » similarities among each other as well as to the crystal structures of surrounding binary Ni–Sn and ternary Ni–Sn–Zn compounds. In particular, the two new compounds form a homologous series with Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}, x~0.13. They contain “Ni{sub 4}Sn{sub 4}” and “Ni{sub 2}Sn{sub 4}” building blocks which by different interconnection build up the distinct structures. Topological relations with NiSn and Ni{sub 5−δ}Sn{sub 4}Zn, δ~0.25 are evident. - Graphical abstract: Projection of the structure of Ni{sub 6+x}ZnSn{sub 8}, x~1.35 and constituent building blocks. Display Omitted - Highlights: • The crystal structures of Ni{sub 6+x}Sn{sub 8}Zn and Ni{sub 3+x}Sn{sub 4}Zn were determined using single crystal XRD. • Topological relations to Ni–Sn and Ni–Sn–Zn compounds were established and discussed. • Common structural units were identified and their interconnection patterns described.« less

  14. Structural coloration of chitosan-cationized cotton fabric using photonic crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yavuz, G.; Zille, A.; Seventekin, N.; Souto, A. P.

    2017-10-01

    In this work, poly (styrene-methyl methacrylate-acrylic acid) P(St-MMA-AA) composite nanospheres were deposited onto chitosan-cationized woven cotton fabrics followed by a second layer of chitosan. The deposited photonic crystals (PCs) on the fabrics were evaluated for coating efficiency and resistance, chemical analysis and color variation by optical and SEM microscopy, ATR-FTIR, diffuse reflectance spectroscopy and washing fastness. Chitosan deposition on cotton fabric provided cationic groups on the fiber surface promoting electrostatic interaction with photonic crystals. SEM images of the washed samples indicate that the PCs are firmly coated on the cotton surface only in the chitosan treated sample. The photonic nanospheres show an average diameter of 280 nm and display a face-centered cubic closepacking structure with an average thickness of 10 μm. A further chitosan post-treatment enhances color yield of the samples due to the chitosan transparent covering layer that induce bright reflections where the angles of incidence and reflection are the same. After washing, no photonic crystal can be detected on control fabric surface. However, the sample that received a chitosan post-treatment showed a good washing fastness maintaining a reasonable degree of iridescence. Chitosan fills the spaces between the polymer spheres in the matrix stabilizing the photonic structure. Sizeable variations in lattice spacing will allow color variations using more flexible non-close-packed photonic crystal arrays in chitosan hydrogels matrices.

  15. Six new complexes constructed from silver(I) and 2-(dinitromethylene)-1,3-diazacyclopentane (DNDZ): Synthesis, crystal structure and properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Feng, Zhicun; Zhang, Hang; Xu, Kangzhen; Song, Jirong; Zhao, Fengqi

    2018-04-01

    Six different energetic silver complexes of 2-(dinitromethylene)-1,3-diazacyclopentane (DNDZ), Ag(DNDZ) (1), [Ag2(H2O)(DNDZ)]n (2), Ag(NH3)DNDZ (3), Ag(CH3NH2)(DNDZ) (4), Ag(C2H5NH2)(DNDZ) (5) and Ag(C3H7NH2)(DNDZ) (6), were first synthesized and structurally characterized. Complexes 2, 3, 5 and 6 were characterized by the single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. Complexes 2, 5 and 6 crystallize in the monoclinic crystal system with space group P21/n containing four molecules per unit cell, but the crystal of complex 3 is triclinic with space group P-1 containing two molecules in each unit cell. Complexes 2 and 3 possess Ag⋯Ag interaction and corresponding central symmetric structure, but complexes 5 and 6 do not. Thermal behaviors of complexes 1-6 were determined and analyzed. The order of thermal stability for the six complexes is 4 > 3 >1 > 2 >5 > 6. Impact sensitivities for complexes 1-6 are >12 J, > 4 J, > 13 J, > 16 J, > 8 J and >7 J respectively, which corresponds well to the results of thermal stability for the six complexes except for complex 2. Moreover, natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis was used to investigate the bonding and hybridization of complex 3.

  16. Fe-Al alloy single-crystal thin film preparation for basic magnetic measurements

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Abe, Tatsuya; Kawai, Tetsuroh; Futamoto, Masaaki; Ohtake, Mitsuru; Inaba, Nobuyuki

    2018-04-01

    Fe100-xAlx (x = 0, 4, 10, 20, 30 at. %) alloy films of 40 nm thickness are prepared on MgO(001) single-crystal substrates by varying substrate temperature from room temperature to 600 °C. Single-crystal films of (001) orientation with bcc-based disordered A2 structure are obtained for the Al content range of x = 0 - 20 at. %. An ordered phase of DO3 structure is observed in Fe70Al30 films prepared at temperatures higher than 200 °C, whereas (001) oriented single-crystal films of A2 structure are obtained when prepared at room temperature. The film surface profile does not depend much on the film composition, while the surface roughness increases with increasing substrate temperature. Island-like crystals are observed for films prepared at 600°C for all compositions. Difference in lattice spacing measured parallel and perpendicular to the substrate is noted for the single-crystal thin films and it increases with increasing Al content. The lattice strain in single-crystal film is caused possibly to accommodate the lattice mismatch with the MgO substrate. The (001)-oriented single-crystal films with A2 structure show four-fold symmetries in in-plane magnetic anisotropy with the easy magnetization axis A2[100] and the hard magnetization axis A2[110], whereas the films with DO3 ordered structure show almost isotropic magnetic properties.

  17. Abinitio powder x-ray diffraction and PIXEL energy calculations on thiophene derived 1,4 dihydropyridine

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Karthikeyan, N., E-mail: karthin10@gmail.com; Sivakumar, K.; Pachamuthu, M. P.

    We focus on the application of powder diffraction data to get abinitio crystal structure determination of thiophene derived 1,4 DHP prepared by cyclocondensation method using solid catalyst. Crystal structure of the compound has been solved by direct-space approach on Monte Carlo search in parallel tempering mode using FOX program. Initial atomic coordinates were derived using Gaussian 09W quantum chemistry software in semi-empirical approach and Rietveld refinement was carried out using GSAS program. The crystal structure of the compound is stabilized by one N-H…O and three C-H…O hydrogen bonds. PIXEL lattice energy calculation was carried out to understand the physical naturemore » of intermolecular interactions in the crystal packing, on which the total lattice energy is contributed into Columbic, polarization, dispersion, and repulsion energies.« less

  18. Center for Macromolecular Crystallography, University of Alabama in Birmingham

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Navia, Manuel A.

    1991-01-01

    Porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) crystals grown under microgravity conditions on mission STS-26 of the Space Shuttle Discovery were shown to diffract to considerably higher resolution than the best PPE crystals grown by us on the ground. We have now independently refined both the microgravity and ground-based data. Preliminary results of these refinements are summarized. These results show nearly a doubling of experimental diffraction data for this structure, exceeding 1.3 A resolution. Improved phase information derived from the refined structure of PPE based on this microgravity data has allowed us to interpret previously-uninterpretable electron density obtained from ground-based crystals of a complex of PPE with a chemically-reactive inhibitor. Intermediate stages in the enzyme-inhibitor reaction mechanism in the crystal can now be directly observed. Further refinement of PPE structures is in progress.

  19. Low-resolution structure of Drosophila translin

    PubMed Central

    Kumar, Vinay; Gupta, Gagan D.

    2012-01-01

    Crystals of native Drosophila melanogaster translin diffracted to 7 Å resolution. Reductive methylation of the protein improved crystal quality. The native and methylated proteins showed similar profiles in size-exclusion chromatography analyses but the methylated protein displayed reduced DNA-binding activity. Crystals of the methylated protein diffracted to 4.2 Å resolution at BM14 of the ESRF synchrotron. Crystals with 49% solvent content belonged to monoclinic space group P21 with eight protomers in the asymmetric unit. Only 2% of low-resolution structures with similar low percentage solvent content were found in the PDB. The crystal structure, solved by molecular replacement method, refined to Rwork (Rfree) of 0.24 (0.29) with excellent stereochemistry. The crystal structure clearly shows that drosophila protein exists as an octamer, and not as a decamer as expected from gel-filtration elution profiles. The similar octameric quaternary fold in translin orthologs and in translin–TRAX complexes suggests an up-down dimer as the basic structural subunit of translin-like proteins. The drosophila oligomer displays asymmetric assembly and increased radius of gyration that accounts for the observed differences between the elution profiles of human and drosophila proteins on gel-filtration columns. This study demonstrates clearly that low-resolution X-ray structure can be useful in understanding complex biological oligomers. PMID:23650579

  20. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Venkadesh, S.; Mandal, P.K.; Gautham, N., E-mail: n_gautham@hotmail.com

    Highlights: {yields} This is the first crystal structure of a four-way junction with sticky ends. {yields} Four junction structures bind to each other and form a rhombic cavity. {yields} Each rhombus binds to others to form 'infinite' 2D tiles. {yields} This is an example of bottom-up fabrication of a DNA nano-lattice. -- Abstract: We report here the crystal structure of the partially self-complementary decameric sequence d(CGGCGGCCGC), which self assembles to form a four-way junction with sticky ends. Each junction binds to four others through Watson-Crick base pairing at the sticky ends to form a rhombic structure. The rhombuses bind tomore » each other and form two dimensional tiles. The tiles stack to form the crystal. The crystal diffracted in the space group P1 to a resolution of 2.5 A. The junction has the anti-parallel stacked-X conformation like other junction structures, though the formation of the rhombic net noticeably alters the details of the junction geometry.« less

  1. Crystal structure and crystal chemistry of melanovanadite, a natural vanadium bronze.

    USGS Publications Warehouse

    Konnert, J.A.; Evans, H.T.

    1987-01-01

    The crystal structure of melanovanadite from Minas Ragra, Peru, has been determined in space group P1. The triclinic unit cell (non-standard) has a 6.360(2), b 18.090(9), c 6.276(2) A, alpha 110.18(4)o, beta 101.62(3)o, gamma 82.86(4)o. A subcell with b' = b/2 was found by crystal-structure analysis to contain CaV4O10.5H2O. The subcell has a layer structure in which the vanadate sheet consists of corner-shared tetrahedral VO4 and double square-pyramidal V2O8 groups, similar to that previously found in synthetic CsV2O5. Refinement of the full structure (R = 0.056) showed that the Ca atom, which half-occupies a general position in the subcell, is 90% ordered at one of these sites in the whole unit cell. Bond length-bond strength estimates indicate that the tetrahedra contain V5+, and the square pyramids, V4+.-J.A.Z.

  2. Triboluminescence and crystal structure of the complex [Eu(NО3 )3 (HMPA)3 ]: role of cleavage planes.

    PubMed

    Bukvetskii, B V; Mirochnik, A G; Zhikhareva, P A

    2017-05-01

    The atomic structure of crystals of the [Eu(NО 3 ) 3 (HMPA) 3 ] [hexamethylphosphotriamide (HMPA)] complex characterized by an intensive luminescence and triboluminescence was determined using X-ray structural analysis. Noncentrosymmetric crystals have a monoclinic syngony: a = 16.0686 (3), b = 11.0853 (2), c = 20.9655 Å (4), β = 93.232° (1), space group P2 1 , Z = 4, ρ calc  = 1.560 g/cm 3 . The crystal structure is represented by individual С 18 Н 54 EuN 12 O 12 P 3 complexes linked through van der Waals interactions with clearly expressed cleavage planes. The Eu(III) atom coordination polyhedron reflected the state of a distorted square antiprism. Structural aspects of the suggested model, including formation of triboluminescence properties, were considered and the role of the cleavage planes was discussed. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

  3. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Chao, Tzu-Ling; Yang, Chen-I., E-mail: ciyang@thu.edu.tw

    The preparations and properties of three new homochiral three-dimensional (3D) coordination polymers, [M(D-cam)(pyz)(H{sub 2}O){sub 2}]{sub n} (M=Co (1) and Ni (2); D-H{sub 2}cam=(+) D-camphoric acid; pyz=pyrazine) and [Mn{sub 2}(D-cam){sub 2}(H{sub 2}O){sub 2}] (3), under solvothermal conditions is described. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses revealed that all of compounds are homochiral 3D structure. 1 and 2 are isostructural and crystallize in the trigonal space group P3{sub 2}21, while 3 crystallizes in monoclinic space group P2{sub 1}. The structure of 1 and 2 consists of metal-D-cam helical chains which are pillared with pyrazine ligands into a 3D framework structure and 3 features amore » 3D homochiral framework involving one-dimensional manganese-carboxylate chains that are aligned parallel to the b axis. Magnetic susceptibility data of all compounds were collected. The findings indicate that μ{sub 2}-pyrazine dominate weak antiferromagnetic coupling within 1 and 2, while 3 exhibits antiferromagnetic behavior through the carboxylate groups of D-cam ligand. -- Graphical abstract: The preparations and properties of three new homochiral three-dimensional (3D) coordination polymers, [M(D-cam)(pyz)(H{sub 2}O){sub 2}]{sub n} (M=Co (1) and Ni (2); D-H{sub 2}cam=(+) D-camphoric acid; pyz=pyrazine) and [Mn{sub 2}(D-cam){sub 2}(H{sub 2}O){sub 2}] (3), under solvothermal conditions is described. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analyses revealed that all of compounds are homochiral 3D structure. 1 and 2 are isostructural and crystallize in the trigonal space group P3{sub 2}21, while 3 crystallizes in monoclinic space group P2{sub 1}. The structure of 1 and 2 consists of metal-D-cam helical chains which are pillared with pyrazine ligands into a 3D framework structure and 3 features a 3D homochiral framework involving one-dimensional manganese-carboxylate chains that are aligned parallel to the b axis. Magnetic susceptibility data of all compounds were collected. The findings indicate that μ{sub 2}-pyrazine dominate weak antiferromagnetic coupling within 1 and 2, while 3 exhibits antiferromagnetic behavior through the carboxylate groups of D-cam ligand. Highlights: • Three homochiral 3D coordination polymers were synthesized. • 1 and 2 are 3D structure with metal-D-cam helical chains pillared by pyrazine. • 3 shows a 3D homochiral framework involving 1D manganese-carboxylate chains. • Magnetic data analysis indicates that 1–3 exhibit weak antiferromagnetic coupling.« less

  4. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of gene product 44 from bacteriophage Mu

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kondou, Youhei; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama; Kitazawa, Daisuke

    2005-01-01

    Bacteriophage Mu baseplate protein gene product 44 was crystallized. The crystal belongs to space group R3, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 126.6, c = 64.2 Å. Bacteriophage Mu baseplate protein gene product 44 (gp44) is an essential protein required for the assembly of viable phages. To investigate the roles of gp44 in baseplate assembly and infection, gp44 was crystallized at pH 6.0 in the presence of 20% 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol. The crystals belong to space group R3, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 127.47, c = 63.97 Å. The crystals diffract X-rays to at least 2.1 Å resolution andmore » are stable in the X-ray beam and are therefore appropriate for structure determination. Native data have been collected to 2.1 Å resolution using a DIP6040 image-plate system at beamline BL44XU at the SPring-8 facility in Japan.« less

  5. Photonic time crystals.

    PubMed

    Zeng, Lunwu; Xu, Jin; Wang, Chengen; Zhang, Jianhua; Zhao, Yuting; Zeng, Jing; Song, Runxia

    2017-12-07

    When space (time) translation symmetry is spontaneously broken, the space crystal (time crystal) forms; when permittivity and permeability periodically vary with space (time), the photonic crystal (photonic time crystal) forms. We proposed the concept of photonic time crystal and rewritten the Maxwell's equations. Utilizing Finite Difference Time Domain (FDTD) method, we simulated electromagnetic wave propagation in photonic time crystal and photonic space-time crystal, the simulation results show that more intensive scatter fields can obtained in photonic time crystal and photonic space-time crystal.

  6. Pd3MnH0.61

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.; Zaremba, R.

    This document is part of Subvolume A10 'Structure Types. Part 10: Space Groups (140) I4/mcm - (136) P42/mnm' of Volume 43 'Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III 'Condensed Matter'.

  7. KMo4O6 form II

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.; Zaremba, R.

    This document is part of Subvolume A11 'Structure Types. Part 11: Space Groups (135) P42/mbc - (123) P4/mmm' of Volume 43 'Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III 'Condensed Matter'.

  8. (H3O)2TiF6

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.

    This document is part of Subvolume A8 `Structure Types. Part 8: Space Groups (156) P3m1 - (148) R-3' of Volume 43 `Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III `Condensed Matter'.

  9. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Marana, S. R.; Cançado, F. C.; Valério, A. A.

    The digestive lysozymes 1 and 2 from M. domestica were crystallized by vapour diffusion. The crystallographic data were processed to a maximum resolution of 1.9 Å in both cases. Lysozymes are mostly known for their defensive role against bacteria, but in several animals lysozymes have a digestive function. Here, the initial crystallographic characterization of two digestive lysozymes from Musca domestica are presented. The proteins were crystallized using the sitting-drop vapour-diffusion method in the presence of ammonium sulfate or PEG/2-propanol as the precipitant. X-ray diffraction data were collected to a maximum resolution of 1.9 Å using synchrotron radiation. The lysozyme 1more » and 2 crystals belong to the monoclinic space group P2{sub 1} (unit-cell parameters a = 36.52, b = 79.44, c = 45.20 Å, β = 102.97°) and the orthorhombic space group P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2 (unit-cell parameters a = 73.90, b = 96.40, c = 33.27 Å), respectively. The crystal structures were solved by molecular replacement and structure refinement is in progress.« less

  10. Cloning, expression, purification and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of mouse protein arginine methyltransferase 7.

    PubMed

    Cura, Vincent; Troffer-Charlier, Nathalie; Lambert, Marie-Annick; Bonnefond, Luc; Cavarelli, Jean

    2014-01-01

    Protein arginine methyltransferase 7 (PRMT7) is a unique but less characterized member of the family of protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) that plays a role in male germline gene imprinting. PRMT7 is the only known PRMT member that catalyzes the monomethylation but not the dimethylation of the target arginine residues and harbours two catalytic domains in tandem. PRMT7 genes from five different species were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and Sf21 insect cells. Four gave soluble proteins from Sf21 cells, of which two were homogeneous and one gave crystals. The mouse PRMT7 structure was solved by the single anomalous dispersion method using a crystal soaked with thimerosal that diffracted to beyond 2.1 Å resolution. The crystal belonged to space group P4(3)2(1)2, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 97.4, c = 168.1 Å and one PRMT7 monomer in the asymmetric unit. The structure of another crystal form belonging to space group I222 was solved by molecular replacement.

  11. Cloning, expression, purification and preliminary X-­ray crystallographic analysis of mouse protein arginine methyltransferase 7

    PubMed Central

    Cura, Vincent; Troffer-Charlier, Nathalie; Lambert, Marie-Annick; Bonnefond, Luc; Cavarelli, Jean

    2014-01-01

    Protein arginine methyltransferase 7 (PRMT7) is a unique but less characterized member of the family of protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) that plays a role in male germline gene imprinting. PRMT7 is the only known PRMT member that catalyzes the monomethylation but not the dimethylation of the target arginine residues and harbours two catalytic domains in tandem. PRMT7 genes from five different species were cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and Sf21 insect cells. Four gave soluble proteins from Sf21 cells, of which two were homogeneous and one gave crystals. The mouse PRMT7 structure was solved by the single anomalous dispersion method using a crystal soaked with thimerosal that diffracted to beyond 2.1 Å resolution. The crystal belonged to space group P43212, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 97.4, c = 168.1 Å and one PRMT7 monomer in the asymmetric unit. The structure of another crystal form belonging to space group I222 was solved by molecular replacement. PMID:24419624

  12. Redetermination of 2-methyl-4-nitro­pyridine N-oxide

    PubMed Central

    Peukert, Max; Seichter, Wilhelm; Weber, Edwin

    2014-01-01

    An improved crystal structure of the title compound, C6H6N2O3, is reported. The structure, previously solved [Li et al. (1987 ▶). Jiegou Huaxue (Chin. J. Struct. Chem.), 6, 20–24] in the ortho­rhom­bic space group Pca21 and refined to R = 0.067, has been solved in the ortho­rhom­bic space group Pbcm with data of enhanced quality, giving an improved structure (R = 0.0485). The mol­ecule adopts a planar conformation with all atoms lying on a mirror plane. The crystal structure is composed of mol­ecular sheets extending parallel to the ab plane and connected via C—H⋯O contacts involving ring H atoms and O atoms of the N-oxide and nitro groups, while van der Waals forces consolidate the stacking of the layers. PMID:24826136

  13. Low-energy electron diffraction study of potassium adsorbed on single-crystal graphite and highly oriented pyrolytic graphite

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Ferralis, N.; Diehl, R.D.; Pussi, K.

    2004-12-15

    Potassium adsorption on graphite has been a model system for the understanding of the interaction of alkali metals with surfaces. The geometries of the (2x2) structure of potassium on both single-crystal graphite (SCG) and highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) were investigated for various preparation conditions for graphite temperatures between 55 and 140 K. In all cases, the geometry was found to consist of K atoms in the hollow sites on top of the surface. The K-graphite average perpendicular spacing is 2.79{+-}0.03 A , corresponding to an average C-K distance of 3.13{+-}0.03 A , and the spacing between graphite planes ismore » consistent with the bulk spacing of 3.35 A. No evidence was observed for a sublayer of potassium. The results of dynamical LEED studies for the clean SCG and HOPG surfaces indicate that the surface structures of both are consistent with the truncated bulk structure of graphite.« less

  14. Zeolite Crystal Growth (ZCG) Flight on USML-2

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sacco, Albert, Jr.; Bac, Nurcan; Warzywoda, Juliusz; Guray, Ipek; Marceau, Michelle; Sacco, Teran L.; Whalen, Leah M.

    1997-01-01

    The extensive use of zeolites and their impact on the world's economy has resulted in many efforts to characterize their structure, and improve the knowledge base for nucleation and growth of these crystals. The zeolite crystal growth (ZCG) experiment on USML-2 aimed to enhance the understanding of nucleation and growth of zeolite crystals, while attempting to provide a means of controlling the defect concentration in microgravity. Zeolites A, X, Beta, and Silicalite were grown during the 16 day - USML-2 mission. The solutions where the nucleation event was controlled yielded larger and more uniform crystals of better morphology and purity than their terrestrial/control counterparts. The external surfaces of zeolite A, X, and Silicalite crystals grown in microgravity were smoother (lower surface roughness) than their terrestrial controls. Catalytic studies with zeolite Beta indicate that crystals grown in space exhibit a lower number of Lewis acid sites located in micropores. This suggests fewer structural defects for crystals grown in microgravity. Transmission electron micrographs (TEM) of zeolite Beta crystals also show that crystals grown in microgravity were free of line defects while terrestrial/controls had substantial defects.

  15. Crystal structure of guanidinium hexafluoridovanadate(III), (CN3H6)3[VF6]: an unusual hybrid compound related to perovskite.

    PubMed

    Black, Cameron; Lightfoot, Philip

    2017-03-01

    Vanadium fluorides with novel crystal-chemical features and interesting physical properties can be prepared by solvothermal synthetic routes. The title compound, guanidinium hexafluoridovanadate(III), has a cubic structure (space group Pa-3), exhibiting isolated regular VF 6 octahedral units, which are hydrogen bonded to protonated guanidinium moieties. Although the VF 6 octahedral units are not linked directly together, there are structural similarities between this crystal structure and those of the wider family of perovskite materials, in particular, hybrid perovskites based on extended ligands such as cyanide. In this context, the octahedral tilt system of the present compound is of interest and demonstrates that unusual tilt systems can be mediated via `molecular' linkers which allow only supramolecular rather than covalent interactions.

  16. The crystal and magnetic structures of Sr 2LaFe 3O 8

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Battle, P. D.; Gibb, T. C.; Lightfoot, P.

    1990-02-01

    The crystal and magnetic structures of the anion-deficient perovskite Sr 2LaFe 3O 8 (space group Pmma, a = 5.5095(1), b = 11.8845(5), c = 5.6028(1)AÅ) have been refined from X-ray and neutron powder diffraction data collected at room temperature. The crystal structure consists of layers of octahedral (O) and tetrahedral (T) iron-oxygen polyhedra arranged in the stacking sequence … OOTOOT … perpendicular to theyˆaxis of the unit cell. The magnetic structure is that of a G-type antiferromagnet with ordered magnetic moments of 3.77(5) and 3.15(11) μ B at the octahedral and tetrahedral sites, respectively. The low moment at the tetrahedral site is consistent with the observed disorder and magnetic anisotropy.

  17. New vanadium tellurites: Syntheses, structures, optical properties of noncentrosymmetric VTeO{sub 4}(OH), centrosymmetric Ba{sub 2}V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10})

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Liang, Ming-Li; State Key Laboratory of Structural Chemistry, Fujian Institute of Research on the Structure of Matter, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Fuzhou 350002; Marsh, Matthew

    Two new vanadium tellurites, VTeO{sub 4}(OH) (1) and Ba{sub 2}V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10}) (2), have been synthesized successfully with the use of hydrothermal reactions. The crystal structures of the two compounds were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Compound 1 crystallizes in the polar space group Pca2{sub 1} (No. 29) while compound 2 crystallizes in the centrosymmetric space group C2/c (No. 15). The topography of compound 1 reveals a two-dimensional, layered structure comprised of VO{sub 6} octahedral chains and TeO{sub 3}(OH) zig-zag chains. Compound 2, on the contrary, features a three-dimensional [V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10})]{sup 4-} anionic framework withmore » Ba{sup 2+} ions filled into the 10-member ring helical tunnels. The [V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10})]{sup 4-} anionic network is the first 3D vanadium tellurite framework to be discovered in the alkaline-earth vanadium tellurite system. Powder second harmonic generation (SHG) measurements indicate that compound 1 shows a weak SHG response of about 0.3×KDP (KH{sub 2}PO{sub 4}) under 1064 nm laser radiation. Infrared spectroscopy, elemental analysis, thermal analysis, and dipole moment calculations have also been carried out. - Graphical abstract: VTeO{sub 4}(OH) (1) crystallizes in the noncentrosymmetric space group Pca2{sub 1} (No. 29) while Ba{sub 2}V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10}) (2) crystallizes in the centrosymmetric space group C2/c (No. 15). - Highlights: • VTeO{sub 4}(OH) (1) and Ba{sub 2}V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10}) (2) have been synthesized successfully with the use of hydrothermal reactions. • VTeO{sub 4}(OH) (1) crystallizes in the noncentrosymmetric space group Pca2{sub 1} and displays a weak SHG response. • VTeO{sub 4}(OH) (1) represents only the fourth SHG-active material found in vanadium tellurite systems. • Ba{sub 2}V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10}) (2) exhibits a novel three-dimensional [V{sub 4}O{sub 8}(Te{sub 3}O{sub 10})]{sup 4-} anionic framework.« less

  18. Topological photonic crystal with equifrequency Weyl points

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wang, Luyang; Jian, Shao-Kai; Yao, Hong

    2016-06-01

    Weyl points in three-dimensional photonic crystals behave as monopoles of Berry flux in momentum space. Here, based on general symmetry analysis, we show that a minimal number of four symmetry-related (consequently equifrequency) Weyl points can be realized in time-reversal invariant photonic crystals. We further propose an experimentally feasible way to modify double-gyroid photonic crystals to realize four equifrequency Weyl points, which is explicitly confirmed by our first-principle photonic band-structure calculations. Remarkably, photonic crystals with equifrequency Weyl points are qualitatively advantageous in applications including angular selectivity, frequency selectivity, invisibility cloaking, and three-dimensional imaging.

  19. Relative Sizes of Organic Molecules

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2000-01-01

    This computer graphic depicts the relative complexity of crystallizing large proteins in order to study their structures through x-ray crystallography. Insulin is a vital protein whose structure has several subtle points that scientists are still trying to determine. Large molecules such as insuline are complex with structures that are comparatively difficult to understand. For comparison, a sugar molecule (which many people have grown as hard crystals in science glass) and a water molecule are shown. These images were produced with the Macmolecule program. Photo credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)

  20. Structural, electronic and vibrational properties of LaF3 according to density functional theory and Raman spectroscopy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Oreshonkov, A. S.; Roginskii, E. M.; Krylov, A. S.; Ershov, A. A.; Voronov, V. N.

    2018-06-01

    Crystal structure of LaF3 single crystal is refined in tysonite-type trigonal unit cell P c1 using density functional theory calculations and Raman spectroscopy. It is shown that trigonal structure with P c1 space group is more energy-efficient than hexagonal structure with space group P63 cm. Simulated Raman spectra obtained using LDA approximation is in much better agreement with experimental data than that obtained with PBE and PBEsol functionals of GGA. The calculated frequency value of silent mode B 2 in case of hexagonal structure P63 cm was found to be imaginary (unstable mode), thus the energy surface obtains negative curvature with respect to the corresponding normal coordinates of the mode which leads to instability of the hexagonal structure in harmonic approximation. The A 1g line at 214 cm‑1 in Raman spectra of LaF3 related to the translation of F2 ions along c axis can be connected with F2 ionic conductivity.

  1. Growth, structure, Hirshfeld surface and spectroscopic properties of 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methylpyrimidinium-2,3-pyrazinedicorboxylate single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Faizan, Mohd; Alam, Mohammad Jane; Afroz, Ziya; Rodrigues, Vítor Hugo Nunes; Ahmad, Shabbir

    2018-03-01

    The present work is focused on the crystal structure, vibrational spectroscopy and DFT calculations of hydrogen bonded 2,3-pyrazinedicorboxylic acid and 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methylpyrimidine (PDCA-.AHMP+) crystal. The crystal structure has been determined using single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis which shows that the crystal belongs to monoclinic space group P21/n. The PDCA-.AHMP+ crystal has been characterized by FTIR, FT-Raman and FT-NMR spectroscopic techniques. The FTIR and FT-Raman spectra of the complex have unique spectroscopic feature as compared with those of the starting material to confirm salt formation. The theoretical vibrational studies have been performed to understand the modes of the vibrations of asymmetric unit of the complex by DFT methods. Hirschfeld surface and 2D fingerprint plots analyses were carried out to investigate the intermolecular interactions and its contribution in the building of PDCA-.AHMP+ crystal. The experimental and simulated 13C and 1H NMR studies have assisted in structural analysis of PDCA-.AHMP+ crystal. The electronic spectroscopic properties of the complex were explored by the experimental as well as theoretical electronic spectra simulated using TD-DFT/IEF-PCM method at B3LYP/6-311++G (d,p) level of theory. In addition, frontier molecular orbitals, molecular electrostatic potential map (MEP) and nonlinear optical (NLO) properties using DFT method have been also presented.

  2. Insights into Inverse Materials Design from Phase Transitions in Shape Space

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cersonsky, Rose; van Anders, Greg; Dodd, Paul M.; Glotzer, Sharon C.

    In designing new materials for synthesis, the inverse materials design approach posits that, given a structure, we can predict a building block optimized for self- assembly. How does that building block change as pressure is varied to maintain the same crystal structure? We address this question for entropically stabilized colloidal crystals by working in a generalized statistical thermodynamic ensemble where an alchemical potential variable is fixed and its conjugate variable, particle shape, is allowed to fluctuate. We show that there are multiple regions of shape behavior and phase transitions in shape space between these regions. Furthermore, while past literature has looked towards packing arguments for proposing shape-filling candidate building blocks for structure formation, we show that even at very high pressures, a structure will attain lowest free energy by modifying these space-filling shapes. U.S. Army Research Office under Grant Award No. W911NF-10-1-0518, Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation Award EFRI-1240264, National Science Foundation Grant Number ACI- 1053575, XSEDE award DMR 140129, Rackham Merit Fellowship Program.

  3. Solid-state reaction kinetics of neodymium doped magnesium hydrogen phosphate system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gupta, Rashmi; Slathia, Goldy; Bamzai, K. K.

    2018-05-01

    Neodymium doped magnesium hydrogen phosphate (NdMHP) crystals were grown by using gel encapsulation technique. Structural characterization of the grown crystals has been carried out by single crystal X-ray diffraction (XRD) and it revealed that NdMHP crystals crystallize in orthorhombic crystal system with space group Pbca. Kinetics of the decomposition of the grown crystals has been studied by non-isothermal analysis. The estimation of decomposition temperatures and weight loss has been made from the thermogravimetric/differential thermo analytical (TG/DTA) in conjuncture with DSC studies. The various steps involved in the thermal decomposition of the material have been analysed using Horowitz-Metzger, Coats-Redfern and Piloyan-Novikova equations for evaluating various kinetic parameters.

  4. SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALS: Chemical etching of a GaSb crystal incorporated with Mn grown by the Bridgman method under microgravity conditions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xiaofeng, Chen; Nuofu, Chen; Jinliang, Wu; Xiulan, Zhang; Chunlin, Chai; Yude, Yu

    2009-08-01

    A GaSb crystal incorporated with Mn has been grown by the Bridgman method on the Polizon facility onboard the FOTON-M3 spacecraft. Structural defects and growth striations have been successfully revealed by the chemical etching method. By calculating various parameters of the convection, the striation patterns can be explained, and the critical value of the Taylor number, which characterizes the convective condition of the rotating magnetic field induced azimuthal flow, was shown. The stresses generated during crystal growth can be reflected by the observations of etch pit distribution and other structural defects. Suggestions for improving the space experiment to improve the quality of the crystal are given.

  5. Structure of a new crystal form of human Hsp70 ATPase domain.

    PubMed

    Osipiuk, J; Walsh, M A; Freeman, B C; Morimoto, R I; Joachimiak, A

    1999-05-01

    Hsp70 proteins are highly conserved proteins induced by heat shock and other stress conditions. An ATP-binding domain of human Hsp70 protein has been crystallized in two major morphological forms at pH 7.0 in the presence of PEG 8000 and CaCl2. Both crystal forms belong to the orthorhombic space group P212121, but show no resemblance in unit-cell parameters. Analysis of the crystal structures for both forms shows a 1-2 A shift of one of the subdomains of the protein. This conformational change could reflect a 'natural' flexibility of the protein which might be relevant to ATP binding and may facilitate the interaction of other proteins with Hsp70 protein.

  6. Towards solution and refinement of organic crystal structures by fitting to the atomic pair distribution function

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Prill, Dragica; Juhas, Pavol; Billinge, Simon J. L.

    2016-01-01

    In this study, a method towards the solution and refinement of organic crystal structures by fitting to the atomic pair distribution function (PDF) is developed. Approximate lattice parameters and molecular geometry must be given as input. The molecule is generally treated as a rigid body. The positions and orientations of the molecules inside the unit cell are optimized starting from random values. The PDF is obtained from carefully measured X-ray powder diffraction data. The method resembles `real-space' methods for structure solution from powder data, but works with PDF data instead of the diffraction pattern itself. As such it may bemore » used in situations where the organic compounds are not long-range-ordered, are poorly crystalline, or nanocrystalline. The procedure was applied to solve and refine the crystal structures of quinacridone (β phase), naphthalene and allopurinol. In the case of allopurinol it was even possible to successfully solve and refine the structure in P1 with four independent molecules. As an example of a flexible molecule, the crystal structure of paracetamol was refined using restraints for bond lengths, bond angles and selected torsion angles. In all cases, the resulting structures are in excellent agreement with structures from single-crystal data.« less

  7. Low-temperature crystal and magnetic structure of α – RuCl 3

    DOE PAGES

    Cao, Huibo B.; Yan, Jiaqiang; Bridges, Craig A.; ...

    2016-04-19

    Here, single crystals of the Kitaev spin-liquid candidate α – RuCl 3 have been studied to determine the low-temperature bulk properties, the structure, and the magnetic ground state. Refinements of x-ray diffraction data show that the low-temperature crystal structure is described by space group C2/m with a nearly perfect honeycomb lattice exhibiting less than 0.2% in-plane distortion. The as-grown single crystals exhibit only one sharp magnetic transition at T N = 7 K. The magnetic order below this temperature exhibits a propagation vector of k=(0,1,1/3), which coincides with a three-layer stacking of the C2/m unit cells. Magnetic transitions at highermore » temperatures up to 14 K can be introduced by deformations of the crystal that result in regions in the crystal with a two-layer stacking sequence. The best-fit symmetry-allowed magnetic structure of the as-grown crystals shows that the spins lie in the ac plane, with a zigzag configuration in each honeycomb layer. The three-layer repeat out-of-plane structure can be refined as a 120° spiral order or a collinear structure with a spin direction of 35° away from the a axis. The collinear spin configuration yields a slightly better fit and also is physically preferred. The average ordered moment in either structure is less than 0.45(5) μB per Ru 3+ ion.« less

  8. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Aliev, Ziya S., E-mail: ziyasaliev@gmail.com; Institute of Physics, ANAS, H.Javid ave. 131, AZ1143 Baku; Donostia International Physics Center

    Single crystals of the ternary copper compounds CuTlS and CuTlSe have been successfully grown from stoichiometric melt by using vertical Bridgman-Stockbarger method. The crystal structure of the both compounds has been determined by powder and single crystal X-Ray diffraction. They crystallize in the PbFCl structure type with two formula units in the tetragonal system, space group P4/nmm, a=3.922(2); c=8.123(6); Z=2 and a=4.087(6); c=8.195(19) Å; Z=2, respectively. The band structure of the reported compounds has been analyzed by means of full-potential linearized augmented plane-wave (FLAPW) method based on the density functional theory (DFT). Both compounds have similar band structures and aremore » narrow-gap semiconductors with indirect band gap. The resistivity measurements agree with a semiconductor behavior although anomalies are observed at low temperature. - Graphical abstract: The crystal structures of CuTl and CuTlSe are isostructural with the PbFCl-type and the superconductor LiFeAs-type tetragonal structure. The band structure calculations confirmed that they are narrow-gap semiconductors with indirect band gaps of 0.326 and 0.083 eV. The resistivity measurements, although confirming the semiconducting behavior of both compounds exhibit unusual anomalies at low temperatures. - Highlights: • Single crystals of CuTlS and CuTlSe have been successfully grown by Bridgman-Stockbarger method. • The crystal structure of the both compounds has been determined by single crystal XRD. • The band structure of the both compounds has been analyzed based on the density functional theory (DFT). • The resistivity measurements have been carried out from room temperature down to 10 K.« less

  9. Structural, magnetic, magneto-caloric and Mössbauer spectral study of Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} compound synthesized by arc melting

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Charfeddine, S.; LVMU, Centre National de Recherches en Sciences des Matériaux, Technopole de Borj-Cédria, BP 73 Soliman 8027; Zehani, K.

    We have synthesized the intermetallic Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} compound in hexagonal crystal structure by arc-melting without annealing. X-ray diffraction pattern has been refined by Rietveld method. The crystal structure is hexagonal with P6{sub 3}/mmc space group (Th{sub 2}Ni{sub 17}-type). The Mössbauer spectrum of Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} compound has been analyzed with seven magnetic sextets assigned to the inequivalent crystallographic sites. The temperature dependence of magnetization data revealed that Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} exhibits a second-order ferromagnetic to paramagnetic phase transition in the vicinity of Curie temperature (T{sub C}=412 K). The relative cooling power around the magnetic transition and the Arrott plotsmore » are also reported. - Graphical abstract: A 3D surface showing the temperature and applied magnetic field dependencies of the magnetization for Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} compound (left). Rietveld analysis of the XRD pattern (right). Crystal structure for the hexagonal P6{sub 3}/mmc Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} (bottom). Display Omitted - Highlights: • Tb{sub 2}Fe{sub 17} single-phase synthesized by simple arc-melting without any heat treatment. • The crystal structure is hexagonal with P6{sub 3}/mmc space group. • The magnetic entropy change of the sample was determined by Maxwell relation. • Hyperfine parameters, magnetic and magnetocaloric properties were studied.« less

  10. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction study of phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase from M. tuberculosis crystallizing in space group P3{sub 2}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Timofeev, V. I., E-mail: tostars@mail.ru; Chupova, L. A.; Esipov, R. S.

    Crystals of M. tuberculosis phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase were grown in microgravity by the capillary counter-diffusion method through a gel layer. The X-ray diffraction data set suitable for the determination of the three-dimensional structure at atomic resolution was collected from one crystal at the Spring-8 synchrotron facility to 2.00-Å resolution. The crystals belong to sp. gr. P3{sub 2} and have the following unit-cell parameters: a = b = 106.47 Å, c = 71.32 Å, α = γ = 90°, β = 120°. The structure was solved by the molecular-replacement method. There are six subunits of the enzyme comprising a hexamer per asymmetricmore » unit. The hexamer is a biologically active form of phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase from M. tuberculosis.« less

  11. Cation-anion interactions and polar structures in the solid state.

    PubMed

    Marvel, Michael R; Lesage, Julien; Baek, Jaewook; Halasyamani, P Shiv; Stern, Charlotte L; Poeppelmeier, Kenneth R

    2007-11-14

    Complicated structures where oxygen and fluorine are found together in one framework, where deviations from Pauling's second crystal rule (PSCR) are expected, often result in structures with important physical properties. The [NbOF5]2- anion and therefore all the individual Nb-O and Nb-F bonds are ordered in noncentrosymmetric KNaNbOF5 and centrosymmetric CsNaNbOF5. The Na/K- and Na/Cs-O/F interactions in these phases, in particular the expected deviations from PSCR and the bond valence model, reveal the essential role of the small potassium cations in the acentric packing of the [NbOF5]2- anion. KNaNbOF5 crystallizes in the orthorhombic and polar space group Pna21 (No. 33) with lattice constants a = 11.8653(11) A, b = 5.8826(6) A, c = 8.1258(8) A, and Z = 4, while CsNaNbOF5 crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pbcn (No. 60) with lattice constants a = 8.3155(7), b = 13.3176(11), c = 11.1314(9), and Z = 8.

  12. Nb2OsB2, with a new twofold superstructure of the U3Si2 type: Synthesis, crystal chemistry and chemical bonding

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mbarki, Mohammed; Touzani, Rachid St.; Fokwa, Boniface P. T.

    2013-07-01

    The new ternary metal-rich boride, Nb2OsB2, was synthesized by arc-melting the elements in a water-cooled copper crucible under an argon atmosphere. The compound was characterized from single-crystal X-ray data and EDX measurements. It crystallizes as a new superstructure (space group P4/mnc, no. 128) of the tetragonal U3Si2-structure type with lattice parameters a=5.922(1) Å and c=6.879(2) Å. All of the B atoms are involved in B2 dumbbells with B-B distances of 1.89(4) Å. Structure relaxation using VASP (Vienna ab intio Simulation Package) has confirmed the space group and the lattice parameters. According to electronic structure calculations (TB-LMTO-ASA), the homoatomic B-B interactions are optimized and very strong, but relatively strong heteroatomic Os-B, Nb-B and Nb-Os bonds are also found: These interactions, which together build a three-dimensional network, are mainly responsible for the structural stability of this new phase. The density of state at the Fermi level predicts metallic behavior, as expected, from this metal-rich boride.

  13. Coarse-grained modeling of crystal growth and polymorphism of a model pharmaceutical molecule.

    PubMed

    Mandal, Taraknath; Marson, Ryan L; Larson, Ronald G

    2016-10-04

    We describe a systematic coarse-graining method to study crystallization and predict possible polymorphs of small organic molecules. In this method, a coarse-grained (CG) force field is obtained by inverse-Boltzmann iteration from the radial distribution function of atomistic simulations of the known crystal. With the force field obtained by this method, we show that CG simulations of the drug phenytoin predict growth of a crystalline slab from a melt of phenytoin, allowing determination of the fastest-growing surface, as well as giving the correct lattice parameters and crystal morphology. By applying meta-dynamics to the coarse-grained model, a new crystalline form of phenytoin (monoclinic, space group P2 1 ) was predicted which is different from the experimentally known crystal structure (orthorhombic, space group Pna2 1 ). Atomistic simulations and quantum calculations then showed the polymorph to be meta-stable at ambient temperature and pressure, and thermodynamically more stable than the conventional orthorhombic crystal at high pressure. The results suggest an efficient route to study crystal growth of small organic molecules that could also be useful for identification of possible polymorphs as well.

  14. A hetero-micro-seeding strategy for readily crystallizing closely related protein variants.

    PubMed

    Islam, Mohammad M; Kuroda, Yutaka

    2017-11-04

    Protein crystallization remains difficult to rationalize and screening for optimal crystallization conditions is a tedious and time consuming procedure. Here, we report a hetero-micro-seeding strategy for producing high resolution crystals of closely related protein variants, where micro crystals from a readily crystallized variant are used as seeds to develop crystals of other variants less amenable to crystallization. We applied this strategy to Bovine Pancreatic Trypsin Inhibitor (BPTI) variants, which would not crystallize using standard crystallization practice. Out of six variants in our analysis, only one called BPTI-[5,55]A14G formed well behaving crystals; and the remaining five (A14GA38G, A14GA38V, A14GA38L, A14GA38I, and A14GA38K) could be crystallized only using micro-seeds from the BPTI-[5,55]A14G crystal. All hetero-seeded crystals diffracted at high resolution with minimum mosaicity, retaining the same space group and cell dimension. Moreover, hetero-micro-seeding did not introduce any biases into the mutant's structure toward the seed structure, as demonstrated by A14GA38I structures solved using micro-seeds from A14GA38G, A14GA38L and A14GA38I. Though hetero-micro-seeding is a simple and almost naïve strategy, this is the first direct demonstration of its workability. We believe that hetero-micro-seeding, which is contrasting with the popular idea that crystallization requires highly purified proteins, could contribute a new tool for rapidly solving protein structures in mutational analysis studies. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  15. NaSi4O8(OH)•4H2O

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.

    This document is part of Subvolume A9 `Structure Types. Part 9: Space Groups (148) R-3 - (141) I41' of Volume 43 `Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III `Condensed Matter'.

  16. Structural, spectroscopic (FT-IR, FT-Raman) and theoretical studies of the 1:1 cocrystal of isoniazid with p-coumaric acid

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ravikumar, N.; Gaddamanugu, Gopikrishna; Anand Solomon, K.

    2013-02-01

    The 1:1 cocrystal of isoniazid (INH) with p-coumaric acid (pCA) has been prepared by slow evaporation method in methanol, which was crystallized in monoclinic P21/n space group having four molecules in the asymmetric unit. The cocrystal has been characterized by single crystal X-ray analysis, FTIR, FT Raman and DFT calculations. The crystal structure was stabilized by Osbnd Hphenol⋯Npyridine, Nsbnd H⋯Odbnd C, COOH⋯Nsbnd H and Csbnd H⋯O hydrogen bonding interactions. The geometry optimized structure of the cocrystal at the B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) level of theory has been used to calculate the vibrational frequencies.

  17. Low carrier semiconductor like behavior in Lu3Ir4Ge13 single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kumar, Anil; Matteppanavar, Shidaling; Thamizhavel, A.; Ramakrishnan, S.

    2018-04-01

    Single crystal of Lu3Ir4Ge13 crystallizing in the Yb3Rh4Sn13-type cubic crystal structure has been grown by Czochralski method in a tetra-arc furnace. In this paper we report on the crystal structure, magnetic and transport properties of Lu3Ir4Ge13. The analysis of the powder x-ray diffraction (XRD) studies revealed that Lu3Ir4Ge13 crystallizes in a cubic structure with the space group Pm-3n, no. 223. The lattice parameter was obtained from the Rietveld refinement of the room temperature XRD data which amounts to 8.904 (3) Å with low R factors. The temperature dependence of the resistivity exhibited semiconductor like behavior till 1.8 K, with a broad hump around 15 - 62 K. This hump was observed in both warming and cooling cycle with a very small hysteresis, it may be due to the existence of structural transition from high - low symmetry. The temperature dependent magnetization data shows the diamagnetic behavior with an anomaly around 70 K, which is well supported by the derivative of resistivity data.

  18. Effect of Sr doping on structural and magnetic behavior of SmBa1-xSrxCo2O5+δ (x = 0 and 1)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kumari, Archana; Dhanasekhar, C.; Das, A. K.

    2018-05-01

    Layered double perovskite, SmBa1-xSrxCo2O5+δ (x = 0, δ = 0.5 and x = 1, δ = 1) samples were prepared by solid state reaction method. X-ray diffraction studies show that the SmBaCo2O5.5 sample crystallizes in the orthorhombic crystal structure with Pmmm space group, whereas SmSrCo2O6 sample crystallizes in the orthorhombic crystal structure with Pnma space group. The temperature dependent magnetization of the SmBaCo2O5.5 sample shows a paramagnetic (PM)-ferromagnetic (FM) and a FM-antiferromagnetic (AFM) transitions at TC = 267 K and TN = 221 K, respectively. In contrast, the SmSrCo2O6 sample shows a PM-FM transition at TC = 175 K. According to Goodenough-Kanamori-Anderson rules, the ferromagnetic behavior in SmSrCo2O6 can be understood from the super exchange interaction between the intermediate spin Co3+ and low spin Co4+ via O2- (IS Co3+ -O2- - LS Co4+). The change in magnetic entropy (ΔSMmax) is found to be maximum for the SmSrCo2O6 sample.

  19. (NZ)CH...O contacts assist crystallization of a ParB-like nuclease.

    PubMed

    Shaw, Neil; Cheng, Chongyun; Tempel, Wolfram; Chang, Jessie; Ng, Joseph; Wang, Xin-Yu; Perrett, Sarah; Rose, John; Rao, Zihe; Wang, Bi-Cheng; Liu, Zhi-Jie

    2007-07-07

    The major bottleneck for determination of 3 D structures of proteins using X-rays is the production of diffraction quality crystals. Often proteins are subjected to chemical modification to improve the chances of crystallization Here, we report the successful crystallization of a nuclease employing a reductive methylation protocol. The key to crystallization was the successful introduction of 44 new cohesive (NZ) CH...O contacts (3.2-3.7 A) by the addition of 2 methyl groups to the side chain amine nitrogen (NZ) of 9 lysine residues of the nuclease. The new contacts dramatically altered the crystallization properties of the protein, resulting in crystals that diffracted to 1.2 A resolution. Analytical ultracentrifugation analysis and thermodynamics results revealed a more compact protein structure with better solvent exclusion of buried Trp residues in the folded state of the methylated protein, assisting crystallization. In this study, introduction of novel cohesive (NZ)CH...O contacts by reductive methylation resulted in the crystallization of a protein that had previously resisted crystallization in spite of extensive purification and crystallization space screening. Introduction of (NZ)CH...O contacts could provide a solution to crystallization problems for a broad range of protein targets.

  20. Hydrothermal synthesis, crystal structure and properties of 2-D and 3-D lanthanide sulfates

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Xu Yan; Ding Shaohua; Zheng Xuefang

    2007-07-15

    Two new lanthanum sulfates DySO{sub 4}(OH) 1 and Eu{sub 2}(SO{sub 4}){sub 3}(H{sub 2}O){sub 8} 2 have been hydrothermally synthesized. The colorless crystals were characterized by IR, TGA, ICP and XRD. The structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. 1 crystallizes with monoclinic symmetry, space group P2(1)/n [a=7.995(4) A, b=10.945(5) A, c=8.164(4) A, {alpha}=90{sup o}, {beta}=93.619(6){sup o}, {gamma}=90{sup o}, V=713.0(5) A{sup 3}, Z=8]. It displays a three-dimensional framework, based on the novel Dy-O chains connected by the sulfate groups through helical chains. 2 crystallizes with monoclinic symmetry, space group C2/c, [a=13.5605(17) A, b=6.7676(8) A, c=18.318(2) A, {alpha}=90{sup o}, {beta}=102.265(2){sup o}, {gamma}=90{supmore » o}, V=1642.7 (4) A{sup 3}, Z=4]. Its layered framework is attained by the europium atoms connected by the sulfate groups arranged in a helical manner. - Graphical abstract: Two new lanthanum sulfates DySO{sub 4}(OH) 1 and Eu{sub 2} (SO{sub 4}){sub 3} (H{sub 2}O){sub 8} 2 have been hydrothermally synthesized. The colorless crystals were characterized by IR, TGA, ICP and XRD. The structure was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. It displays a three dimensional framework, based on the novel Dy-O chains connected by the sulfate groups through helical chains.« less

  1. Delicate crystal structure changes govern the magnetic properties of 1D coordination polymers based on 3d metal carboxylates.

    PubMed

    Gavrilenko, Konstantin S; Cador, Olivier; Bernot, Kevin; Rosa, Patrick; Sessoli, Roberta; Golhen, Stéphane; Pavlishchuk, Vitaly V; Ouahab, Lahcène

    2008-01-01

    Homo- and heterometallic 1D coordination polymers of transition metals (Co II, Mn II, Zn II) have been synthesized by an in-situ ligand generation route. Carboxylato-based complexes [Co(PhCOO)2]n (1 a, 1 b), [Co(p-MePhCOO)2]n (2), [ZnMn(PhCOO)4]n (3), and [CoZn(PhCOO)4]n (4) (PhCOOH=benzoic acid, p-MePhCOOH=p-methylbenzoic acid) have been characterized by chemical analysis, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and magnetization measurements. The new complexes 2 and 3 crystallize in orthorhombic space groups Pnab and Pcab respectively. Their crystal structures consist of zigzag chains, with alternating M(II) centers in octahedral and tetrahedral positions, which are similar to those of 1 a and 1 b. Compound 4 crystallizes in monoclinic space group P2 1/c and comprises zigzag chains of M II ions in a tetrahedral coordination environment. Magnetic investigations reveal the existence of antiferromagnetic interactions between magnetic centers in the heterometallic complexes 3 and 4, while ferromagnetic interactions operate in homometallic compounds (1 a, 1 b, and 2). Compound 1 b orders ferromagnetically at TC=3.7 K whereas 1 a does not show any magnetic ordering down to 330 mK and displays typical single-chain magnet (SCM) behavior with slowing down of magnetization relaxation below 0.6 K. Single-crystal measurements reveal that the system is easily magnetized in the chain direction for 1 a whereas the chain direction coincides with the hard magnetic axis in 1 b. Despite important similarities, small differences in the molecular and crystal structures of these two compounds lead to this dramatic change in properties.

  2. The Biophysics Microgravity Initiative

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gorti, S.

    2016-01-01

    Biophysical microgravity research on the International Space Station using biological materials has been ongoing for several decades. The well-documented substantive effects of long duration microgravity include the facilitation of the assembly of biological macromolecules into large structures, e.g., formation of large protein crystals under micro-gravity. NASA is invested not only in understanding the possible physical mechanisms of crystal growth, but also promoting two flight investigations to determine the influence of µ-gravity on protein crystal quality. In addition to crystal growth, flight investigations to determine the effects of shear on nucleation and subsequent formation of complex structures (e.g., crystals, fibrils, etc.) are also supported. It is now considered that long duration microgravity research aboard the ISS could also make possible the formation of large complex biological and biomimetic materials. Investigations of various materials undergoing complex structure formation in microgravity will not only strengthen NASA science programs, but may also provide invaluable insight towards the construction of large complex tissues, organs, or biomimetic materials on Earth.

  3. Purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic studies of the TLDc domain of oxidation resistance protein 2 from zebrafish

    PubMed Central

    Alsarraf, Husam M. A. B.; Laroche, Fabrice; Spaink, Herman; Thirup, Søren; Blaise, Mickael

    2011-01-01

    Cell metabolic processes are constantly producing reactive oxygen species (ROS), which have deleterious effects by triggering, for example, DNA damage. Numerous enzymes such as catalase, and small compounds such as vitamin C, provide protection against ROS. The TLDc domain of the human oxidation resistance protein has been shown to be able to protect DNA from oxidative stress; however, its mechanism of action is still not understood and no structural information is available on this domain. Structural information on the TLDc domain may therefore help in understanding exactly how it works. Here, the purification, crystallization and preliminary crystallographic studies of the TLDc domain from zebrafish are reported. Crystals belonging to the orthorhombic space group P21212 were obtained and diffracted to 0.97 Å resolution. Selenomethionine-substituted protein could also be crystallized; these crystals diffracted to 1.1 Å resolution and the structure could be solved by SAD/MAD methods. PMID:22102041

  4. Synthesis, crystal structure analysis, molecular docking studies and density functional theory predictions of the local reactive properties and degradation properties of a novel halochalcone

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Arshad, Suhana; Pillai, Renjith Raveendran; Zainuri, Dian Alwani; Khalib, Nuridayanti Che; Razak, Ibrahim Abdul; Armaković, Stevan; Armaković, Sanja J.

    2017-09-01

    In the present study, single crystals of E)-3-(3,5-dichlorophenyl)-1-(4-fluorophenyl)prop-2-en-1-one, were prepared and structurally characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The molecular structure crystallized in monoclinic crystal system with P21/c space group. Sensitivity of the title molecule towards electrophilic attacks has been examined by calculations of average localized ionization energies (ALIE) and their mapping to electron density surface. Further determination of atoms that could be important reactive centres has been performed by calculations of Fukui functions. Sensitivity of title molecule towards autoxidation and hydrolysis mechanisms has been assessed by calculations of bond dissociation energies and radial distribution functions (RDF), respectively. Also, in order to explore possible binding mode of the title compound towards Dihydrofolate reductase enzyme, we have utilized in silico molecular docking to explore possible binding modes of the title compound with the DHFR enzyme.

  5. Zn3Sb4O6F6: Hydrothermal synthesis, crystal structure and nonlinear optical properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ali, Sk Imran; Zhang, Weiguo; Halasyamani, P. Shiv; Johnsson, Mats

    2017-12-01

    Zn3Sb4O6F6 has been synthesized hydrothermally at 230 °C. The crystal structure was determined from single crystal X-ray diffraction data. It crystallizes in the cubic non-centrosymmetric space group I-43m with the unit cell parameter a = 8.1291(4) Å and is isostructural with M3Sb4O6F6 (M = Co, Ni). The new compound is the first oxofluoride containing Zn2+ and a p-element cation with a stereochemically active lone pair. The crystal structure is made up by [ZnO2F4] octahedra forming a network via corner sharing at F-atoms and [SbO3] trigonal pyramids that form [Sb4O6] cages that connect via the O-atoms to the Zn-atoms. Powder second-harmonic generation (SHG) measurements using 1064 nm radiation on Zn3Sb4O6F6 indicate an SHG intensity of approximately 40 × α-SiO2.

  6. Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic investigation of a low-pH native insulin monomer with flexible behaviour.

    PubMed

    Zhang, Youshang; Whittingham, Jean L; Turkenburg, Johan P; Dodson, Eleanor J; Brange, Jens; Dodson, G Guy

    2002-01-01

    Insulin naturally aggregates as dimers and hexamers, whose structures have been extensively analysed by X-ray crystallography. Structural determination of the physiologically relevant insulin monomer, however, is an unusual challenge owing to the difficulty in finding solution conditions in which the concentration of insulin is high enough for crystallization yet the molecule remains monomeric. By utilizing solution conditions known to inhibit insulin assembly, namely 20% acetic acid, crystals of insulin in the monomeric state have been obtained. The crystals are strongly diffracting and a data set extending to 1.6 A has recently been collected. The crystals nominally belong to the space group I422, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 57.80, c = 54.61 A, giving rise to one molecule in the asymmetric unit. Preliminary electron-density maps show that whilst most of the insulin monomer is well ordered and similar in conformation to other insulin structures, parts of the B-chain C-terminus main chain adopt more than one conformation.

  7. Racemic crystallography of synthetic protein enantiomers used to determine the X-ray structure of plectasin by direct methods

    PubMed Central

    Mandal, Kalyaneswar; Pentelute, Brad L; Tereshko, Valentina; Thammavongsa, Vilasak; Schneewind, Olaf; Kossiakoff, Anthony A; Kent, Stephen B H

    2009-01-01

    We describe the use of racemic crystallography to determine the X-ray structure of the natural product plectasin, a potent antimicrobial protein recently isolated from fungus. The protein enantiomers l-plectasin and d-plectasin were prepared by total chemical synthesis; interestingly, l-plectasin showed the expected antimicrobial activity, while d-plectasin was devoid of such activity. The mirror image proteins were then used for racemic crystallization. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction data were collected to atomic resolution from a racemic plectasin crystal; the racemate crystallized in the achiral centrosymmetric space group with one l-plectasin molecule and one d-plectasin molecule forming the unit cell. Dimer-like intermolecular interactions between the protein enantiomers were observed, which may account for the observed extremely low solvent content (13%–15%) and more highly ordered nature of the racemic crystals. The structure of the plectasin molecule was well defined for all 40 amino acids and was generally similar to the previously determined NMR structure, suggesting minimal impact of the crystal packing on the plectasin conformation. PMID:19472324

  8. Pseudoracemic amino acid complexes: blind predictions for flexible two-component crystals.

    PubMed

    Görbitz, Carl Henrik; Dalhus, Bjørn; Day, Graeme M

    2010-08-14

    Ab initio prediction of the crystal packing in complexes between two flexible molecules is a particularly challenging computational chemistry problem. In this work we present results of single crystal structure determinations as well as theoretical predictions for three 1 ratio 1 complexes between hydrophobic l- and d-amino acids (pseudoracemates), known from previous crystallographic work to form structures with one of two alternative hydrogen bonding arrangements. These are accurately reproduced in the theoretical predictions together with a series of patterns that have never been observed experimentally. In this bewildering forest of potential polymorphs, hydrogen bonding arrangements and molecular conformations, the theoretical predictions succeeded, for all three complexes, in finding the correct hydrogen bonding pattern. For two of the complexes, the calculations also reproduce the exact space group and side chain orientations in the best ranked predicted structure. This includes one complex for which the observed crystal packing clearly contradicted previous experience based on experimental data for a substantial number of related amino acid complexes. The results highlight the significant recent advances that have been made in computational methods for crystal structure prediction.

  9. Crystal morphology variation in inkjet-printed organic materials

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ihnen, Andrew C.; Petrock, Anne M.; Chou, Tsengming; Samuels, Phillip J.; Fuchs, Brian E.; Lee, Woo Y.

    2011-11-01

    The recent commercialization of piezoelectric-based drop-on-demand inkjet printers provides an additive processing platform for producing and micropatterning organic crystal structures. We report an inkjet printing approach where macro- and nano-scale energetic composites composed of cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine (RDX) crystals dispersed in a cellulose acetate butyrate (CAB) matrix are produced by direct phase transformation from organic solvent-based all-liquid inks. The characterization of printed composites illustrates distinct morphological changes dependent on ink deposition parameters. When 10 pL ink droplets rapidly formed a liquid pool, a coffee ring structure containing dendritic RDX crystals was produced. By increasing the substrate temperature, and consequently the evaporation rate of the pooled ink, the coffee ring structure was mitigated and shorter dendrites from up to ∼1 to 0.2 mm with closer arm spacing from ∼15 to 1 μm were produced. When the nucleation and growth of RDX and CAB were confined within the evaporating droplets, a granular structure containing nanoscale RDX crystals was produced. The results suggest that evaporation rate and microfluidic droplet confinement can effectively be used to tailor the morphology of inkjet-printed energetic composites.

  10. Ultrasonic acoustic levitation for fast frame rate X-ray protein crystallography at room temperature.

    PubMed

    Tsujino, Soichiro; Tomizaki, Takashi

    2016-05-06

    Increasing the data acquisition rate of X-ray diffraction images for macromolecular crystals at room temperature at synchrotrons has the potential to significantly accelerate both structural analysis of biomolecules and structure-based drug developments. Using lysozyme model crystals, we demonstrated the rapid acquisition of X-ray diffraction datasets by combining a high frame rate pixel array detector with ultrasonic acoustic levitation of protein crystals in liquid droplets. The rapid spinning of the crystal within a levitating droplet ensured an efficient sampling of the reciprocal space. The datasets were processed with a program suite developed for serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX). The structure, which was solved by molecular replacement, was found to be identical to the structure obtained by the conventional oscillation method for up to a 1.8-Å resolution limit. In particular, the absence of protein crystal damage resulting from the acoustic levitation was carefully established. These results represent a key step towards a fully automated sample handling and measurement pipeline, which has promising prospects for a high acquisition rate and high sample efficiency for room temperature X-ray crystallography.

  11. Ultrasonic acoustic levitation for fast frame rate X-ray protein crystallography at room temperature

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tsujino, Soichiro; Tomizaki, Takashi

    2016-05-01

    Increasing the data acquisition rate of X-ray diffraction images for macromolecular crystals at room temperature at synchrotrons has the potential to significantly accelerate both structural analysis of biomolecules and structure-based drug developments. Using lysozyme model crystals, we demonstrated the rapid acquisition of X-ray diffraction datasets by combining a high frame rate pixel array detector with ultrasonic acoustic levitation of protein crystals in liquid droplets. The rapid spinning of the crystal within a levitating droplet ensured an efficient sampling of the reciprocal space. The datasets were processed with a program suite developed for serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX). The structure, which was solved by molecular replacement, was found to be identical to the structure obtained by the conventional oscillation method for up to a 1.8-Å resolution limit. In particular, the absence of protein crystal damage resulting from the acoustic levitation was carefully established. These results represent a key step towards a fully automated sample handling and measurement pipeline, which has promising prospects for a high acquisition rate and high sample efficiency for room temperature X-ray crystallography.

  12. Ultrasonic acoustic levitation for fast frame rate X-ray protein crystallography at room temperature

    PubMed Central

    Tsujino, Soichiro; Tomizaki, Takashi

    2016-01-01

    Increasing the data acquisition rate of X-ray diffraction images for macromolecular crystals at room temperature at synchrotrons has the potential to significantly accelerate both structural analysis of biomolecules and structure-based drug developments. Using lysozyme model crystals, we demonstrated the rapid acquisition of X-ray diffraction datasets by combining a high frame rate pixel array detector with ultrasonic acoustic levitation of protein crystals in liquid droplets. The rapid spinning of the crystal within a levitating droplet ensured an efficient sampling of the reciprocal space. The datasets were processed with a program suite developed for serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX). The structure, which was solved by molecular replacement, was found to be identical to the structure obtained by the conventional oscillation method for up to a 1.8-Å resolution limit. In particular, the absence of protein crystal damage resulting from the acoustic levitation was carefully established. These results represent a key step towards a fully automated sample handling and measurement pipeline, which has promising prospects for a high acquisition rate and high sample efficiency for room temperature X-ray crystallography. PMID:27150272

  13. The magnetic and crystal structures of Sr2IrO4: A neutron diffraction study

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Ye, Feng; Chi, Songxue; Chakoumakos, Bryan C

    2013-01-01

    We report a single-crystal neutron diffraction study of the layered Sr2IrO4. This work unambigu- ously determines the magnetic and crystal structures, and reveals that the spin orientation rigidly tracks the staggered rotation of the IrO6 octahedra in Sr2IrO4. The long-range antiferromagnetic order has a canted spin configuration with an ordered moment of 0.208(3) B/Ir site within the basal plane; a detailed examination of the spin canting yields 0.202(3) and 0.049(2) B/site for the a-axis and the b-axis, respectively. It is intriguing that forbidden nuclear reflections of space group I41/acd are also observed in a wide temperature range from 4 Kmore » to 600 K, which suggests a reduced crystal structure symmetry. This neutron scattering work provides a direct, well-refined experimen- tal characterization of the magnetic and crystal structures that are crucial to the understanding of the unconventional magnetism existent in this unusual magnetic insulator.« less

  14. Overexpression, crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of β-N-acetylglucosaminidase from Thermotoga maritima encoded by the Tm0809 gene.

    PubMed

    Lee, Hyung Ho; Jung, Sang Taek

    2013-02-01

    β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (NagA) protein hs a chitin-degrading activity and chitin is one of the most abundant polymers in nature. NagA contains a family 3 glycoside (GH3)-type N-terminal domain and a unique C-terminal domain. The structurally uncharacterized C-terminal domain of NagA may be involved in substrate specificity. To provide a structural basis for the substrate specificity of NagA, structural analysis of NagA from Thermotoga maritima encoded by the Tm0809 gene was initiated. NagA from T. maritima has been overexpressed in Escherichia coli and crystallized at 296 K using ammonium sulfate as a precipitant. Crystals of T. maritima NagA diffracted to 3.80 Å resolution and belonged to the monoclinic space group C2, with unit-cell parameters a = 231.15, b = 133.62, c = 140.88 Å, β = 89.97°. The crystallization of selenomethionyl-substituted protein is in progress to solve the crystal structure of T. maritima NagA.

  15. Crystal structure, vibrational and DFT simulation studies of melaminium dihydrogen phosphite monohydrate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Arjunan, V.; Kalaivani, M.; Marchewka, M. K.; Mohan, S.

    2013-08-01

    The crystal structure investigations of melamine with phosphorous acid, namely melaminium dihydrogenphosphite monohydrate (C3N6H7·H2PO3·H2O) have been investigated by means of single crystal X-ray diffraction method. The title compound crystallizes in monoclinic crystal system, and the space group is P21/c with a = 10.069 Å, b = 21.592 Å, c = 12.409 Å and Z = 12. The vibrational assignments and analysis of melaminium dihydrogen phosphite monohydrate have also been performed by FTIR, FT-Raman and far-infrared spectral studies. The quantum chemical simulations were performed with DFT (B3LYP) method using 6-31G**, cc-pVTZ, and 6-311++G** basis sets to determine the energy, structural, thermodynamic parameters and vibrational frequencies of melaminium dihydrogen phosphite monohydrate. The hydrogen atom from phosphorous acid was transferred to the melamine molecule giving the singly protonated melaminium cation. The ability of ions to form spontaneous three-dimensional structure through weak Osbnd H···O and Nsbnd H···O hydrogen bonds shows notable vibrational effects.

  16. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1995-10-25

    The Isothermal Dendritic Growth Experiment (IDGE), flown on three Space Shuttle missions, is yielding new insights into virtually all industrially relevant metal and alloy forming operations. IDGE used transparent organic liquids that form dendrites (treelike structures) similar to the crystals that form inside metal alloys. Comparing Earth-based and space-based dentrite growth velocity, tip size and shape provid a better understanding of the fundamentals of dentritic growth, including gravity's effects. These shadowgraphic images show succinonitrile (SCN) dentrites growing in a melt (liquid). The space-grown crystals also have cleaner, better defined sidebranches. IDGE was developed by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institude (RPI) and NASA/ Glenn Research Center(GRC). Advanced follow-on experiments are being developed for flight on the International Space Station. Photo gredit: NASA/Glenn Research Center

  17. Crystal structure of hydrocortisone acetate, C23H32O6

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kaduk, James A.; Gindhart, Amy M.; Blanton, Thomas N.

    The crystal structure of hydrocortisone acetate has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional techniques. Hydrocortisone acetate crystallizes in space groupP2 1(#4) witha= 8.85173(3) Å,b= 13.53859(3) Å,c= 8.86980(4) Å,β= 101.5438(3)°,V= 1041.455(6) Å 3, andZ= 2. Both hydroxyl groups form hydrogen bonds to the ketone oxygen atom on the steroid ring system, resulting in a three-dimensional hydrogen bond network. The powder pattern has been submitted to ICDD for inclusion in the Powder Diffraction File™.

  18. The effect of structural disorder on guided resonances in photonic crystal slabs studied with terahertz time-domain spectroscopy.

    PubMed

    Prasad, Tushar; Colvin, Vicki L; Mittleman, Daniel M

    2007-12-10

    We measure the normal-incidence transmission coefficient of photonic crystal slabs with hexagonal arrays of air holes in silicon. The transmission spectra exhibit sharp resonant features with Fano line shapes. They are produced due to the coupling of the leaky photonic crystal modes, called guided resonances, to the continuum of free-space modes. We investigate the effects of several types of structural disorder on the spectra of these resonances. Our results indicate that guided resonances are very tolerant to disorder in the hole diameter and to interface roughness, but very sensitive to disorder in the lattice periodicity.

  19. Colorimetric detection of hydrogen peroxide by dioxido-vanadium(V) complex containing hydrazone ligand: synthesis and crystal structure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kurbah, Sunshine D.; Syiemlieh, Ibanphylla; Lal, Ram A.

    2018-03-01

    Dioxido-vanadium(V) complex has been synthesized in good yield, the complex was characterized by IR, UV-visible and 1H NMR spectroscopy. Single crystal X-ray crystallography techniques were used to assign the structure of the complex. Complex crystallized with monoclinic P21/c space group with cell parameters a (Å) = 39.516(5), b (Å) = 6.2571(11), c (Å) = 17.424(2), α (°) = 90, β (°) = 102.668(12) and γ (°) = 90. The hydrazone ligand is coordinate to metal ion in tridentate fashion through -ONO- donor atoms forming a distorted square pyramidal geometry around the metal ion.

  20. Synthesis, growth, crystal structure, optical and third order nonlinear optical properties of quinolinium derivative single crystal: PNQI

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karthigha, S.; Krishnamoorthi, C.

    2018-03-01

    An organic quinolinium derivative nonlinear optical (NLO) crystal, 1-ethyl-2-[2-(4-nitro-phenyl)-vinyl]-quinolinium iodide (PNQI) was synthesized and successfully grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique. Formation of a crystalline compound was confirmed by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The quinolinium compound PNQI crystallizes in the triclinic crystal system with a centrosymmetric space group of P-1 symmetry. The molecular structure of PNQI was confirmed by 1H NMR and 13C NMR spectral studies. The thermal properties of the crystal have been investigated by thermogravimetric (TG) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) studies. The optical characteristics obtained from UV-Vis-NIR spectral data were described and the cut-off wavelength observed at 506 nm. The etching study was performed to analyse the growth features of PNQI single crystal. The third order NLO properties such as nonlinear refractive index (n2), nonlinear absorption coefficient (β) and nonlinear susceptibility (χ (3)) of the crystal were investigated using Z-scan technique at 632.8 nm of Hesbnd Ne laser.

  1. Study of liquid crystal space groups using controlled tilting with cryogenic transmission electron microscopy.

    PubMed

    Sagalowicz, Laurent; Acquistapace, Simone; Watzke, Heribert J; Michel, Martin

    2007-11-20

    We developed a method that enables differentiation between liquid crystalline-phase particles corresponding to different space groups. It consists of controlled tilting of the specimen to observe different orientations of the same particle using cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. This leads to the visualization of lattice planes (or reflections) that are present for a given structure and absent for the other one(s) and that give information on liquid crystalline structures and their space groups. In particular, we show that we can unambiguously distinguish among particles having the inverted micellar cubic (space group Fd(3)m, 227), the inverted bicontinuous gyroid (space group Ia(3)d, 230), the inverted bicontinuous diamond (space group Pn(3)m, 224), and the inverted bicontinuous primitive cubic structure (space group Im(3)m, 229).

  2. Synthesis, growth, structural, optical, luminescence, surface and HOMO LUMO analysis of 2-[2-(4-cholro-phenyl)-vinyl]-1-methylquinolinium naphthalene-2-sulfonate organic single crystals grown by a slow evaporation technique

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Karthigha, S.; Kalainathan, S.; Maheswara Rao, Kunda Uma; Hamada, Fumio; Yamada, Manabu; Kondo, Yoshihiko

    2016-02-01

    Single crystals of 2-[2-(4-cholro-phenyl)-vinyl]-1-methylquinolinium naphthalene-2-sulfonate (4CLNS) were grown by a slow evaporation technique. The formation of molecule was confirmed from 1H NMR and FTIR analysis. The confirmation of crystal structure was done by single crystal XRD and atomic packing of grown crystal was identified. The grown single crystal crystallized in triclinic structure with centrosymmetric space group P-1. The crystalline nature of the synthesised material was recorded by powder XRD. The optical absorption properties of the grown crystals were analyzed by UV-vis spectral studies. The thermal behaviour of the title material has been studied by TG/DTA analysis which revealed the stability of the compound till its melting point 276.7 °C. The third order nonlinear optical property of 4CLNS was investigated in detail by Z scan technique and it confirms that the title crystal is suitable for photonic devices and NLO optical applications. Emissions at 519 nm in green region of the EM spectrum were found by photoluminescence studies. The charge transfer occurring within the molecule is explained by the calculated HOMO and LUMO energies.

  3. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of mouse galectin-4 N-terminal carbohydrate recognition domain in complex with lactose

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Krejčiříková, Veronika; Fábry, Milan; Marková, Vladimíra

    2008-07-01

    Mouse galectin-4 carbohydrate binding domain was overexpressed in E. coli and crystallized in the presence of lactose. The crystals belong to tetragonal space group P42{sub 1}2 and diffraction data were collected to 2.1 Å resolution. Galectin-4 is thought to play a role in the process of tumour conversion of cells of the alimentary tract and the breast tissue; however, its exact function remains unknown. With the aim of elucidating the structural basis of mouse galectin-4 (mGal-4) binding specificity, we have undertaken X-ray analysis of the N-terminal domain, CRD1, of mGal-4 in complex with lactose (the basic building block of knownmore » galectin-4 carbohydrate ligands). Crystals of CRD1 in complex with lactose were obtained using vapour-diffusion techniques. The crystals belong to tetragonal space group P42{sub 1}2 with unit-cell parameters a = 91.1, b = 91.16, c = 57.10 Å and preliminary X-ray diffraction data were collected to 3.2 Å resolution. An optimized crystallization procedure and cryocooling protocol allowed us to extend resolution to 2.1 Å. Structure refinement is currently under way; the initial electron-density maps clearly show non-protein electron density in the vicinity of the carbohydrate binding site, indicating the presence of one lactose molecule. The structure will help to improve understanding of the binding specificity and function of the potential colon cancer marker galectin-4.« less

  4. Highly robust crystalsome via directed polymer crystallization at curved liquid/liquid interface

    PubMed Central

    Wang, Wenda; Qi, Hao; Zhou, Tian; Mei, Shan; Han, Lin; Higuchi, Takeshi; Jinnai, Hiroshi; Li, Christopher Y.

    2016-01-01

    Lipids and amphiphilic block copolymers spontaneously self-assemble in water to form a plethora of micelles and vesicles. They are typically fluidic in nature and often mechanically weak for applications such as drug delivery and gene therapeutics. Mechanical properties of polymeric materials could be improved by forming crystalline structures. However, most of the self-assembled micelles and vesicles have curved surfaces and precisely tuning crystallization within a nanoscale curved space is challenging, as the curved geometry is incommensurate with crystals having three-dimensional translational symmetry. Herein, we report using a miniemulsion crystallization method to grow nanosized, polymer single-crystal-like capsules. We coin the name crystalsome to describe this unique structure, because they are formed by polymer lamellar crystals and their structure mimics liposomes and polymersomes. Using poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) as the model polymer, we show that curved water/p-xylene interface formed by the miniemulsion process can guide the growth of PLLA single crystals. Crystalsomes with the size ranging from ∼148 nm to over 1 μm have been formed. Atomic force microscopy measurement demonstrate a two to three orders of magnitude increase in bending modulus compared with conventional polymersomes. We envisage that this novel structure could shed light on investigating spherical crystallography and drug delivery. PMID:26837260

  5. Single crystal growth of spin-ladder compound La8Cu7O19 by the travelling-solvent floating zone method

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mohan, A.; Singh, S.; Partzsch, S.; Zwiebler, M.; Geck, J.; Wurmehl, S.; Büchner, B.; Hess, C.

    2016-08-01

    Large single crystals of La8Cu7O19 have been grown using the travelling-solvent floating zone method. A rather high oxygen pressure of 9 bar in the growth chamber and a slow growth speed of 0.5 mm/h were among the most important parameters in stabilizing the growth of this incongruently melting compound. Interestingly, a novel growth scenario has been witnessed. The crystal structure of the grown La8Cu7O19 crystal has been analyzed using single crystal diffractometry to extract important structural parameters of this compound. We find that La8Cu7O19 crystallizes in a monoclinic structure with space group C 2 / c and has the lattice parameters a ≈ 13.83 Å, b ≈ 3.75 Å, c ≈ 34.59 Å, and β ≈ 99.33 °, in good agreement with the data obtained on polycrystalline samples in the literature. The magnetization shows a highly anisotropic behavior, and an anomaly at T ≈103 K.

  6. Crystal structure, Raman scattering and magnetic properties of CuCr2-xZrxSe4 and CuCr2-xSnxSe4 selenospinels

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pinto, C.; Galdámez, A.; Barahona, P.; Moris, S.; Peña, O.

    2018-06-01

    Selenospinels, CuCr2-xMxSe4 (M = Zr and Sn), were synthesized via conventional solid-state reactions. The crystal structure of CuCr1.5Sn0.5Se4, CuCr1.7Sn0.3Se4, CuCr1.5Zr0.5Se4, and CuCr1.8Zr0.2Se4 were determined using single-crystal X-ray diffraction. All the phases crystallized in a cubic spinel-type structure. The chemical compositions of the single-crystals were examined using energy-dispersive X-ray analysis (EDS). Powder X-ray diffraction patterns of CuCr1.3Sn0.7Se4 and CuCr1.7Sn0.3Se4 were consistent with phases belonging to the Fd 3 bar m Space group. An analysis of the vibrational properties on the single-crystals was performed using Raman scattering measurements. The magnetic properties showed a spin glass behavior with increasing Sn content and ferromagnetic order for CuCr1.7Sn0.3Se4.

  7. A new crystal form of a hyperthermophilic endocellulase

    PubMed Central

    Kataoka, Misumi; Ishikawa, Kazuhiko

    2014-01-01

    The hyperthermophilic glycoside hydrolase family endocellulase 12 from the archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus (EGPf; Gene ID PF0854; EC 3.2.1.4) catalyzes the hydrolytic cleavage of the β-1,4-glucosidic linkage in β-glucan in lignocellulose biomass. A crystal of EGPf was previously prepared at pH 9.0 and its structure was determined at an atomic resolution of 1.07 Å. This article reports the crystallization of EGPf at the more physiologically relevant pH of 5.5. Structure determination showed that this new crystal form has the symmetry of space group C2. Two molecules of the enzyme are observed in the asymmetric unit. Crystal packing is weak at pH 5.5 owing to two flexible interfaces between symmetry-related molecules. Comparison of the EGPf structures obtained at pH 9.0 and pH 5.5 reveals a significant conformational difference at the active centre and in the surface loops. The interfaces in the vicinity of the flexible surface loops impact the quality of the EGPf crystal. PMID:25005081

  8. Crystallization and initial X-ray diffraction studies of scaffolding protein (gp7) of bacteriophage ϕ29

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Badasso, Mohammed O., E-mail: badas001@umn.edu; Anderson, Dwight L.; Department of Oral Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455

    2005-04-01

    ϕ29 bacteriophage scaffolding protein (gp7) has been overproduced in E. coli, purified, crystallized and characterized by X-ray diffraction. Two distinct crystal forms were obtained and a diffraction data set was collected to 1.8 Å resolution. The Bacillus subtilis bacteriophage ϕ29 scaffolding protein (gp7) has been crystallized by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method at 293 K. Two new distinct crystal forms that both differed from a previously crystallized and solved scaffolding protein were grown under the same conditions. Form I belongs to the primitive tetragonal space group P4{sub 1}2{sub 1}2, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 77.13, c = 37.12 Å.more » Form II crystals exhibit an orthorhombic crystal form, with space group C222 and unit-cell parameters a = 107.50, b = 107. 80, c = 37.34 Å. Complete data sets have been collected to 1.78 and 1.80 Å for forms I and II, respectively, at 100 K using Cu Kα X-rays from a rotating-anode generator. Calculation of a V{sub M} value of 2.46 Å{sup 3} Da{sup −1} for form I suggests the presence of one molecule in the asymmetric unit, corresponding to a solvent content of 50.90%, whereas form II has a V{sub M} of 4.80 Å{sup 3} Da{sup −1} with a solvent content of 48.76% and two molecules in the asymmetric unit. The structures of both crystal forms are being determined by the molecular-replacement method using the coordinates of the published crystal structure of gp7.« less

  9. A functional role of Rv1738 in Mycobacterium tuberculosis persistence suggested by racemic protein crystallography.

    PubMed

    Bunker, Richard D; Mandal, Kalyaneswar; Bashiri, Ghader; Chaston, Jessica J; Pentelute, Bradley L; Lott, J Shaun; Kent, Stephen B H; Baker, Edward N

    2015-04-07

    Protein 3D structure can be a powerful predictor of function, but it often faces a critical roadblock at the crystallization step. Rv1738, a protein from Mycobacterium tuberculosis that is strongly implicated in the onset of nonreplicating persistence, and thereby latent tuberculosis, resisted extensive attempts at crystallization. Chemical synthesis of the L- and D-enantiomeric forms of Rv1738 enabled facile crystallization of the D/L-racemic mixture. The structure was solved by an ab initio approach that took advantage of the quantized phases characteristic of diffraction by centrosymmetric crystals. The structure, containing L- and D-dimers in a centrosymmetric space group, revealed unexpected homology with bacterial hibernation-promoting factors that bind to ribosomes and suppress translation. This suggests that the functional role of Rv1738 is to contribute to the shutdown of ribosomal protein synthesis during the onset of nonreplicating persistence of M. tuberculosis.

  10. Na3Tb(PO4)2: Synthesis, crystal structure and greenish emitting properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Dan; Ma, Zhao; Liu, Bao-Zhong; Zhang, Rui-Juan; Wu, Zhi-Qiang; Wang, Jian; Duan, Pei-Gao

    2018-03-01

    A anhydrous orthoborate Na3Tb(PO4)2 has been prepared and its crystal structure was determined by X-Ray diffraction of a non-merohedral twinned single crystal. The results show that the compound crystallizes in monoclinic space group C2/c and the structure features a 3D framework containing PO4, NaO6, NaO7, NaO8 and TbO8 polyhedra. Under near-UV excitation (370 nm), Na3Tb(PO4)2 shows intense characteristic emission bands of Tb3+ (490 nm, 543 nm, 585 nm and 620 nm) with the CIE coordinate of (0.3062, 0.5901), corresponding to greenish color. The excitation spectrum covers a wide range from 340 nm to 390 nm, which indicates that phosphor Na3Tb(PO4)2 can be efficiently activated by near-UV LED ship.

  11. Crystal Structure and Ferroelectric Properties of ε-Ga2O3 Films Grown on (0001)-Sapphire.

    PubMed

    Mezzadri, Francesco; Calestani, Gianluca; Boschi, Francesco; Delmonte, Davide; Bosi, Matteo; Fornari, Roberto

    2016-11-21

    The crystal structure and ferroelectric properties of ε-Ga 2 O 3 deposited by low-temperature MOCVD on (0001)-sapphire were investigated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and the dynamic hysteresis measurement technique. A thorough investigation of this relatively unknown polymorph of Ga 2 O 3 showed that it is composed of layers of both octahedrally and tetrahedrally coordinated Ga 3+ sites, which appear to be occupied with a 66% probability. The refinement of the crystal structure in the noncentrosymmetric space group P6 3 mc pointed out the presence of uncompensated electrical dipoles suggesting ferroelectric properties, which were finally demonstrated by independent measurements of the ferroelectric hysteresis. A clear epitaxial relation is observed with respect to the c-oriented sapphire substrate, with the Ga 2 O 3 [10-10] direction being parallel to the Al 2 O 3 direction [11-20], yielding a lattice mismatch of about 4.1%.

  12. Order-disorder phase transitions and their influence on the structure and vibrational properties of new hybrid material: 2-Amino-4-methyl-3-nitropyridinium trifluoroacetate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lorenc, J.; Bryndal, I.; Syska, W.; Wandas, M.; Marchewka, M.; Pietraszko, A.; Lis, T.; Mączka, M.; Hermanowicz, K.; Hanuza, J.

    2010-08-01

    New organic-organic salt, 2-amino-4-methyl-3-nitropyridinium trifluoroacetate, has been synthesised and characterised by FT-IR, FT-Raman, DSC and single crystal X-ray crystallography. The 2-amino-4-methyl-3-nitropyridinium trifluoroacetate undergoes a reversible phase transition at ˜162 K. The X-ray structures, vibrational spectra and quantum chemical DFT calculations (B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) approach) have been analysed for high-temperature and low-temperature modifications of the compound, which both crystallize in orthorhombic space group Pbca with two non-equivalent cations and two anions in the asymmetric unit. Their crystal and molecular structures have been compared and the role of the intermolecular interactions in these crystals has been analysed. The mechanisms of the phase transition have been proposed.

  13. Structure of Ce2RhIn8: an example of complementary use of high-resolution neutron powder diffraction and reciprocal-space mapping to study complex materials.

    PubMed

    Moshopoulou, E G; Ibberson, R M; Sarrao, J L; Thompson, J D; Fisk, Z

    2006-04-01

    The room-temperature crystal structure of the heavy fermion antiferromagnet Ce2RhIn8, dicerium rhodium octaindide, has been studied by a combination of high-resolution synchrotron X-ray reciprocal-space mapping of single crystals and high-resolution time-of-flight neutron powder diffraction. The structure is disordered, exhibiting a complex interplay of non-periodic, partially correlated planar defects, coexistence and segregation of polytypic phases (induced by periodic planar ;defects'), mosaicity (i.e. domain misalignment) and non-uniform strain. These effects evolve as a function of temperature in a complicated way, but they remain down to low temperatures. The room-temperature diffraction data are best represented by a complex mixture of two polytypic phases, which are affected by non-periodic, partially correlated planar defects, differ slightly in their tetragonal structures, and exhibit different mosaicities and strain values. Therefore, Ce2RhIn8 approaches the paracrystalline state, rather than the classic crystalline state and thus several of the concepts of conventional single-crystal crystallography are inapplicable. The structural results are discussed in the context of the role of disorder in the heavy-fermion state and in the interplay between superconductivity and magnetism.

  14. Diffusion paths formation for Cu + ions in superionic Cu 6PS 5I single crystals studied in terms of structural phase transition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gągor, A.; Pietraszko, A.; Kaynts, D.

    2005-11-01

    In order to understand the structural transformations leading to high ionic conductivity of Cu + ions in Cu 6PS 5I argyrodite compound, the detailed structure analysis based on single-crystal X-ray diffraction has been performed. Below the phase transition at T=(144-169) K Cu 6PS 5I belongs to monoclinic, ferroelastic phase (space group Cc) with ordered copper sublattice. Above Tc delocalization of copper ions begins and crystal changes the symmetry to cubic superstructure with space group F-43 c ( a'=19.528 Å, z=32). Finally, above T1=274 K increasing disordering of the Cu + ions heightens the symmetry to F-43 m ( a=9.794 Å, z=4). In this work, the final structural model of two cubic phases is presented including the detailed temperature evolution of positions and site occupation factors of copper ions ( R1=0.0397 for F-43 c phase, and 0.0245 for F-43 m phase). Possible diffusion paths for the copper ions are represented by means of the atomic displacement factors and split model. The structural results coincide well with the previously reported non-Arrhenius behavior of conductivity and indicate significant change in conduction mechanism.

  15. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray data of the FadA adhesin from Fusobacterium nucleatum

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Nithianantham, Stanley; Xu, Minghua; Wu, Nan

    2006-12-01

    The FadA adhesin from F. nucleatum, which is involved in bacterial attachment and invasion of human oral epithelial cells, has been crystallized in space group P6{sub 1} or P6{sub 5}, and X-ray data have been collected to 1.9 Å resolution. Fusobacterium nucleatum is a Gram-negative anaerobe prevalent in the oral cavity that is associated with periodontal disease, preterm birth and infections in other parts of the human body. The bacteria attach to and invade epithelial and endothelial cells in the gum tissue and elsewhere via a 13.7 kDa adhesin protein FadA (Fusobacterium adhesin A). FadA exists in two forms: themore » intact form (pre-FadA), consisting of 129 amino acids, and the mature form (mFadA), which lacks an 18-residue signal sequence. Both forms have been expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. mFadA has been crystallized. The crystals belong to the hexagonal space group P6{sub 1} or P6{sub 5}, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 59.3, c = 125.7 Å and one molecule per asymmetric unit. The crystals exhibit an unusually high solvent content of 74%. Synchrotron X-ray data have been collected to 1.9 Å. The crystals are suitable for X-ray structure determination. The crystal structure of FadA may provide a basis for the development of therapeutic agents to combat periodontal disease and other infections associated with F. nucleatum.« less

  16. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1992-06-01

    Malic Enzyme is a target protein for drug design because it is a key protein in the life cycle of intestinal parasites. After 2 years of effort on Earth, investigators were unable to produce any crystals that were of high enough quality and for this reason the structure of this important protein could not be determined. Crystals obtained from one STS-50 were of superior quality allowing the structure to be determined. This is just one example why access to space is so vital for these studies. Principal Investigator is Larry DeLucas.

  17. Crystal structures and theoretical studies of polyphosphate LiZnP3O9 for nonlinear optical applications

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xie, Zhiqing; Su, Xin; Ding, Hanqin; Li, Hongyi

    2018-06-01

    Nonlinear optical materials have attracted worldwide attention owing to their wide range of applications, specially in the laser field. Phosphates with noncentrosymmetric structures are potential candidates for novel ultraviolet (UV)-NLO materials, because they usually display short UV cut-off edges. In this work, a polyphosphate, the LiZnP3O9 polyphosphate crystals were grown through spontaneous crystallization from high-temperature melts. It crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group P212121 with unit cell parameters a = 8.330(3) Å, b = 8.520(3) Å, c = 8.635(3) Å, and Z = 4. In the structure, all the P atoms are coordinated by four oxygen atoms forming the [PO4] tetrahedra and further connected to generate a zig-zag [PO3]∞ anionic framework. Thermal analysis, IR spectroscopy, UV-vis-NIR diffuse reflectance spectrum and powder second harmonic generation measurements are performed. In addition, the first-principles calculation was employed for better understanding the structure-property relationships of LiZnP3O9.

  18. Crystal Structure Variations of Sn Nanoparticles upon Heating

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mittal, Jagjiwan; Lin, Kwang-Lung

    2018-04-01

    Structural changes in Sn nanoparticles during heating below the melting point have been investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), x-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis, electron diffraction (ED), and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). DSC revealed that the heat required to melt the nanoparticles (28.43 J/g) was about half compared with Sn metal (52.80 J/g), which was attributed to the large surface energy contribution for the nanoparticles. ED and XRD analyses of the Sn nanoparticles revealed increased intensity for crystal planes having large interplaner distances compared with regular crystal planes with increasing heat treatment temperature (HTT). HRTEM revealed an increase in interlayer spacing at the surface and near joints between nanoparticles with the HTT, leading to an amorphous structure of nanoparticles at the surface at 220°C. These results highlight the changes that occur in the morphology and crystal structure of Sn nanoparticles at the surface and in the interior with increase of the heat treatment temperature.

  19. Coarsening Dynamics of Inclusions and Thermocapillary Phenomena in Smectic Liquid Crystal Bubbles

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Park, Cheol; Maclennan, Joseph; Glaser, Matthew; Clark, Noel; Trittel, Torsten; Eremin, Alexey; Stannarius, Ralf; Tin, Padetha; Hall, Nancy

    The Observation and Analysis of Smectic Islands in Space (OASIS) project comprises a series of experiments that probe interfacial and hydrodynamic behavior of thin spherical-bubbles of smectic liquid crystal in microgravity. Smectic films are the thinnest known stable condensed phase structures, making them ideal for studies of two-dimensional (2D) coarsening dynamics and thermocapillary phenomena in microgravity. The OASIS flight hardware was launched on SpaceX-6 in April 2015 and experiments were carried out on the International Space Station using four different smectic A and C liquid crystal materials in separate sample chambers. We will describe the behavior of collective island dynamics on the bubbles, including temperature gradient-induced themomigration, and the diffusion and coalescence-driven coarsening dynamics of island emulsions in microgravity. This work was supported by NASA Grant No. NNX-13AQ81G, and NSF MRSEC Grants No. DMR-0820579 and DMR-1420736.

  20. Crystallization and X-ray diffraction analysis of a putative bacterial class I labdane-related diterpene synthase.

    PubMed

    Serrano-Posada, Hugo; Centeno-Leija, Sara; Rojas-Trejo, Sonia; Stojanoff, Vivian; Rodríguez-Sanoja, Romina; Rudiño-Piñera, Enrique; Sánchez, Sergio

    2015-09-01

    Labdane-related diterpenoids are natural products with potential pharmaceutical applications that are rarely found in bacteria. Here, a putative class I labdane-related diterpene synthase (LrdC) identified by genome mining in a streptomycete was successfully crystallized using the microbatch method. Crystals of the LrdC enzyme were obtained in a holo form with its natural cofactor Mg(2+) (LrdC-Mg(2+)) and in complex with inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) (LrdC-Mg(2+)-PPi). Crystals of native LrdC-Mg(2+) diffracted to 2.50 Å resolution and belonged to the trigonal space group P3221, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 107.1, c = 89.2 Å. Crystals of the LrdC-Mg(2+)-PPi complex grown in the same conditions as the native enzyme with PEG 8000 diffracted to 2.36 Å resolution and also belonged to the trigonal space group P3221. Crystals of the LrdC-Mg(2+)-PPi complex grown in a second crystallization condition with PEG 3350 diffracted to 2.57 Å resolution and belonged to the monoclinic space group P21, with unit-cell parameters a = 49.9, b = 104.1, c = 66.5 Å, β = 111.4°. The structure was determined by the single-wavelength anomalous dispersion (SAD) technique using the osmium signal from a potassium hexachloroosmate (IV) derivative.

  1. Rb3TlBr6•1.14H2O

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Kuprysyuk, V.; Savysyuk, I.; Zaremba, R.

    This document is part of Subvolume A10 'Structure Types. Part 10: Space Groups (140) I4/mcm - (136) P42/mnm' of Volume 43 'Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III 'Condensed Matter'.

  2. NaGa[TeO3]2[H2O]2.4

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Villars, P.; Cenzual, K.; Daams, J.; Gladyshevskii, R.; Shcherban, O.; Dubenskyy, V.; Melnichenko-Koblyuk, N.; Pavlyuk, O.; Savysyuk, I.; Stoyko, S.; Sysa, L.

    This document is part of Subvolume A6 `Structure Types. Part 6: Space Groups (166) R-3m - (160) R3m' of Volume 43 `Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds' of Landolt-Börnstein - Group III `Condensed Matter'.

  3. Synthesis, characterization and computational studies of 3-{(E)-[(2-hydroxyphenyl)imino]methyl}benzene-1,2-diol and molecular structure of its zwitterionic form

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ezeorah, Julius Chigozie; Ossai, Valentine; Obasi, Lawrence Nnamdi; Elzagheid, Mohamed I.; Rhyman, Lydia; Lutter, Michael; Jurkschat, Klaus; Dege, Necmi; Ramasami, Ponnadurai

    2018-01-01

    The Schiff base 3-{(E)-[(2-hydroxyphenyl)imino]methyl}benzene-1,2-diol was synthesized by the condensation of 2,3-dihydroxybenzaldehyde and 2-aminophenol in water at room temperature. The crystal was grown using two solvents (dry methanol and 60% methanol). The compound was characterized using elemental microanalysis, IR, NMR, UV spectroscopies and single-crystal X-ray diffraction crystallography. The X-ray structure reveals that the Schiff base crystallizes as a methanol solvate in dry methanol with triclinic crystal system, space group P-1 and Z = 2 in the unit cell and as a non-methanol solvate in 60% methanol with triclinic crystal system, space group P-1 and Z = 4 in the unit cell. The compound showed absorption bands at 272, 389, 473 and 602 nm in DMSO. These bands were assigned as π → π ∗, n → π∗ and n-σ∗ transitions. The 473 and 602 nm bands in DMSO reveal that the compound exists in tautomeric forms. The presence of N-H, C-O and Cdbnd N stretching vibrations in the IR spectrum indicates that the compound is zwitterionic in the solid state. This study was supplemented using density functional theory method.

  4. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of alginate lyases A1-II and A1-II′ from Sphingomonas sp. A1

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Yamasaki, Masayuki; Ogura, Kohei; Moriwaki, Satoko

    The crystallization and preliminary characterization of the family PL-7 alginate lyases A1-II and A1-II′ from Sphingomonas sp. A1 are presented. Alginate lyases depolymerize alginate, a heteropolysaccharide consisting of α-l-guluronate and β-d-mannuronate, through a β-elimination reaction. The alginate lyases A1-II (25 kDa) and A1-II′ (25 kDa) from Sphingomonas sp. A1, which belong to polysaccharide lyase family PL-7, exhibit 68% homology in primary structure but have different substrate specificities. To determine clearly the structural basis for substrate recognition in the depolymerization mechanism by alginate lyases, both proteins were crystallized at 293 K using the vapour-diffusion method. A crystal of A1-II belonged tomore » space group P2{sub 1} and diffracted to 2.2 Å resolution, with unit-cell parameters a = 51.3, b = 30.1, c = 101.6 Å, β = 100.2°, while a crystal of A1-II′ belonged to space group P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2{sub 1} and diffracted to 1.0 Å resolution, with unit-cell parameters a = 34.6, b = 68.5, c = 80.3 Å.« less

  5. Trithallium hydrogen bis(sulfate), Tl(3)H(SO(4))(2), in the super-ionic phase by X-ray powder diffraction.

    PubMed

    Matsuo, Yasumitsu; Kawachi, Shinya; Shimizu, Yuya; Ikehata, Seiichiro

    2002-07-01

    The structure of trithallium hydrogen bis(sulfate), Tl(3)H(SO(4))(2), in the super-ionic phase has been analyzed by Rietveld analysis of the X-ray powder diffraction pattern. Atomic parameters based on the isotypic Rb(3)H(SeO(4))(2) crystal in space group R3m in the super-ionic phase were used as the starting model, because it has been shown from the comparison of thermal and electric properties in Tl(3)H(SO(4))(2) and M(3)H(SO(4))(2) type crystals (M = Rb, Cs or NH(4)) that the room-temperature Tl(3)H(SO(4))(2) phase is isostructural with the high-temperature R3m-symmetry M(3)H(SO(4))(2) crystals. The structure was determined in the trigonal space group R3m and the Rietveld refinement shows that an hydrogen-bond O-H...O separation is slightly shortened compared with O-H...O separations in isotypic M(3)H(SeO(4))(2) crystals. In addition, it was found that the distortion of the SO(4) tetrahedra in Tl(3)H(SO(4))(2) is less than that in isotypic crystals.

  6. Magneto-elastic coupling across the first-order transition in the distorted kagome lattice antiferromagnet Dy3Ru4Al12

    PubMed Central

    Henriques, M.S.; Gorbunov, D.I.; Kriegner, D.; Vališka, M.; Andreev, A.V.; Matěj, Z.

    2018-01-01

    Structural changes through the first-order paramagnetic-antiferromagnetic phase transition of Dy3Ru4Al12 at 7 K have been studied by means of X-ray diffraction and thermal expansion measurements. The compound crystallizes in a hexagonal crystal structure of Gd3Ru4Al12 type (P63/mmc space group), and no structural phase transition has been found in the temperature interval between 2.5 and 300 K. Nevertheless, due to the spin-lattice coupling the crystal volume undergoes a small orthorhombic distortion of the order of 2×10-5 as the compound enters the antiferromagnetic state. We propose that the first-order phase transition is not driven by the structural changes but rather by the exchange interactions present in the system. PMID:29445250

  7. Crystal structures of the free and inhibited forms of plasmepsin I (PMI) from Plasmodium falciparum

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bhaumik, Prasenjit; Horimoto, Yasumi; Xiao, Huogen

    2011-09-06

    Plasmepsin I (PMI) is one of the four vacuolar pepsin-like proteases responsible for hemoglobin degradation by the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum, and the only one with no crystal structure reported to date. Due to substantial functional redundancy of these enzymes, lack of inhibition of even a single plasmepsin can defeat efforts in creating effective antiparasitic agents. We have now solved crystal structures of the recombinant PMI as apoenzyme and in complex with the potent peptidic inhibitor, KNI-10006, at the resolution of 2.4 and 3.1 {angstrom}, respectively. The apoenzyme crystallized in the orthorhombic space group P2{sub 1}2{sub 1}2{sub 1} with twomore » molecules in the asymmetric unit and the structure has been refined to the final R-factor of 20.7%. The KNI-10006 bound enzyme crystallized in the tetragonal space group P4{sub 3} with four molecules in the asymmetric unit and the structure has been refined to the final R-factor of 21.1%. In the PMI-KNI-10006 complex, the inhibitors were bound identically to all four enzyme molecules, with the opposite directionality of the main chain of KNI-10006 relative to the direction of the enzyme substrates. Such a mode of binding of inhibitors containing an allophenylnorstatine-dimethylthioproline insert in the P1-P1' positions, previously reported in a complex with PMIV, demonstrates the importance of satisfying the requirements for the proper positioning of the functional groups in the mechanism-based inhibitors towards the catalytic machinery of aspartic proteases, as opposed to binding driven solely by the specificity of the individual enzymes. A comparison of the structure of the PMI-KNI-10006 complex with the structures of other vacuolar plasmepsins identified the important differences between them and may help in the design of specific inhibitors targeting the individual enzymes.« less

  8. Crystal structure, matrix-isolation FTIR, and UV-induced conformational isomerization of 3-quinolinecarboxaldehyde.

    PubMed

    Kuş, Nihal; Henriques, Marta Sofia; Paixão, José António; Lapinski, Leszek; Fausto, Rui

    2014-09-25

    The crystal structure of 3-quinolinecarboxaldehyde (3QC) has been solved, and the compound has been shown to crystallize in the space group P21/c (monoclinic) with a = 6.306(4), b = 18.551(11), c = 6.999(4) Å, β = 106.111(13)°, and Z = 4. The crystals were found to exhibit pseudomerohedral twinning with a twin law corresponding to a two-fold rotation around the monoclinic (100) reciprocal lattice axis (or [4 0 1] in direct space). Individual molecules adopt the syn conformation in the crystal, with the oxygen atom of the aldehyde substituent directed toward the same side of the ring nitrogen atom. In the gas phase, the compound exists in two nearly isoenergetic conformers (syn and anti), which could be successfully trapped in solid argon at 10 K, and their infrared spectra are registered and interpreted. Upon in situ irradiation of matrix-isolated 3QC with UV light (λ > 315 nm), significant reduction of the population of the less stable anti conformer was observed, while that of the conformational ground state (syn conformer) increased, indicating occurrence of the anti → syn isomerization. Upon irradiation at higher energy (λ > 235 nm), the syn → anti reverse photoreaction was observed. Interpretation of the structural, spectroscopic, and photochemical experimental data received support from quantum chemical theoretical results obtained at both DFT/B3LYP (including TD-DFT investigation of excited states) and MP2 levels, using the 6-311++G(d,p) basis set.

  9. Crystalline structures, thermal properties and crystallizing mechanism of polyamide 6 nanotubes in confined space

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Xiaoru; Peng, Zhi; Yang, Chao; Han, Ping; Song, Guojun; Cong, Longliang

    2016-09-01

    The polyamide 6 (PA6) nanotubes were prepared by infiltrating the anodic aluminum oxide templates with polymer solution. Crystalline regions in the nanotube walls were detected by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). X-ray diffraction (XRD), Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) techniques were employed to investigate crystallization, crystal faces and thermodynamics. It was found that the crystals were transformed from α-form in bulk to γ-form in nanotubes. It was made a detailed analysis in this article. Moreover, schematic diagram for the crystallizing mechanism of PA6 nanotubes was given to explain PA6 molecules how to crystallize in the nano-pores.

  10. Microgravity sciences application visiting scientist program

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Glicksman, Martin; Vanalstine, James

    1995-01-01

    Marshall Space Flight Center pursues scientific research in the area of low-gravity effects on materials and processes. To facilitate these Government performed research responsibilities, a number of supplementary research tasks were accomplished by a group of specialized visiting scientists. They participated in work on contemporary research problems with specific objectives related to current or future space flight experiments and defined and established independent programs of research which were based on scientific peer review and the relevance of the defined research to NASA microgravity for implementing a portion of the national program. The programs included research in the following areas: protein crystal growth, X-ray crystallography and computer analysis of protein crystal structure, optimization and analysis of protein crystal growth techniques, and design and testing of flight hardware.

  11. Exploratory Solid-State Synthesis of Uranium Chalcogenides and Mixed Anion Uranium Chalcogenides

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ward, Matthew David

    Several uranium chalcogenides and mixed anion uranium chalcogenides have been synthesized by solid-state synthetic methods. Structural determinations were carried out via single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Some of these compounds have been further characterized by magnetic measurements, optical properties measurements, Raman spectroscopy, resistivity measurements, XANES and XPS. Eight compounds of the composition MU8Q17 were synthesized and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. All of these compounds crystallize in the CrU8S17 structure type. XANES measurements indicate that ScU8S17 contains Sc3+ and must be charge balanced with some amount of U 3+. Two compounds of the composition ATiU3Te9 crystallize as black rectangular plates. From single-crystal magnetic measurements, CsTiU 3Te9 is consistent with antiferromagnetic coupling between magnetic U atoms. The uranium chalcogenide compounds NiUS3 and Cr4US 8 were synthesized from reaction of the elements in various fluxes. NiUS3 crystallizes in the GdFeO3 structure type. Cr 4US8 crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group D - Pnma and its structure is related to that of Li4UF 8. The compounds Rh2U6S15, Cs 2Ti2U6Se15, and Cs2Cr 2U6Se15 crystallize as black prisms in the cubic space group O-Im3m. Magnetic measurements on Cs 2Cr2U6Se15 give a value for the Weiss temperature, θWeiss, of 57.59 K, indicative of ferromagnetic coupling. Black plates of CsScU(Se2)Se3 were synthesized from the reaction of the elements in a CsCl flux. CsScU(Se2)Se 3 crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group D- Cmcm . Magnetic susceptibility measurements on CsScU(Se2)Se 3 indicate three regions of magnetic response. The uranium double salt Cs5[U2(μ-S 2)2Cl8]I crystallizes as red plates. Cs 5[U2(μ-S2)2Cl 8]I displays optical anisotropy with band gap energies of 1.99 eV and 2.08 eV along the [001] and [100] polarizations. The uranium oxychalcogenides U7O2Se12 and Na2Ba2(UO2)S4 were synthesized by intentional oxygen contamination. The structure of U7O 2Se12 is related to the previously reported U7Q 12. Na2Ba2(UO2)S4 contains isolated uranyl polyhedra in which each uranium atom may be assigned an oxidation state of +6. The four uranium(IV) chlorophosphates, UCl4(POCl3), [U2Cl9][PCl4], UCl3(PO2Cl 2), and U2Cl8(POCl3) were synthesized in an effort to synthesize new novel uranyl sulfides. All are unstable, but UCl4(POCl3) is the thermodynamically favorable phase.

  12. A low-temperature polymorph of m-quinquephenyl.

    PubMed

    Gomes, Ligia R; Howie, R Alan; Low, John Nicolson; Rodrigues, Ana S M C; Santos, Luís M N B F

    2012-12-01

    A low-temperature polymorph of 1,1':3',1'':3'',1''':3''',1''''-quinquephenyl (m-quinquephenyl), C(30)H(22), crystallizes in the space group P2(1)/c with two molecules in the asymmetric unit. The crystal is a three-component nonmerohedral twin. A previously reported room-temperature polymorph [Rabideau, Sygula, Dhar & Fronczek (1993). Chem. Commun. pp. 1795-1797] also crystallizes with two molecules in the asymmetric unit in the space group P-1. The unit-cell volume for the low-temperature polymorph is 4120.5 (4) Å(3), almost twice that of the room-temperature polymorph which is 2102.3 (6) Å(3). The molecules in both structures adopt a U-shaped conformation with similar geometric parameters. The structural packing is similar in both compounds, with the molecules lying in layers which stack perpendicular to the longest unit-cell axis. The molecules pack alternately in the layers and in the stacked columns. In both polymorphs, the only interactions between the molecules which can stabilize the packing are very weak C-H...π interactions.

  13. Purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction of the C-terminal bromodomain from human BRD2

    PubMed Central

    Umehara, Takashi; Wakamori, Masatoshi; Tanaka, Akiko; Padmanabhan, Balasundaram; Yokoyama, Shigeyuki

    2007-01-01

    BRD2 is a bromodomain-containing BET-family protein that associates with acetylated histones throughout the cell cycle. Although the tertiary structures of the bromodomains involved in histone acetyl transfer are already known, the structures of the BET-type bromodomains, which are required for tight association with acetylated chromatin, are poorly understood. Here, the expression, purification and crystallization of the C-terminal bromodomain of human BRD2 are reported. The protein was crystallized by the sitting-drop vapour-diffusion method in the orthorhombic space group P21212, with unit-cell parameters a = 71.78, b = 52.60, c = 32.06 Å and one molecule per asymmetric unit. The crystal diffracted beyond 1.80 Å resolution using synchrotron radiation. PMID:17620725

  14. Studies of Nucleation, Growth, Specific Heat, and Viscosity of Undercooled Melts of Quasicrystals and Polytetrahedral-Phase-Forming Alloys

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Kelton, K. F.; Croat, T. K.; Gangopadhyay, A.; Holland-Moritz, D.; Hyers, Robert W.; Rathz, Thomas J.; Robinson, Michael B.; Rogers, Jan R.

    2001-01-01

    Undercooling experiments and thermal physical property measurements of metallic alloys on the International Space Station (ISS) are planned. This recently-funded research focuses on fundamental issues of the formation and structure of highly-ordered non-crystallographic phases (quasicrystals) and related crystal phases (crystal approximants), and the connections between the atomic structures of these phases and those of liquids and glasses. It extends studies made previously by us of the composition dependence of crystal nucleation processes in silicate and metallic glasses, to the case of nucleation from the liquid phase. Motivating results from rf-levitation and drop-tube measurements of the undercooling of Ti/Zr-based liquids that form quasicrystals and crystal approximants are discussed. Preliminary measurements by electrostatic levitation (ESL) are presented.

  15. Crystal structure of paliperidone palmitate (INVEGA SUSTENNA®), C39H57FN4O4

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kaduk, James A.; Dmitrienko, Artem O.; Gindhart, Amy M.

    2017-08-29

    The crystal structure of paliperidone palmitate has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional techniques. Paliperidone palmitate crystallizes in space groupP2 1/c(#14) witha= 34.415 40(35),b= 10.093 49(7),c= 10.904 92(9) Å,β= 94.3917(9)°,V= 3776.94(6) Å 3, andZ= 4. The conformation of the paliperidone fragment differs from that of the parent compound. The palmitate chain exhibits a slight twist close to the ester group. Several C–H•••O hydrogen bonds contribute to the crystal packing, which is dominated by van der Waals interactions. The powder pattern is included in the Powder Diffraction File™ as entry 00-066-1614.

  16. DNA-mediated nanoparticle crystallization into Wulff polyhedra

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Auyeung, Evelyn; Li, Ting I. N. G.; Senesi, Andrew J.; Schmucker, Abrin L.; Pals, Bridget C.; de La Cruz, Monica Olvera; Mirkin, Chad A.

    2014-01-01

    Crystallization is a fundamental and ubiquitous process much studied over the centuries. But although the crystallization of atoms is fairly well understood, it remains challenging to predict reliably the outcome of molecular crystallization processes that are complicated by various molecular interactions and solvent involvement. This difficulty also applies to nanoparticles: high-quality three-dimensional crystals are mostly produced using drying and sedimentation techniques that are often impossible to rationalize and control to give a desired crystal symmetry, lattice spacing and habit (crystal shape). In principle, DNA-mediated assembly of nanoparticles offers an ideal opportunity for studying nanoparticle crystallization: a well-defined set of rules have been developed to target desired lattice symmetries and lattice constants, and the occurrence of features such as grain boundaries and twinning in DNA superlattices and traditional crystals comprised of molecular or atomic building blocks suggests that similar principles govern their crystallization. But the presence of charged biomolecules, interparticle spacings of tens of nanometres, and the realization so far of only polycrystalline DNA-interconnected nanoparticle superlattices, all suggest that DNA-guided crystallization may differ from traditional crystal growth. Here we show that very slow cooling, over several days, of solutions of complementary-DNA-modified nanoparticles through the melting temperature of the system gives the thermodynamic product with a specific and uniform crystal habit. We find that our nanoparticle assemblies have the Wulff equilibrium crystal structure that is predicted from theoretical considerations and molecular dynamics simulations, thus establishing that DNA hybridization can direct nanoparticle assembly along a pathway that mimics atomic crystallization.

  17. Increasing dissolution of trospium chloride by co-crystallization with urea

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Skořepová, Eliška; Hušák, Michal; Čejka, Jan; Zámostný, Petr; Kratochvíl, Bohumil

    2014-08-01

    The search for various solid forms of an active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) is an important step in drug development. Our aim was to prepare co-crystals of trospium chloride, an anticholinergic drug used for the treatment of incontinence, and to investigate if they have advantageous properties for drug formulation. Phase identification was done by powder X-ray diffraction and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The chemical composition was verified by solution NMR and the dissolution rate of the prepared phases was studied by IDR (intrinsic dissolution rate). For further analysis of phase stability and transitions, combined thermal analysis and temperature-resolved X-ray powder diffraction were used. Urea was selected as a co-crystallization partner. Trospium chloride urea (1:1) co-crystal was prepared by a solvent evaporation. From single-crystal data, the co-crystal structure was solved in a space group P21/c and compared to previously published structures of trospium chloride. Intrinsic dissolution rate revealed that the co-crystal dissolves 32% faster than pure API. However, its low thermal and pressure stability makes it a challenging choice for the final drug formulation.

  18. Studies on the structural, optical and dielectric properties of samarium coordinated with salicylic acid single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Singh, Harjinder; Slathia, Goldy; Gupta, Rashmi; Bamzai, K. K.

    2018-04-01

    Samarium coordinated with salicylic acid was successfully grown as a single crystal by low temperature solution technique using mixed solvent of methanol and water in equal ratio. Structural characterization was carried out by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis and it crystallizes in centrosymmetric space group P121/c1. FTIR and UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopy confirmed the compound formation and help to determine the mode of binding of the ligand to the rare earth-metal ion. Dielectric constant and dielectric loss have been measured over the frequency range 100 Hz - 30MHz. The decrease in dielectric constant with increases in frequency is due to the transition from interfacial polarization to dipolar polarization. The small value of dielectric constant at higher frequency ensures that the crystal is good candidate for NLO devices. Dielectric loss represents the resistive nature of the material.

  19. Anharmonic vibrational spectroscopy, NBO charges and global chemical reactivity studies on the charge transfer PDCA-.AHMP+ single crystal using DFT calculations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Faizan, Mohd; Afroz, Ziya; Bhat, Sheeraz Ahmad; Alam, Mohamad Jane; Ahmad, Shabbir; Ahmad, Afaq

    2018-04-01

    The charge transfer (CT) complex of the 2-amino-4-hydroxy-6-methylpyrimidine and 2,3 pyrazinedicarboxylic acid (PDCA-.AHMP+) was synthesized and its single crystal was grown by solution method. The structure of the crystalline complex has been investigated by single crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD). The vibrational features of the complex have been studied with the help of FTIR spectra and DFT computation. The anharmonic corrections in vibrational frequencies are made using the GVPT2 method at B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) level of theory. The frontier molecular orbitals and global chemical reactivity have been calculated to understand the pharmacological aspect of the synthesized crystal. Furthermore, Hirshfeld electrostatic potential (ESP) surface, void space in the crystal structure and natural as well as Mulliken atomic charges are studied.

  20. Non-covalent interactions in 2-methylimidazolium copper(II) complex (MeImH)2[Cu(pfbz)4]: Synthesis, characterization, single crystal X-ray structure and packing analysis

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sharma, Raj Pal; Saini, Anju; Kumar, Santosh; Kumar, Jitendra; Sathishkumar, Ranganathan; Venugopalan, Paloth

    2017-01-01

    A new anionic copper(II) complex, (MeImH)2 [Cu(pfbz)4] (1) where, MeImH = 2-methylimidazolium and pfbz = pentafluorobenzoate has been isolated by reacting copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate, pentafluorobenzoic acid and 2-methylimidazole in ethanol: water mixture in 1:2:2 molar ratio. This complex 1 has been characterized by elemental analysis, thermogravimetric analysis, spectroscopic techniques (UV-Vis, FT-IR) and conductance measurements. The complex salt crystallizes in monoclinic crystal system with space group C2/c. Single crystal X-ray structure determination revealed the presence of discrete ions: [Cu(pfbz)4]2- anion and two 2-methylimidazolium cation (C4H7N2)+. The crystal lattice is stabilized by strong hydrogen bonding and F⋯F interactions between cationic-anionic and the anionic-anionic moieties respectively, besides π-π interactions.

  1. 3D coherent X-ray diffractive imaging of an Individual colloidal crystal grain

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shabalin, A.; Meijer, J.-M.; Sprung, M.; Petukhov, A. V.; Vartanyants, I. A.

    Self-assembled colloidal crystals represent an important model system to study nucleation phenomena and solid-solid phase transitions. They are attractive for applications in photonics and sensorics. We present results of a coherent x-ray diffractive imaging experiment performed on a single colloidal crystal grain. The full three-dimensional (3D) reciprocal space map measured by an azimuthal rotational scan contained several orders of Bragg reflections together with the coherent interference signal between them. Applying the iterative phase retrieval approach, the 3D structure of the crystal grain was reconstructed and positions of individual colloidal particles were resolved. We identified an exact stacking sequence of hexagonal close-packed layers including planar and linear defects. Our results open up a breakthrough in applications of coherent x-ray diffraction for visualization of the inner 3D structure of different mesoscopic materials, such as photonic crystals. Present address: University of California - San Diego, USA.

  2. Enhancement of broadband optical absorption in photovoltaic devices by band-edge effect of photonic crystals.

    PubMed

    Tanaka, Yoshinori; Kawamoto, Yosuke; Fujita, Masayuki; Noda, Susumu

    2013-08-26

    We numerically investigate broadband optical absorption enhancement in thin, 400-nm thick microcrystalline silicon (µc-Si) photovoltaic devices by photonic crystals (PCs). We realize absorption enhancement by coupling the light from the free space to the large area resonant modes at the photonic band-edge induced by the photonic crystals. We show that multiple photonic band-edge modes can be produced by higher order modes in the vertical direction of the Si photovoltaic layer, which can enhance the absorption on multiple wavelengths. Moreover, we reveal that the photonic superlattice structure can produce more photonic band-edge modes that lead to further optical absorption. The absorption average in wavelengths of 500-1000 nm weighted to the solar spectrum (AM 1.5) increases almost twice: from 33% without photonic crystal to 58% with a 4 × 4 period superlattice photonic crystal; our result outperforms the Lambertian textured structure.

  3. Containerless processing of single crystals in low-G environment

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Walter, H. U.

    1974-01-01

    Experiments on containerless crystal growth from the melt were conducted during Skylab missions SL3 and SL4 (Skylab Experiment M-560). Six samples of InSb were processed, one of them heavily doped with selenium. The concept of the experiment is discussed and related to general crystal growth methods and their merits as techniques for containerless processing in space. The morphology of the crystals obtained is explained in terms of volume changes associated with solidification and wetting conditions during solidification. All samples exhibit extremely well developed growth facets. Analysis by X-ray topographical methods and chemical etching shows that the crystals are of high structural perfection. Average dislocation density as revealed by etching is of the order of 100 per sq cm; no dislocation clusters could be observed in the space-grown samples. A sequence of striations that is observed in the first half of the selenium-doped sample is explained as being caused by periodic surface breakdown.

  4. Crystal growth of device quality GaAs in space

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gatos, H. C.; Lagowski, J.

    1979-01-01

    The optimization of space processing of GaAs is described. The detailed compositional, structural, and electronic characterization of GaAs on a macro- and microscale and the relationships between growth parameters and the properties of GaAs are among the factors discussed. The key parameters limiting device performance are assessed.

  5. Synthesis, Crystal and Electronic Structures of the Pnictides AE 3TrPn 3 (AE = Sr, Ba; Tr = Al, Ga; Pn = P, As)

    DOE PAGES

    Stoyko, Stanislav; Voss, Leonard; He, Hua; ...

    2015-09-24

    New ternary arsenides AE 3TrAs 3 (AE = Sr, Ba; Tr = Al, Ga) and their phosphide analogs Sr 3GaP 3 and Ba 3AlP 3 have been prepared by reactions of the respective elements at high temperatures. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies reveal that Sr 3AlAs 3 and Ba 3AlAs 3 adopt the Ba 3AlSb 3-type structure (Pearson symbol oC56, space group Cmce, Z = 8). This structure is also realized for Sr 3GaP 3 and Ba 3AlP 3. Likewise, the compounds Sr 3GaAs 3 and Ba 3GaAs 3 crystallize with the Ba 3GaSb 3-type structure (Pearson symbol oP56, space groupmore » Pnma, Z = 8). Both structures are made up of isolated pairs of edge-shared AlPn 4 and GaPn 4 tetrahedra (Pn = pnictogen, i.e., P or As), separated by the alkaline-earth Sr 2+ and Ba 2+ cations. In both cases, there are no homoatomic bonds, hence, regardless of the slightly different atomic arrangements, both structures can be rationalized as valence-precise [AE 2+] 3[Tr 3+][Pn 3-] 3, or rather [AE 2+] 6[Tr 2Pn 6] 12-, i.e., as Zintl phases.« less

  6. Structure-property relationship of supramolecular ferroelectric [H-66dmbp][Hca] accompanied by high polarization, competing structural phases, and polymorphs.

    PubMed

    Kobayashi, Kensuke; Horiuchi, Sachio; Ishibashi, Shoji; Kagawa, Fumitaka; Murakami, Youichi; Kumai, Reiji

    2014-12-22

    Three polymorphic forms of 6,6'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridinium chloranilate crystals were characterized to understand the origin of polarization properties and the thermal stability of ferroelectricity. According to the temperature-dependent permittivity, differential scanning calorimetry, and X-ray diffraction, structural phase transitions were found in all polymorphs. Notably, the ferroelectric α-form crystal, which has the longest hydrogen bond (2.95 Å) among the organic acid/base-type supramolecular ferroelectrics, transformed from a polar structure (space group, P21) into an anti-polar structure (space group, P21/c) at 378 K. The non-ferroelectric β- and γ-form crystals also exhibited structural rearrangements around hydrogen bonds. The hydrogen-bonded geometry and ferroelectric properties were compared with other supramolecular ferroelectrics. A positive relationship between the phase-transition temperature (TC ) and hydrogen-bond length () was observed, and was attributed to the potential barrier height for proton off-centering or order/disorder phenomena. The optimized spontaneous polarization (Ps ) agreed well with the results of the first-principles calculations, and could be amplified by separating the two equilibrium positions of protons with increasing . These data consistently demonstrated that stretching is a promising way to enhance the polarization performance and thermal stability of hydrogen-bonded organic ferroelectrics. © 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

  7. First-principles study on structure stabilities of α-S and Na-S battery systems

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Momida, Hiroyoshi; Oguchi, Tamio

    2014-03-01

    To understand microscopic mechanisms of charge and discharge reactions in Na-S batteries, there has been increasing needs to study fundamental atomic and electronic structures of elemental S as well as that of Na-S phases. The most stable form of S is known to be an orthorhombic α-S crystal at ambient temperature and pressure, and α-S consists of puckered S8 rings which crystallize in space group Fddd . In this study, the crystal structure of α-S is examined by using first-principles calculations with and without the van der Waals interaction corrections of Grimme's method, and results clearly show that the van der Waals interactions between the S8 rings have crucial roles on cohesion of α-S. We also study structure stabilities of Na2S, NaS, NaS2, and Na2S5 phases with reported crystal structures. Using calculated total energies of the crystal structure models, we estimate discharge voltages assuming discharge reactions from 2Na+ xS -->Na2Sx, and discharge reactions in Na/S battery systems are discussed by comparing with experimental results. This work was partially supported by Elements Strategy Initiative for Catalysts and Batteries (ESICB) of Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT), Japan.

  8. Valence State Driven Site Preference in the Quaternary Compound Ca5MgAgGe5: An Electron-Deficient Phase with Optimized Bonding

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Ponou, Simeon; Lidin, Sven; Zhang, Yuemei

    The quaternary phase Ca5Mg0.95Ag1.05(1)Ge5 (3) was synthesized by high-temperature solid-state techniques, and its crystal structure was determined by single-crystal diffraction methods in the orthorhombic space group Pnma – Wyckoff sequence c12 with a = 23.1481(4) Å, b = 4.4736(1) Å, c = 11.0128(2) Å, V = 1140.43(4) Å3, Z = 4. The crystal structure can be described as linear intergrowths of slabs cut from the CaGe (CrB-type) and the CaMGe (TiNiSi-type; M = Mg, Ag) structures. Hence, 3 is a hettotype of the hitherto missing n = 3 member of the structure series with the general formula R2+nT2X2+n, previously describedmore » with n = 1, 2, and 4. The member with n = 3 was predicted in the space group Cmcm – Wyckoff sequence f5c2. The experimental space group Pnma (in the nonstandard setting Pmcn) corresponds to a klassengleiche symmetry reduction of index two of the predicted space group Cmcm. This transition originates from the switching of one Ge and one Ag position in the TiNiSi-related slab, a process that triggers an uncoupling of each of the five 8f sites in Cmcm into two 4c sites in Pnma. The Mg/Ag site preference was investigated using VASP calculations and revealed a remarkable example of an intermetallic compound for which the electrostatic valency principle is a critical structure-directing force. The compound is deficient by one valence electron according to the Zintl concept, but LMTO electronic structure calculations indicate electronic stabilization and overall bonding optimization in the polyanionic network. Other stability factors beyond the Zintl concept that may account for the electronic stabilization are discussed.« less

  9. X-Ray diffraction on large single crystals using a powder diffractometer

    DOE PAGES

    Jesche, A.; Fix, M.; Kreyssig, A.; ...

    2016-06-16

    Information on the lattice parameter of single crystals with known crystallographic structure allows for estimations of sample quality and composition. In many cases it is sufficient to determine one lattice parameter or the lattice spacing along a certain, high- symmetry direction, e.g. in order to determine the composition in a substitution series by taking advantage of Vegard’s rule. Here we present a guide to accurate measurements of single crystals with dimensions ranging from 200 μm up to several millimeter using a standard powder diffractometer in Bragg-Brentano geometry. The correction of the error introduced by the sample height and the optimizationmore » of the alignment are discussed in detail. Finally, in particular for single crystals with a plate-like habit, the described procedure allows for measurement of the lattice spacings normal to the plates with high accuracy on a timescale of minutes.« less

  10. Crystal growth of device quality GaAs in space

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gatos, H. C.; Lagowski, J.

    1985-01-01

    The present program has been aimed at solving the fundamental and technological problems associated with Crystal Growth of Device Quality in Space. The initial stage of the program was devoted strictly to ground-based research. The unsolved problems associated with the growth of bulk GaAs in the presence of gravitational forces were explored. Reliable chemical, structural and electronic characterization methods were developed which would permit the direct relation of the salient materials parameters (particularly those affected by zero gravity conditions) to the electronic characteristics of single crystal GaAs, in turn to device performance. These relationships are essential for the development of optimum approaches and techniques. It was concluded that the findings on elemental semiconductors Ge and Si regarding crystal growth, segregation, chemical composition, defect interactions, and materials properties-electronic properties relationships are not necessarily applicable to GaAs (and to other semiconductor compounds). In many instances totally unexpected relationships were found to prevail.

  11. Periodic order and defects in Ni-based inverse opal-like crystals on the mesoscopic and atomic scale

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chumakova, A. V.; Valkovskiy, G. A.; Mistonov, A. A.; Dyadkin, V. A.; Grigoryeva, N. A.; Sapoletova, N. A.; Napolskii, K. S.; Eliseev, A. A.; Petukhov, A. V.; Grigoriev, S. V.

    2014-10-01

    The structure of inverse opal crystals based on nickel was probed on the mesoscopic and atomic levels by a set of complementary techniques such as scanning electron microscopy and synchrotron microradian and wide-angle diffraction. The microradian diffraction revealed the mesoscopic-scale face-centered-cubic (fcc) ordering of spherical voids in the inverse opal-like structure with unit cell dimension of 750±10nm. The diffuse scattering data were used to map defects in the fcc structure as a function of the number of layers in the Ni inverse opal-like structure. The average lateral size of mesoscopic domains is found to be independent of the number of layers. 3D reconstruction of the reciprocal space for the inverse opal crystals with different thickness provided an indirect study of original opal templates in a depth-resolved way. The microstructure and thermal response of the framework of the porous inverse opal crystal was examined using wide-angle powder x-ray diffraction. This artificial porous structure is built from nickel crystallites possessing stacking faults and dislocations peculiar for the nickel thin films.

  12. Experimental correlation of melt structures, nucleation rates, and thermal histories of silicate melts

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Boynton, W. V.; DRAKE; HILDEBRAND; JONES; LEWIS; TREIMAN; WARK

    1987-01-01

    The theory and measurement of the structure of liquids is an important aspect of modern metallurgy and igneous petrology. Liquid structure exerts strong controls on both the types of crystals that may precipitate from melts and on the chemical composition of those crystals. An interesting aspect of melt structure studies is the problem of melt memories; that is, a melt can retain a memory of previous thermal history. This memory can influence both nucleation behavior and crystal composition. This melt memory may be characterized quantitatively with techniques such as Raman, infrared and NMR spectroscopy to provide information on short-range structure. Melt structure studies at high temperature will take advantage of the microgravity conditions of the Space Station to perform containerless experiments. Melt structure determinations at high temperature (experiments that are greatly facilitated by containerless technology) will provide invaluable information for materials science, glass technology, and geochemistry. In conjunction with studies of nucleation behavior and nucleation rates, information relevant to nucleation in magma chambers in terrestrial planets will be acquired.

  13. Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) experiment aboard mission STS-66

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2000-01-01

    On the Space Shuttle Orbiter Atlantis' middeck, Astronaut Joseph R. Tarner, mission specialist, works at an area amidst several lockers which support the Protein Crystal Growth (PCG) experiment during the STS-66 mission. This particular section is called the Crystal Observation System, housed in the Thermal Enclosure System (COS/TES). Together with the Vapor Diffusion Apparatus (VDA), housed in Single Locker Thermal Enclosure (SLTES), the COS/TES represents the continuing research into the structure of proteins and other macromolecules such as viruses.

  14. Diffraction imaging (topography) with monochromatic synchrotron radiation

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Steiner, Bruce; Kuriyama, Masao; Dobbyn, Ronald C.; Laor, Uri

    1988-01-01

    Structural information of special interest to crystal growers and device physicists is now available from high resolution monochromatic synchrotron diffraction imaging (topography). In the review, the importance of superior resolution in momentum transfer and in space is described, and illustrations are taken from a variety of crystals: gallium arsenide, cadmium telluride, mercuric iodide, bismuth silicon oxide, and lithium niobate. The identification and understanding of local variations in crystal growth processes are shown. Finally, new experimental opportunities now available for exploitation are indicated.

  15. The synthesis and crystal structure of α-Ca 3UO 6

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Holc, J.; Golic̆, L.

    1983-07-01

    Single crystals of α-Ca 3UO 6 were grown from a UO 3CaCl 2CaO melt by the slow cooling method from 950°C. The crystal structure was determined by means of X-ray diffraction with R = 0.032 and Rw = 0.019. The structure of α-Ca 3UO 6 is of Mg 3TeO 6 type. α-Ca 3UO 6 is rhombohedral with a = 6.729 (1)Å, α = 90.30 (1)°, Z = 2, Dc = 4.955 g/cm 3, Dm = 4.79 g/cm 3, space group R overline3. Uranium and calcium atoms are six-coordinated. At 1200°C rhombohedral α-Ca 3UO 6 irreversibly transforms to monoclinic β-Ca 3UO 6.

  16. Disorder in Ag7GeSe5I, a superionic conductor: temperature-dependent anharmonic structural study.

    PubMed

    Albert, Stéphanie; Pillet, Sébastien; Lecomte, Claude; Pradel, Annie; Ribes, Michel

    2008-02-01

    A temperature-dependent structural investigation of the substituted argyrodite Ag(7)GeSe(5)I has been carried out on a single crystal from 15 to 475 K, in steps of 50 K, and correlated to its conductivity properties. The argyrodite crystallizes in a cubic cell with the F\\bar 43m space group. The crystal structure exhibits high static and dynamic disorder which has been efficiently accounted for using a combination of (i) Gram-Charlier development of the Debye-Waller factors for iodine and silver, and (ii) a split-atom model for Ag(+) ions. An increased delocalization of the mobile d(10) Ag(+) cations with temperature has been clearly shown by the inspection of the joint probability-density functions; the corresponding diffusion pathways have been determined.

  17. Classification of crystal structure using a convolutional neural network

    PubMed Central

    Park, Woon Bae; Chung, Jiyong; Sohn, Keemin; Pyo, Myoungho

    2017-01-01

    A deep machine-learning technique based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) is introduced. It has been used for the classification of powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns in terms of crystal system, extinction group and space group. About 150 000 powder XRD patterns were collected and used as input for the CNN with no handcrafted engineering involved, and thereby an appropriate CNN architecture was obtained that allowed determination of the crystal system, extinction group and space group. In sharp contrast with the traditional use of powder XRD pattern analysis, the CNN never treats powder XRD patterns as a deconvoluted and discrete peak position or as intensity data, but instead the XRD patterns are regarded as nothing but a pattern similar to a picture. The CNN interprets features that humans cannot recognize in a powder XRD pattern. As a result, accuracy levels of 81.14, 83.83 and 94.99% were achieved for the space-group, extinction-group and crystal-system classifications, respectively. The well trained CNN was then used for symmetry identification of unknown novel inorganic compounds. PMID:28875035

  18. Classification of crystal structure using a convolutional neural network.

    PubMed

    Park, Woon Bae; Chung, Jiyong; Jung, Jaeyoung; Sohn, Keemin; Singh, Satendra Pal; Pyo, Myoungho; Shin, Namsoo; Sohn, Kee-Sun

    2017-07-01

    A deep machine-learning technique based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) is introduced. It has been used for the classification of powder X-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns in terms of crystal system, extinction group and space group. About 150 000 powder XRD patterns were collected and used as input for the CNN with no handcrafted engineering involved, and thereby an appropriate CNN architecture was obtained that allowed determination of the crystal system, extinction group and space group. In sharp contrast with the traditional use of powder XRD pattern analysis, the CNN never treats powder XRD patterns as a deconvoluted and discrete peak position or as intensity data, but instead the XRD patterns are regarded as nothing but a pattern similar to a picture. The CNN interprets features that humans cannot recognize in a powder XRD pattern. As a result, accuracy levels of 81.14, 83.83 and 94.99% were achieved for the space-group, extinction-group and crystal-system classifications, respectively. The well trained CNN was then used for symmetry identification of unknown novel inorganic compounds.

  19. Phase coexistence and domain configuration in Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-0.34PbTiO3 single crystal revealed by synchrotron-based X-ray diffractive three-dimensional reciprocal space mapping and piezoresponse force microscopy

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wang, Ruixue; Xu, Han; Yang, Bin

    The crystalline phases and domain configuration in the morphotropic phase boundary composition Pb(Mg1/3Nb2/3)O3-0.34PbTiO3 (PMN-0.34PT) single crystal have been investigated by synchrotronbased X-ray 3D Reciprocal Space Mapping (3D-RSM) and Piezoresponse Force Microscopy. The coexistence of tetragonal (T) and monoclinic MC phases in this PMN-0.34PT single crystal is confirmed. The affiliation of each diffraction spot in the 3D-RSM was identified with the assistance of qualitative simulation. Most importantly, the twinning structure between different domains in such a mixed phase PMN-PT crystal is firmly clarified, and the spatial distribution of different twin domains is demonstrated. In addition, the lattice parameters of T andmore » MC phases in PMN-0.34PT single crystal as well as the tilting angles of crystal lattices caused by the interfacial lattice mismatch are determined.« less

  20. Crystal and magnetic structure of the La1-xCaxMnO3 compound (0.11⩽x⩽0.175)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pissas, M.; Margiolaki, I.; Papavassiliou, G.; Stamopoulos, D.; Argyriou, D.

    2005-08-01

    We studied the crystal and magnetic structure of the La1-xCaxMnO3 compound for (0.11⩽x⩽0.175) using stoichiometric samples. For x<0.13 the system’s ground state is insulating canted antiferromagnetic. For 0.13⩽x⩽0.175 below the Jahn-Teller transition temperature (TJT) the crystal structure undergoes a monoclinic distortion. The crystal structure can be described with P21/c space group which permits two Mn sites. The unit-cell strain parameter s=2(a-c)/(a+c) increases for Ta>b/2) structure.

  1. Structure of fructose bisphosphate aldolase from Bartonella henselae bound to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate.

    PubMed

    Gardberg, Anna; Abendroth, Jan; Bhandari, Janhavi; Sankaran, Banumathi; Staker, Bart

    2011-09-01

    Fructose bisphosphate aldolase (FBPA) enzymes have been found in a broad range of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. FBPA catalyses the cleavage of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate into glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate. The SSGCID has reported several FBPA structures from pathogenic sources, including the bacterium Brucella melitensis and the protozoan Babesia bovis. Bioinformatic analysis of the Bartonella henselae genome revealed an FBPA homolog. The B. henselae FBPA enzyme was recombinantly expressed and purified for X-ray crystallographic studies. The purified enzyme crystallized in the apo form but failed to diffract; however, well diffracting crystals could be obtained by cocrystallization in the presence of the native substrate fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. A data set to 2.35 Å resolution was collected from a single crystal at 100 K. The crystal belonged to the orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with unit-cell parameters a=72.39, b=127.71, c=157.63 Å. The structure was refined to a final free R factor of 22.2%. The structure shares the typical barrel tertiary structure and tetrameric quaternary structure reported for previous FBPA structures and exhibits the same Schiff base in the active site.

  2. Betavoltaic p--n+-structure simulation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Urchuk, S. U.; Murashev, V. N.; Legotin, S. A.; Krasnov, A. A.; Rabinovich, O. I.; Kuzmina, K. A.; Omel'chenko, Y. K.; Osipov, U. V.; Didenko, S. I.

    2016-08-01

    In order to increase the betavoltaic batteries efficiency output characteristics of the p--n+ (n--p+) - structures were simulated. Replacing the p+-n-structures on the p-n+ and n-p+ -structures enables the space-charge expansion to the crystal surface and thus to reduce the recombination loss in the heavy doped p+-layer and improve conversion of betavoltaic elements efficiency.

  3. Crystal structures reveal an induced-fit binding of a substrate-like Aza-peptide epoxide to SARS coronavirus main peptidase.

    PubMed

    Lee, Ting-Wai; Cherney, Maia M; Liu, Jie; James, Karen Ellis; Powers, James C; Eltis, Lindsay D; James, Michael N G

    2007-02-23

    The SARS coronavirus main peptidase (SARS-CoV M(pro)) plays an essential role in the life-cycle of the virus and is a primary target for the development of anti-SARS agents. Here, we report the crystal structure of M(pro) at a resolution of 1.82 Angstroms, in space group P2(1) at pH 6.0. In contrast to the previously reported structure of M(pro) in the same space group at the same pH, the active sites and the S1 specificity pockets of both protomers in the structure of M(pro) reported here are in the catalytically competent conformation, suggesting their conformational flexibility. We report two crystal structures of M(pro) having an additional Ala at the N terminus of each protomer (M(+A(-1))(pro)), both at a resolution of 2.00 Angstroms, in space group P4(3)2(1)2: one unbound and one bound by a substrate-like aza-peptide epoxide (APE). In the unbound form, the active sites and the S1 specificity pockets of both protomers of M(+A(-1))(pro) are observed in a collapsed (catalytically incompetent) conformation; whereas they are in an open (catalytically competent) conformation in the APE-bound form. The observed conformational flexibility of the active sites and the S1 specificity pockets suggests that these parts of M(pro) exist in dynamic equilibrium. The structural data further suggest that the binding of APE to M(pro) follows an induced-fit model. The substrate likely also binds in an induced-fit manner in a process that may help drive the catalytic cycle.

  4. Dewetting During the Crystal Growth of (Cd,Zn)Te:In Under Microgravity

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sylla, Lamine; Fauler, Alex; Fiederle, Michael; Duffar, Thierry; Dieguez, Ernesto; Zanotti, Lucio; Zappettini, Andrea; Roosen, GÉrald

    2009-08-01

    The phenomenon of ldquodewettingrdquo associated with the Vertical Bridgman (VB) crystal growth technique leads to the growth of a crystal without contact with the crucible. One dramatic consequence of this modified VB process is the reduction of structural defects within the crystal. It has been observed in several microgravity experiments for different semiconductor crystals. This work is concentrated on the growth of high resistivity (Cd,Zn)Te:In (CZT) crystals by achieving the phenomenon of dewetting under microgravity condition and its application in the processing of CZT detectors. Two Cd0.9Zn0.1Te:In crystals were grown in space on the Russian FOTON satellite in the POLIZON-M facility in September 2007 (mission M3). At the end of the preliminary melting phase of one crystal, a Rotating Magnetic Field (RMF) was applied in order to reduce the typical tellurium clusters within the melt before the pulling. The other crystal was superheated with 20 K above the melting point before the pulling. A third reference crystal has been grown on the ground in similar thermal conditions. Profiles measurements of the space grown crystals surface gave the evidence of a successful dewetting during the crystal growth. Characterization methods such as IR microscopy and CoReMa have been performed on the three crystals. CZT detectors have been processed from the grown part of the different crystals. The influence of the dewetting on the material quality and the detector properties completes the study.

  5. Crystallographic site swapping of La3+ ion in BaA'LaTeO6 (A' = Na, K, Rb) double perovskite type compounds: diffraction and photoluminescence evidence for the site swapping.

    PubMed

    Phatak, R; Gupta, S K; Krishnan, K; Sali, S K; Godbole, S V; Das, A

    2014-02-28

    Double perovskite type compounds of the formula BaA'LaTeO6 (A' = Na, K, Rb) were synthesized by solid state route and their crystal structures were determined by Rietveld analysis using powder X-ray diffraction and neutron diffraction data. Na compound crystallizes in the monoclinic system with P2₁/n space group whereas, K and Rb compounds crystallize in Fm3m space group. All the three compounds show rock salt type ordering at B site. Crystal structure analysis shows that La ion occupies A site in Na compound whereas, it occupies B site in K and Rb compounds according to the general formula of AA'BB'O6 for a double perovskite type compound. Effect of this crystallographic site swapping of the La ion was also observed in the photoluminescence study by doping Eu(3+) in La(3+) site. The large decrease in the intensity of the electric dipole ((5)D0-(7)F2) transition in the Rb compound compared to the Na compound indicates that Eu(3+) ion resides in the centrosymmetric octahedral environment in the Rb compound.

  6. Cloning, purification, crystallization and preliminary structural studies of penicillin V acylase from Bacillus subtilis

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Rathinaswamy, Priya; Pundle, Archana V.; Prabhune, Asmita A.

    An unannotated protein reported from B. subtilis has been expressed in E. coli and identified as possessing penicillin V acylase activity. The crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of this penicillin V acylase is presented. Penicillin acylase proteins are amidohydrolase enzymes that cleave penicillins at the amide bond connecting the side chain to their β-lactam nucleus. An unannotated protein from Bacillus subtilis has been expressed in Escherichia coli, purified and confirmed to possess penicillin V acylase activity. The protein was crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method from a solution containing 4 M sodium formate in 100 mM Tris–HCl buffer pH 8.2.more » Diffraction data were collected under cryogenic conditions to a spacing of 2.5 Å. The crystals belonged to the orthorhombic space group C222{sub 1}, with unit-cell parameters a = 111.0, b = 308.0, c = 56.0 Å. The estimated Matthews coefficient was 3.23 Å{sup 3} Da{sup −1}, corresponding to 62% solvent content. The structure has been solved using molecular-replacement methods with B. sphaericus penicillin V acylase (PDB code 2pva) as the search model.« less

  7. Growth and characterization of barium complex of 1,3,5-triazinane-2,4,6-trione in gel: a corrosion inhibiting material

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Divya, R.; Nair, Lekshmi P.; Bijini, B. R.; Nair, C. M. K.; Babu, K. Rajendra

    2018-05-01

    Good quality prismatic crystals of industrially applicable corrosion inhibiting barium complex of 1,3,5-triazinane-2,4,6-trione have been grown by conventional gel method. The crystal structure, packing, and nature of bonds are revealed in the single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The crystal has a three-dimensional polymeric structure having a triclinic crystal system with the space group P-1. The powder X-ray diffraction analysis confirms its crystalline nature. The functional groups present in the crystal are identified by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Elemental analysis confirms the stoichiometry of the elements present in the complex. Thermogravimetric analysis and differential thermal analysis reveal its good thermal stability. The optical properties like band gap, refractive index and extinction coefficient are evaluated from the UV-visible spectral analysis. The singular property of the material, corrosion inhibition efficiency achieved by the adsorption of the sample molecules is determined by the weight loss method.

  8. A co-crystal between benzene and ethane: a potential evaporite material for Saturn’s moon Titan

    PubMed Central

    Maynard-Casely, Helen E.; Hodyss, Robert; Cable, Morgan L.; Vu, Tuan Hoang; Rahm, Martin

    2016-01-01

    Using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, the structure of a co-crystal between benzene and ethane formed in situ at cryogenic conditions has been determined, and validated using dispersion-corrected density functional theory calculations. The structure comprises a lattice of benzene molecules hosting ethane molecules within channels. Similarity between the intermolecular interactions found in the co-crystal and in pure benzene indicate that the C—H⋯π network of benzene is maintained in the co-crystal, however, this expands to accommodate the guest ethane molecules. The co-crystal has a 3:1 benzene:ethane stoichiometry and is described in the space group with a = 15.977 (1) Å and c = 5.581 (1) Å at 90 K, with a density of 1.067 g cm−3. The conditions under which this co-crystal forms identify it is a potential that forms from evaporation of Saturn’s moon Titan’s lakes, an evaporite material. PMID:27158505

  9. Structural and spectroscopic investigation of glycinium oxalurate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kavitha, T.; Pasupathi, G.; Marchewka, M. K.; Anbalagan, G.; Kanagathara, N.

    2017-09-01

    Glycinium oxalurate (GO) single crystals has been synthesized and grown by the slow solvent evaporation method at room temperature. Single crystal X-ray diffraction study confirms that GO crystal crystallizes in the monoclinic system with centrosymmetric space group P121/c1. The grown crystals are built up from single protonated glycinium residues and single dissociated oxalurate anions. A combination of ionic and donor-acceptor hydrogen-bond interactions linking together the glycine and oxaluric acid residues forms a three-dimensional network. Hydrogen bonded network present in the crystal gives notable vibrational effect. The molecular geometry, vibrational frequencies and intensity of the vibrational bands have been interpreted with the aid of structure optimization based on HF and density functional theory B3LYP methods with 6-311++G(d,p) basis set. Frontier molecular orbital energies and other related electronic properties are calculated. The natural bonding orbital (NBO) charges have been calculated and interpreted. The molecular electrostatic potential map has been constructed and discussed in detail.

  10. Bubble and skyrmion crystals in frustrated magnets with easy-axis anisotropy

    DOE PAGES

    Hayami, Satoru; Lin, Shi-Zeng; Batista, Cristian D.

    2016-05-12

    We clarify the conditions for the emergence of multiple-Q structures out of lattice and easy-axis spin anisotropy in frustrated magnets. By considering magnets whose exchange interaction has multiple global minima in momentum space, we find that both types of anisotropy stabilize triple-Q orderings. Moderate anisotropy leads to a magnetic field-induced skyrmion crystal, which evolves into a bubble crystal for increasing spatial and spin anisotropy. Finally, the bubble crystal exhibits a quasi-continuous (devil’s staircase) temperature dependent ordering wave-vector, characteristic of the competition between frustrated exchange and strong easy-axis anisotropy.

  11. Ba 2TeO: A new layered oxytelluride

    DOE PAGES

    Besara, T.; Ramirez, D.; Sun, J.; ...

    2015-02-01

    For single crystals of the new semiconducting oxytelluride phase, Ba 2TeO, we synthesized from barium oxide powder and elemental tellurium in a molten barium metal flux. Ba 2TeO crystallizes in tetragonal symmetry with space group P4/nmm (#129), a=5.0337(1) Å, c=9.9437(4) Å, Z=2. The crystals were characterized by single crystal x-ray diffraction, heat capacity and optical measurements. Moreover, the optical measurements along with electronic band structure calculations indicate semiconductor behavior with a band gap of 2.93 eV. Resistivity measurements show that Ba 2TeO is highly insulating.

  12. Computing approximate solutions of the protein structure determination problem using global constraints on discrete crystal lattices.

    PubMed

    Dal Palù, Alessandro; Dovier, Agostino; Pontelli, Enrico

    2010-01-01

    Crystal lattices are discrete models of the three-dimensional space that have been effectively employed to facilitate the task of determining proteins' natural conformation. This paper investigates alternative global constraints that can be introduced in a constraint solver over discrete crystal lattices. The objective is to enhance the efficiency of lattice solvers in dealing with the construction of approximate solutions of the protein structure determination problem. Some of them (e.g., self-avoiding-walk) have been explicitly or implicitly already used in previous approaches, while others (e.g., the density constraint) are new. The intrinsic complexities of all of them are studied and preliminary experimental results are discussed.

  13. Crystal Structure of 17α-Dihydroequilin, C18H22O2, from Synchrotron Powder Diffraction Data and Density Functional Theory

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kaduk, James; Gindhart, Amy; Blanton, Thomas

    The crystal structure of 17α-dihydroequilin has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional techniques. 17α-dihydroequilin crystallizes in space group P212121 (#19) with a = 6.76849(1) Å, b = 8.96849(1) Å, c = 23.39031(5) Å, V = 1419.915(3) Å3, and Z = 4. Both hydroxyl groups form hydrogen bonds to each other, resulting in zig-zag chains along the b-axis. The powder diffraction pattern has been submitted to ICDD for inclusion in the Powder Diffraction File™ as the entry 00-066-1608.

  14. High-Pressure Synthesis and Characterization of the Ammonium Yttrium Borate (NH4)YB8O14.

    PubMed

    Schmitt, Martin K; Podewitz, Maren; Liedl, Klaus R; Huppertz, Hubert

    2017-11-20

    The first high-pressure yttrium borate (NH 4 )YB 8 O 14 was synthesized at 12.8 GPa/1300 °C using a Walker-type multianvil module. The compound crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pnma (no. 62) with the lattice parameters a = 17.6375(9), b = 10.7160(5), and c = 4.2191(2) Å. (NH 4 )YB 8 O 14 constitutes a novel structure type but exhibits similarities to the crystal structure of β-BaB 4 O 7 . X-ray single-crystal and powder diffraction, EDX, vibrational spectroscopy as well as quantum chemical calculations were used to characterize (NH 4 )YB 8 O 14 .

  15. Band Structure Engineering by Substitutional Doping in Solid-State Solutions of [5-Me-PLY(O,O)]2B(1-x)Be(x) Radical Crystals.

    PubMed

    Bag, Pradip; Itkis, Mikhail E; Stekovic, Dejan; Pal, Sushanta K; Tham, Fook S; Haddon, Robert C

    2015-08-12

    We report the substitutional doping of solid-state spiro-bis(5-methyl-1,9-oxido-phenalenyl)boron radical ([2]2B) by co-crystallization of this radical with the corresponding spiro-bis(5-methyl-1,9-oxido-phenalenyl)beryllium compound ([2]2Be). The pure compounds crystallize in different space groups ([2]2B, P1̅, Z = 2; [2]2Be, P2₁/c, Z = 4) with distinct packing arrangements, yet we are able to isolate crystals of composition [2]2B(1-x)Be(x), where x = 0-0.59. The phase transition from the P1̅ to the P2₁/c space group occurs at x = 0.1, but the conductivities of the solid solutions are enhanced and the activation energies reduced for values of x = 0-0.25. The molecular packing is driven by the relative concentration of the spin-bearing ([2]2B) and spin-free ([2]2Be) molecules in the crystals, and the extended Hückel theory band structures show that the progressive incorporation of spin-free [2]2Be in the lattice of the [2]2B radical (overall bandwidth, W = 1.4 eV, in the pure compound) leads to very strong narrowing of the bandwidth, which reaches a minimum at [2]2Be (W = 0.3 eV). The results provide a graphic picture of the structural transformations undergone by the lattice, and at certain compositions we are able to identify distinct structures for the [2]2B and [2]2Be molecules in a single crystalline phase.

  16. Two halide-containing cesium manganese vanadates: synthesis, characterization, and magnetic properties

    DOE PAGES

    Smith Pellizzeri, Tiffany M.; McGuire, Michael A.; McMillen, Colin D.; ...

    2018-01-24

    In this study, two new halide-containing cesium manganese vanadates have been synthesized by a high-temperature (580 °C) hydrothermal synthetic method from aqueous brine solutions. One compound, Cs 3Mn(VO 3) 4Cl, (1) was prepared using a mixed cesium hydroxide/chloride mineralizer, and crystallizes in the polar noncentrosymmetric space group Cmm2, with a = 16.7820(8) Å, b = 8.4765(4) Å, c = 5.7867(3) Å. This structure is built from sinusoidal zig-zag (VO 3) n chains that run along the b-axis and are coordinated to Mn 2+ containing (MnO 4Cl) square-pyramidal units that are linked together to form layers. The cesium cations reside betweenmore » the layers, but also coordinate to the chloride ion, forming a cesium chloride chain that also propagates along the b-axis. The other compound, Cs 2Mn(VO 3) 3F, (2) crystallizes in space group Pbca with a = 7.4286(2) Å, b = 15.0175(5) Å, c = 19.6957(7) Å, and was prepared using a cesium fluoride mineralizer. The structure is comprised of corner sharing octahedral Mn 2+ chains, with trans fluoride ligands acting as bridging units, whose ends are capped by (VO 3) n vanadate chains to form slabs. The cesium atoms reside between the manganese vanadate layers, and also play an integral part in the structure, forming a cesium fluoride chain that runs along the b-axis. Both compounds were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, powder X-ray diffraction, and single-crystal Raman spectroscopy. Additionally, the magnetic properties of 2 were investigated. Lastly, above 50 K, it displays behavior typical of a low dimensional system with antiferromagnetic interactions, as to be expected for linear chains of manganese(II) within the crystal structure.« less

  17. Structure of N-(5-ethyl-[1,3,4]-thiadiazole-2-yl)toluenesulfonamide by combined X-ray powder diffraction, 13C solid-state NMR and molecular modelling.

    PubMed

    Hangan, Adriana; Borodi, Gheorghe; Filip, Xenia; Tripon, Carmen; Morari, Cristian; Oprean, Luminita; Filip, Claudiu

    2010-12-01

    The crystal structure solution of the title compound is determined from microcrystalline powder using a multi-technique approach that combines X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) data analysis based on direct-space methods with information from (13)C solid-state NMR (SSNMR), and molecular modelling using the GIPAW (gauge including projector augmented-wave) method. The space group is Pbca with one molecule in the asymmetric unit. The proposed methodology proves very useful for unambiguously characterizing the supramolecular arrangement adopted by the N-(5-ethyl-[1,3,4]-thiadiazole-2-yl)toluenesulfonamide molecules in the crystal, which consists of extended double strands held together by C-H···π non-covalent interactions.

  18. Twist-induced guidance in coreless photonic crystal fiber: A helical channel for light.

    PubMed

    Beravat, Ramin; Wong, Gordon K L; Frosz, Michael H; Xi, Xiao Ming; Russell, Philip St J

    2016-11-01

    A century ago, Einstein proposed that gravitational forces were the result of the curvature of space-time and predicted that light rays would deflect when passing a massive celestial object. We report that twisting the periodically structured "space" within a coreless photonic crystal fiber creates a helical channel where guided modes can form despite the absence of any discernible core structure. Using a Hamiltonian optics analysis, we show that the light rays follow closed spiral or oscillatory paths within the helical channel, in close analogy with the geodesics of motion in a two-dimensional gravitational field. The mode diameter shrinks, and its refractive index rises, as the twist rate increases. The birefringence, orbital angular momentum, and dispersion of these unusual modes are explored.

  19. Structural study of polymorphism in methylprednisolone aceponate

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Knyazev, A. V.; Somov, N. V.; Shipilova, A. S.; Gusarova, E. V.; Knyazeva, S. S.; Stepanova, O. V.; Chuprunov, E. V.

    2017-08-01

    The crystal structures of methylprednisolone aceponate were determined by X-ray diffraction analysis at temperatures 90 K and 150 K: space group P212121, a = 14.8592(2), b = 19.6844(5), c = 26.1626(4) Å, Z = 12; R = 0.0598 (T = 90 K); space group P212121, a = 6.57348(14), b = 14.8295(3), c = 26.2214(5) Å, Z = 4; R = 0.0518 (T = 150 K). Features of structural changes in the phase transition were revealed. The abrupt change in the unit cell parameters in the phase transition was shown by low-temperature X-ray powder. The methods of degree of invariance of crystal electron density and molecular Voronoi-Dirichlet polyhedra were used for the analysis of polymorphism in methylprednisolone aceponate. The atomic structure at 90 K have a translational pseudosymmetry of electron density η = 0.329(1). The decrease of number of intermolecular contacts in the high-temperature modification due to rupture of intermolecular non-valence contacts C/O was observed.

  20. TIMo/sub 2/ /SUP IV/ P/sub 3/O/sub 12/: a molybdenophosphate with a tunnel structure

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Leclaire, A.; Monier, J.C.; Raveau, B.

    1985-10-01

    A molybdenophosphate, TIMo/sub 2/ /SUP IV/ P/sub 3/O/sub 12/, with an original tunnel structure, has been isolated. Its structure has been determined by X-ray diffraction on a single crystal. It crystallizes in the orthorhombic system with a = 8.836(1), b = 9.255(1), c = 12.288(1) A, possible space groups Pbcm and Pbc2/sub 1/ with /ZETA/ = 4. The structure was solved and refined in the centrosymmetric space group Pbcm. The host lattice ''Mo/sub 3/P/sub 3/O/sub 12/'' is built up from corner-sharing octahedra and tetrahedra and forms tunnels running along the b axis and cages where the TI+ ions are located.more » The relationships of this framework wit that of the phosphate tungsten bronze CsP/sub 8/W/sub 8/O/sub 40/ and that of the hexagonal tungsten bronze are discussed.« less

  1. Crystallization and X-ray diffraction analysis of the RNA primer/promoter-binding domain of influenza A virus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase PB2

    PubMed Central

    Kuzuhara, Takashi; Kise, Daisuke; Yoshida, Hiroko; Horita, Takahiro; Murazaki, Yoshimi; Utsunomiya, Hiroko; Tsuge, Hideaki

    2009-01-01

    The C-terminal domain protein (amino-acid residues 535–759) of the PB2 subunit of the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from the highly pathogenic influenza A virus was expressed as a soluble protein in Escherichia coli and crystallized using sodium formate as a precipitant. Data sets were collected from crystals of native and selenomethionine-substituted protein on the KEK NW12 beamline at the Photon Factory and the crystals diffracted to a maximum resolution of 2.44 Å for the SeMet-derivative crystal. The native crystals were found to belong to space group P3221, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 52.5, c = 156.3 Å. The Matthews value (V M) was 2.7 Å3 Da−1, assuming the presence of one molecule in the asymmetric unit. The SeMet-derivative crystals were found to belong to the same space group, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 52.6, c = 156.4 Å. Attempts are being made to solve the structure by multi-wavelength anomalous dispersion phasing. PMID:19194006

  2. Towards the Structure Determination of a Modulated Protein Crystal: The Semicrystalline State of Profilin:Actin

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Borgstahl, G.; Lovelace, J.; Snell, E. H.; Bellamy, H.

    2003-01-01

    One of the remaining challenges to structural biology is the solution of modulated structures. While small molecule crystallographers have championed this type of structure, to date, no modulated macromolecular structures have been determined. Modulation of the molecular structures within the crystal can produce satellite reflections or a superlattice of reflections in reciprocal space. We have developed the data collection methods and strategies that are needed to collect and analyze these data. If the macromolecule's crystal lattice is composed of physiologically relevant packing contacts, structural changes induced under physiological conditions can cause distortion relevant to the function and biophysical processes of the molecule making up the crystal. By careful measurement of the distortion, and the corresponding three-dimensional structure of the distorted molecule, we will visualize the motion and mechanism of the biological macromolecule(s). We have measured the modulated diffraction pattern produced by the semicrystalline state of profilin:actin crystals using highly parallel and highly monochromatic synchrotron radiation coupled with fine phi slicing (0.001-0.010 degrees) for structure determination. These crystals present these crystals present a unique opportunity to address an important question in structural biology. The modulation is believed to be due to the formation of actin helical filaments from the actin beta ribbon upon the pH-induced dissociation of profilin. To date, the filamentous state of actin has resisted crystallization and no detailed structures are available. The semicrystalline state profilin:actin crystals provides a unique opportunity to understand the many conformational states of actin. This knowledge is essential for understanding the dynamics underlying shape changes and motility of eukaryotic cells. Many essential processes, such as cytokinesis, phagocytosis, and cellular migration depend upon the capacity of the actin microfilament system to be restructured in a controlled manner via polymerization, depolymerization, severing, cross-linking, and anchorage. The structure the semicrystalline state of profilin:actin will challenge and validate current models of muscle contraction and cell motility. The methodology and theory under development will be easily extendable to other systems.

  3. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of central structure domains from mumps virus F protein

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Liu, Yueyong; Xu, Yanhui; Zhu, Jieqing

    2005-09-01

    Single crystals of the central structure domains from mumps virus F protein have been obtained by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. A diffraction data set has been collected to 2.2 Å resolution. Fusion of members of the Paramyxoviridae family involves two glycoproteins: the attachment protein and the fusion protein. Changes in the fusion-protein conformation were caused by binding of the attachment protein to the cellular receptor. In the membrane-fusion process, two highly conserved heptad-repeat (HR) regions, HR1 and HR2, are believed to form a stable six-helix coiled-coil bundle. However, no crystal structure has yet been determined for this state in themore » mumps virus (MuV, a member of the Paramyxoviridae family). In this study, a single-chain protein consisting of two HR regions connected by a flexible amino-acid linker (named 2-Helix) was expressed, purified and crystallized by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method. A complete X-ray data set was obtained in-house to 2.2 Å resolution from a single crystal. The crystal belongs to space group C2, with unit-cell parameters a = 161.2, b = 60.8, c = 40.1 Å, β = 98.4°. The crystal structure will help in understanding the molecular mechanism of Paramyxoviridae family membrane fusion.« less

  4. Synthesis, growth, structure, mechanical and optical properties of a new semi-organic 2-methyl imidazolium dihydrogen phosphate single crystal

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Nagapandiselvi, P., E-mail: nagapandiselvip@ssn.edu.in; Baby, C.; Gopalakrishnan, R.

    2016-09-15

    Highlights: • 2MIDP crystals were grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique. • Single crystal XRD revealed self-assembled supramolecular framework. • Z scan technique is employed for third order nonlinear optical susceptibility. • Structure-property correlation is established. - Abstract: A new semi-organic compound, 2-methyl imidazolium dihydrogen phosphate (2MIDP), was prepared and good quality single crystals of 2MIDP were grown by slow evaporation solution growth technique. Crystal structure elucidated using Single crystal XRD showed that 2MIDP crystallizes in monoclinic system with P2{sub 1}/c space group. FT-IR, UV-Vis-NIR, Fluorescence and FT-NMR spectra confirm the molecular structure of 2MIDP. The UV-Vis-NIR spectra establishedmore » the suitability of the compound for NLO applications. TG-DSC showed that 2MIDP is thermally stable up to 200 °C. Mechanical characteristics like hardness number (H{sub v}), stiffness constant (C{sub 11}), yield strength (σ{sub v}), fracture toughness (K{sub c}) and brittleness index (B{sub i}) were assessed using Vicker’s microhardness tester. Third order nonlinear optical properties determined from Z-scan measurement using femto and picosecond lasers showed two photon reverse saturable absorption. The enhancement of nonlinear optical properties in femto second laser, revealed the suitability of 2MIDP for optical limiting applications.« less

  5. Crystallization of the rice immune receptor RGA5A_S with the rice blast fungus effector AVR1-CO39 prepared via mixture and tandem strategies.

    PubMed

    Guo, Liwei; Zhang, Yikun; Ma, Mengqi; Liu, Qiang; Zhang, Yanan; Peng, Youliang; Liu, Junfeng

    2018-04-01

    RGA5 is a component of the Pia resistance-protein pair (RGA4/RGA5) from Oryza sativa L. japonica. It acts as an immune receptor that directly recognizes the effector AVR1-CO39 from Magnaporthe oryzae via a C-terminal non-LRR domain (RGA5A_S). The interaction between RGA5A_S and AVR1-CO39 relieves the repression of RGA4, leading to effector-independent cell death. To determine the structure of the complex of RGA5A_S and AVR1-CO39 and to understand the details of this interaction, the complex was prepared by fusing the proteins together, by mixing them in vitro or by co-expressing them in one host cell. Samples purified via the first two strategies were crystallized under two different conditions. A mixture of AVR1-CO39 and RGA5A_S (complex I) crystallized in 1.1 M ammonium tartrate dibasic, 0.1 M sodium acetate-HCl pH 4.6, while crystals of the fusion complex RGA5A_S-TEV-AVR1-CO39 (complex II) were grown in 2 M NaCl. The crystal of complex I belonged to space group P3 1 21, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 66.2, c = 108.8 Å, α = β = 90, γ = 120°. The crystals diffracted to a Bragg spacing of 2.4 Å, and one molecule each of RGA5A_S and AVR1-CO39 were present in the asymmetric unit of the initial model. The crystal of complex II belonged to space group I4, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 137.4, c = 66.2 Å, α = β = γ = 90°. The crystals diffracted to a Bragg spacing of 2.72 Å, and there were two molecules of RGA5A_S and two molecules of AVR1-CO39 in the asymmetric unit of the initial model. Further structural characterization of the interaction between RGA5A_S and AVR1-CO39 will lead to a better understanding of the mechanism underlying effector recognition by R proteins.

  6. Synthesis and structure of cesium complexes of nitrilotris(methylenephosphonic) acid [Cs-μ6-NH(CH2PO3)3H4] and [Cs2-μ10-NH(CH2PO3H)3] · H2O

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Somov, N. V.; Chausov, F. F.; Zakirov, R. M.

    2017-07-01

    3D coordination polymers cesium nitrilotris(methylenephosphonate) and dicesium nitrilotris( methylenephosphonate) are synthesized and their crystal structure is determined. In the crystal of [Cs-μ6-NH(CH2PO3)3H4] (space group P, Z = 2), cesium atoms occupy two crystallographically inequivalent positions with c.n. = 10 and c.n. = 14. The phosphonate ligand plays the bridging function; its denticity is nine. The crystal packing consists of alternating layers of Cs atoms in different environments with layers of ligand molecules between them. A ligand is bound to three Cs atoms of one layer and three Cs atoms of another layer. In the crystal of [Cs2-μ10-NH(CH2PO3H)3] · H2O (space group P, Z = 2), the complex has a dimeric structure: the bridging phosphonate ligand coordinates Cs to form a three-dimensional Cs4O6 cluster. The denticity of the ligand is equal to nine; the coordination numbers of cesium atoms are seven and nine. Two-dimensional corrugated layers of Cs4O6 clusters lie in the (002) plane, and layers of ligand molecules are located between them. Each ligand molecule coordinates eight Cs atoms of one layer and two Cs atoms of the neighboring layer.

  7. Crystal structure, electronic structure, temperature-dependent optical and scintillation properties of CsCe 2Br 7

    DOE PAGES

    Wu, Yuntao; Shi, Hongliang; Chakoumakos, Bryan C.; ...

    2015-10-05

    CsCe 2Br 7 is a self-activated inorganic scintillator that shows promising performance, but the understanding of the important structure-property relationships is lacking. In this work, we conduct a comprehensive study on CCsCe 2Br 7. The crystal structure of CsCe 2Br 7 is refined using single crystal X-ray study for the first time. It crystallizes into the orthorhombic crystal system with Pmnb space group. Its electronic structure is revealed by Density Functional Theory (DFT) calculations. Two cerium emission centers are identified and the energy barriers related to the thermal quenching to 4f ground states of Ce 3+ for these two Cemore » centers are evaluated. CsCe 2Br 7 single crystal has better light yield and energy resolution than CsCe 2Cl 7, but with an additional slow decay component of 1.7 s. The existence of a deep trap with a depth of 0.9 eV in CsCe 2Cl 7 contributes to its higher afterglow level in comparison to that of CsCe 2Br 7. The most possible point defects in CsCe 2Cl 7 and CsCe 2Br 7 are proposed by considering the vapour pressure in the growth atmosphere upon melting point.« less

  8. New structure type in the mixed-valent compound YbCu4Ga8.

    PubMed

    Subbarao, Udumula; Gutmann, Matthias J; Peter, Sebastian C

    2013-02-18

    The new compound YbCu(4)Ga(8) was obtained as large single crystals in high yield from reactions run in liquid gallium. Preliminary investigations suggest that YbCu(4)Ga(8) crystallizes in the CeMn(4)Al(8) structure type, tetragonal space group I4/mmm, and lattice constants are a = b = 8.6529(4) Å and c = 5.3976(11) Å. However, a detailed single-crystal XRD revealed a tripling of the c axis and crystallizing in a new structure type with lattice constants of a = b = 8.6529(4) Å and c = 15.465(1) Å. The structural model was further confirmed by neutron diffraction measurements on high-quality single crystal. The crystal structure of YbCu(4)Ga(8) is composed of pseudo-Frank-Kasper cages occupying one ytterbium atom in each ring which are shared through the corner along the ab plane, resulting in a three-dimensional network. The magnetic susceptibility of YbCu(4)Ga(8) investigated in the temperature range 2-300 K showed Curie-Weiss law behavior above 100 K, and the experimentally measured magnetic moment indicates mixed-valent ytterbium. Electrical resistivity measurements show the metallic nature of the compound. At low temperatures, variation of ρ as a function of T indicates a possible Fermi-liquid state at low temperatures.

  9. Flux Crystal Growth of the RE 2Ru 3Ge 5 ( RE = La, Ce, Nd, Gd, Tb) Series and Their Magnetic and Metamagnetic Transitions

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bugaris, Daniel E.; Malliakas, Christos D.; Bud?ko, Sergey L.

    Previously synthesized only as powders, single crystals of the RE 2Ru 3Ge 5 (RE = La, Ce, Nd, Gd, Tb) series of compounds have been now been obtained from molten In. We report that these materials crystallize with the U 2Co 3Si 5-type structure in orthorhombic space group Ibam with lattice parameters a ~ 10.00-9.77 Å (La-Tb), b ~ 12.51-12.35 Å, and c ~ 5.92-5.72 Å. The structure is a three-dimensional framework consisting of RuGe 5 and RuGe 6 units, as well as Ge-Ge zigzag chains. This structure type, along with the other five (Sc 2Fe 3Si 5, Lu 2Comore » 3Si 5, Y 2Rh 3Sn 5, Yb 2Ir 3Ge 5, and Yb 2Pt 3Sn 5) to compose the RE 2T 3X 5 phase space, are discussed in depth. For the three compounds with RE = Nd, Gd, and Tb, multiple magnetic transitions and metamagnetic behavior are observed. Lastly, electronic band structure calculations performed on La 2Ru 3Ge 5 indicate that these materials have a negative band gap and are semimetallic in nature.« less

  10. Copper-based metal coordination complexes with Voriconazole ligand: Syntheses, structures and antimicrobial properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Yan-Ming; Tang, Gui-Mei; Wang, Yong-Tao; Cui, Yue-Zhi; Ng, Seik Weng

    2018-03-01

    Three new chiral metal coordination complexes, namely, [Cu(FZ)2(CH3COO)2(H2O)]·2H2O (1), [Cu(FZ)2(NO3)2] (2), and [Cu2(FZ)2 (H2O)8](SO4)2·4H2O (3) [FZ = (2R,3S)-2-(2,4-difluorophenyl)-3-(5-fluoro-4-pyrimidiny)-1-(1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)-2-butanol) (Voriconazole)] have been obtained by the reaction of Cu(II) salts and the free ligand FZ at room temperature. Complexes 1-3 were structurally characterized by X-ray single-crystal diffraction, IR, UV-vis, powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Complex 1 crystallizes in the chiral space group C2, which exhibits a mono-nuclear structure. Both complexes 2 and 3 display a one-dimensional (1D) tape structure, which crystallize in chiral space group P21212 and P212121, respectively. Among these complexes, there exist a variety of hydrogen bonds and stacking interactions, through which a three-dimensional supramolecular architecture will be generated. Compared with the standard (Voriconazole), these Cu-based complexes show the more potent inhibiting efficiency against the species of Candida and Aspergillus. Moreover, among these complexes, complex 1 shows the most excellent efficiency.

  11. A technique for determining the deuterium/hydrogen contrast map in neutron macromolecular crystallography.

    PubMed

    Chatake, Toshiyuki; Fujiwara, Satoru

    2016-01-01

    A difference in the neutron scattering length between hydrogen and deuterium leads to a high density contrast in neutron Fourier maps. In this study, a technique for determining the deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) contrast map in neutron macromolecular crystallography is developed and evaluated using ribonuclease A. The contrast map between the D2O-solvent and H2O-solvent crystals is calculated in real space, rather than in reciprocal space as performed in previous neutron D/H contrast crystallography. The present technique can thus utilize all of the amplitudes of the neutron structure factors for both D2O-solvent and H2O-solvent crystals. The neutron D/H contrast maps clearly demonstrate the powerful detectability of H/D exchange in proteins. In fact, alternative protonation states and alternative conformations of hydroxyl groups are observed at medium resolution (1.8 Å). Moreover, water molecules can be categorized into three types according to their tendency towards rotational disorder. These results directly indicate improvement in the neutron crystal structure analysis. This technique is suitable for incorporation into the standard structure-determination process used in neutron protein crystallography; consequently, more precise and efficient determination of the D-atom positions is possible using a combination of this D/H contrast technique and standard neutron structure-determination protocols.

  12. Flux Crystal Growth of the RE 2Ru 3Ge 5 ( RE = La, Ce, Nd, Gd, Tb) Series and Their Magnetic and Metamagnetic Transitions

    DOE PAGES

    Bugaris, Daniel E.; Malliakas, Christos D.; Bud?ko, Sergey L.; ...

    2017-11-21

    Previously synthesized only as powders, single crystals of the RE 2Ru 3Ge 5 (RE = La, Ce, Nd, Gd, Tb) series of compounds have been now been obtained from molten In. We report that these materials crystallize with the U 2Co 3Si 5-type structure in orthorhombic space group Ibam with lattice parameters a ~ 10.00-9.77 Å (La-Tb), b ~ 12.51-12.35 Å, and c ~ 5.92-5.72 Å. The structure is a three-dimensional framework consisting of RuGe 5 and RuGe 6 units, as well as Ge-Ge zigzag chains. This structure type, along with the other five (Sc 2Fe 3Si 5, Lu 2Comore » 3Si 5, Y 2Rh 3Sn 5, Yb 2Ir 3Ge 5, and Yb 2Pt 3Sn 5) to compose the RE 2T 3X 5 phase space, are discussed in depth. For the three compounds with RE = Nd, Gd, and Tb, multiple magnetic transitions and metamagnetic behavior are observed. Lastly, electronic band structure calculations performed on La 2Ru 3Ge 5 indicate that these materials have a negative band gap and are semimetallic in nature.« less

  13. Reply to “Structural and magnetic behavior of the cubic oxyfluoride SrFeO{sub 2}F studied by neutron diffraction”

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Clemens, Oliver, E-mail: oliver.clemens@kit.edu; Karlsruher Institut für Technologie, Institut für Nanotechnologie, Hermann-von-Helmholtz-Platz 1, 76344 Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen; Berry, Frank J.

    2015-03-15

    In this article we comment on the results published by Thompson et al. (, J. Solid State Chem. 219 (2014) 173–178) on the crystal structure of SrFeO{sub 2}F, who claim the compound to crystallize in the cubic space group Pm-3m. We give a more detailed explanation of the determination of our previously reported structural model with Imma symmetry (Clemens et al., J. Solid State Chem. 206 (2013) 158–169), with addition of variable temperature XRD measurements with high counting time to provide unambiguous evidence for the Imma model being correct for our sample. - Graphical abstract: The crystal structure of SrFeO{submore » 2}F is discussed with regards to previous reports. - Highlights: • SrFeO{sub 2}F was synthesized by polymer based fluorination of SrFeO{sub 3}. • Evaluation of the diffraction data shows a pseudocubic cell metric. • Superstructure reflections at low d-spacings indicate deviation from cubic symmetry. • The phase transition temperature from orthorhombic to cubic was determined using variable temperature X-ray diffraction. • Results published by Thompson et al. are critically discussed with respect to those observations.« less

  14. Translation effects on vertical Bridgman growth and optical, mechanical and surface analysis of 2-phenylphenol single crystal

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Sadhasivam, S., E-mail: sadha.phy1@gmail.com; Perumal, Rajesh Narayana

    2-phenylphenol optical crystals were grown in cone ampoules using vertical Bridgman technique. Single crystal of 2-phenylphenol with 150 mm length has been grown. The inclination on the conical part of the ampoule reduces the growth defects in the 2-phenylphenol single crystal. The lattice parameters and structure studied using single crystal X-ray diffraction method. 2-phenylphenol single crystal belongs to orthorhombic space group Fdd2. The micro translation rate affects crystal growth of 2-phenylphenol crystal was studied. The translation rate dependent defects present in the crystal were investigated by transmittance, indentation and etching characterizations. The dislocation induced indentation crack lengths variations were studied. Etchmore » pits and striations observed for the selective etchants furnish significant information on growth aspects and degree of defect present in the crystal.« less

  15. Structure determination and characterization of two rare-earth molybdenum borate compounds: LnMoBO(6) (Ln = La, Ce).

    PubMed

    Zhao, Dan; Cheng, Wen-Dan; Zhang, Hao; Hang, Shu-Ping; Fang, Ming

    2008-07-28

    The structural, optical, and electronic properties of two rare-earth molybdenum borate compounds, LnMoBO(6) (Ln = La, Ce), have been investigated by means of single-crystal X-ray diffraction, elemental analyses, and spectral measurements, as well as calculations of energy band structures, density of states, and optical response functions by the density functional method. The title compounds, which crystallize in monoclinic space group P2(1)/c, possess a similar network of interconnected [Ce(2)(MoO(4))(2)](2+) chains and [BO(2)](-) wavy chains. Novel 1D molybdenum oxide chains are contained in their three-dimensional (3D) networks. The calculated results of crystal energy band structure by the density functional theory (DFT) method show that the solid-state compound LaMoBO(6) is a semiconductor with indirect band gaps.

  16. The transmission spectrum of sound through a phononic crystal subjected to liquid flow

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Declercq, Nico F.; Chehami, Lynda; Moiseyenko, Rayisa P.

    2018-01-01

    The influence of liquid-flow up to 7 mm/s is examined on transmission spectra of phononic crystals, revealing a potential use for slow liquid-flow measurement techniques. It is known that transmission of ultrasound through a phononic crystal is determined by its periodicity and depends on the material characteristics of the crystal's constituents. Here, the crystal consists of metal rods with the space in between filled with water. Previous studies have assumed still water in the crystal, and here, we consider flowing liquid. First, the crystal bandgaps are investigated in still water, and the results of transmission experiments are compared with theoretical band structures obtained with the finite element method. Then, changes in transmission spectra are investigated for different speeds of liquid flow. Two situations are investigated: a crystal is placed with a principal symmetry axis in the flow direction ( ΓX) and then at an angle ( ΓM). The good stability of the bandgap structure of the transmission spectrum for both directions is observed, which may be of importance for the application of phononic crystals as acoustic filters in an environment of flowing liquid. Minor transmission amplitude changes on the other hand reveal a possibility for slow liquid flow measurements.

  17. MAIN software for density averaging, model building, structure refinement and validation

    PubMed Central

    Turk, Dušan

    2013-01-01

    MAIN is software that has been designed to interactively perform the complex tasks of macromolecular crystal structure determination and validation. Using MAIN, it is possible to perform density modification, manual and semi-automated or automated model building and rebuilding, real- and reciprocal-space structure optimization and refinement, map calculations and various types of molecular structure validation. The prompt availability of various analytical tools and the immediate visualization of molecular and map objects allow a user to efficiently progress towards the completed refined structure. The extraordinary depth perception of molecular objects in three dimensions that is provided by MAIN is achieved by the clarity and contrast of colours and the smooth rotation of the displayed objects. MAIN allows simultaneous work on several molecular models and various crystal forms. The strength of MAIN lies in its manipulation of averaged density maps and molecular models when noncrystallographic symmetry (NCS) is present. Using MAIN, it is possible to optimize NCS parameters and envelopes and to refine the structure in single or multiple crystal forms. PMID:23897458

  18. Filtering properties of Thue-Morse nano-photonic crystals containing high-temperature superconductor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Talebzadeh, Robabeh; Bavaghar, Mehrdad

    2018-05-01

    In this paper, we introduced new design of quasi-periodic layered structures by choosing order two of ternary Thue-Morse structure. We considered Superconductor-dielectric photonic crystal with mirror symmetric as (ABSSAB)N(BASSBA)N composed of two kinds of nano-scale dielectric layers (A and B) and high-temperature superconductor layers where N is the number of period. This structure is assumed to be the free space. By using the transfer matrix method and the two fluid model, we theoretically study the transmission spectrum of ternary Thue-Morse superconducting photonic crystals with mirror symmetry and introduce this structure as a narrow optical filter. We showed that transmission peak so-called defect mode appears itself inside the transmission spectrum of suggested structure as same as defective layered structure. Also, we analyzed the influence of various related parameters such as the operating temperature of superconductor layer on position of defect mode. The redshift of defect mode with increasing the operating temperature was observed.

  19. Novel 3D bismuth-based coordination polymers: Synthesis, structure, and second harmonic generation properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wibowo, Arief C.; Smith, Mark D.; Yeon, Jeongho; Halasyamani, P. Shiv; zur Loye, Hans-Conrad

    2012-11-01

    Two new 3D bismuth containing coordination polymers are reported along with their single crystal structures and SHG properties. Compound 1: Bi2O2(pydc) (pydc=pyridine-2, 5-dicarboxylate), crystallizes in the monoclinic, polar space group, P21 (a=9.6479(9) Å, b=4.2349(4) Å, c=11.9615(11) Å, β=109.587(1)°), which contains Bi2O2 chains that are connected into a 3D structure via the pydc ligands. Compound 2: Bi4Na4(1R3S-cam)8(EtOH)3.1(H2O)3.4 (1R3S cam=1R3S-camphoric acid) crystallizes in the monoclinic, polar space group, P21 (a=19.0855(7) Å, b=13.7706(5) Å, c=19.2429(7) Å, β=90.701(1)°) and is a true 3D coordination polymer. These are two example of SHG compounds prepared using unsymmetric ligands (compound 1) or chiral ligands (compound 2), together with metals that often exhibit stereochemically-active lone pairs, such as Bi3+, a synthetic approach that resulted in polar, non-centrosymmetric, 3D metal-organic coordination polymer.

  20. 3D DNA Origami Crystals.

    PubMed

    Zhang, Tao; Hartl, Caroline; Frank, Kilian; Heuer-Jungemann, Amelie; Fischer, Stefan; Nickels, Philipp C; Nickel, Bert; Liedl, Tim

    2018-05-18

    3D crystals assembled entirely from DNA provide a route to design materials on a molecular level and to arrange guest particles in predefined lattices. This requires design schemes that provide high rigidity and sufficiently large open guest space. A DNA-origami-based "tensegrity triangle" structure that assembles into a 3D rhombohedral crystalline lattice with an open structure in which 90% of the volume is empty space is presented here. Site-specific placement of gold nanoparticles within the lattice demonstrates that these crystals are spacious enough to efficiently host 20 nm particles in a cavity size of 1.83 × 10 5 nm 3 , which would also suffice to accommodate ribosome-sized macromolecules. The accurate assembly of the DNA origami lattice itself, as well as the precise incorporation of gold particles, is validated by electron microscopy and small-angle X-ray scattering experiments. The results show that it is possible to create DNA building blocks that assemble into lattices with customized geometry. Site-specific hosting of nano objects in the optically transparent DNA lattice sets the stage for metamaterial and structural biology applications. © 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

  1. Processing of mercurous chloride in reduced gravity

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Watson, C.; Singh, N.; Thomas, A.

    1996-12-31

    In a joint experiment between the Northrop-Grumman Science and Technology Center and the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Consortium for Materials Development in Space (UAH/CMDS), single crystals of mercurous chloride (Hg{sub 2}Cl{sub 2}) were grown in the Space Experiment Facility (SEF) transparent furnace that was flown on Spacelab 4 (STS-77) in May 1996. Single crystals of this material can be readily grown in normal gravity by closed-tube physical vapor transport, but the crystals generally contain structural inhomogeneities which degrade the optical performance. The nature and cause of these defects are not completely understood, but their degree appears to correlate withmore » the Rayleigh number that characterizes the convective transport during their growth; hence, it is suspected that uncontrolled convection may play a role in the defect structure. The objective of the flight experiment was to reduce the convective flows by several orders of magnitude to see if the structural inhomogeneities can be reduced or eliminated. This paper will describe the physical and thermal properties of the SEF furnace, the ampoule design and loading procedure, and the ground testing, and will also present the preliminary flight results.« less

  2. Experiment 3: Zeolite Crystal Growth in Microgravity- The USML-2 Mission

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Bac, Nurcan; Warzywoda, Juliusz; Sacco, Albert, Jr.

    1998-01-01

    The extensive use of zeolites and their impact on the world's economy leads to many efforts to characterize their structure, and to improve the knowledge base for nucleation and growth of these crystals. The Zeolite Crystal Growth (ZCG) experiment on USML-2 aims to enhance the understanding of nucleation and growth of zeolite crystals while attempting to provide a means of controlling the defect concentration in microgravity. Zeolites A, X, Beta, and Silicalite were grown during the 16-day USML-2 mission. The solutions where the nucleation event was controlled yielded larger and more uniform crystals of better morphology and purity than their terrestrial/control counterparts. Space-grown Beta crystals were free of line defects while terrestrial/controls had substantial defects.

  3. Yb7Ni4InGe12: a quaternary compound having mixed valent Yb atoms grown from indium flux.

    PubMed

    Subbarao, Udumula; Jana, Rajkumar; Chondroudi, Maria; Balasubramanian, Mahalingam; Kanatzidis, Mercouri G; Peter, Sebastian C

    2015-03-28

    The new intermetallic compound Yb7Ni4InGe12 was obtained as large silver needle shaped single crystals from reactive indium flux. Single crystal X-ray diffraction suggests that Yb7Ni4InGe12 crystallizes in the Yb7Co4InGe12 structure type, and tetragonal space group P4/m and lattice constants are a = b = 10.291(2) Å and c = 4.1460(8) Å. The crystal structure of Yb7Ni4InGe12 consists of columnar units of three different types of channels filled with the Yb atoms. The crystal structure of Yb7Ni4InGe12 is closely related to Yb5Ni4Ge10. The effective magnetic moment obtained from the magnetic susceptibility measurements in the temperature range 200-300 K is 3.66μB/Yb suggests mixed/intermediate valence behavior of ytterbium atoms. X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy (XANES) confirms that Yb7Ni4InGe12 exhibits mixed valence.

  4. Crystal structure and thermal expansion of a CsCe 2Cl 7 scintillator

    DOE PAGES

    Zhuravleva, M.; Lindsey, A.; Chakoumakos, B. C.; ...

    2015-04-06

    Here we used single-crystal X-ray diffraction data to determine crystal structure of CsCe 2Cl 7. It crystallizes in a P112 1/b space group with a = 19.352(1) Å, b = 19.352(1) Å, c = 14.838(1) Å, γ = 119.87(2) ° , and V = 4818.6(5) Å 3. Differential scanning calorimetry measurements combined with the structural evolution of CsCe 2Cl 7 via X-ray diffractometry over a temperature range from room temperature to the melting point indicates no obvious intermediate solid-solid phase transitions. The anisotropy in the average linear coefficient of thermal expansion of the a axis (21.3 10 -6/ °C) withmore » respect to the b and c axes (27.0 10 -6/ °C) was determined through lattice parameter refinement of the temperature dependent diffraction patterns. Lastly, these findings suggest that the reported cracking behavior during melt growth of CsCe 2Cl 7 bulk crystals using conventional Bridgman and Czochralski techniques may be largely attributed to the anisotropy in thermal expansion.« less

  5. Modeling the intermolecular interactions: molecular structure of N-3-hydroxyphenyl-4-methoxybenzamide.

    PubMed

    Karabulut, Sedat; Namli, Hilmi; Kurtaran, Raif; Yildirim, Leyla Tatar; Leszczynski, Jerzy

    2014-03-01

    The title compound, N-3-hydroxyphenyl-4-methoxybenzamide (3) was prepared by the acylation reaction of 3-aminophenol (1) and 4-metoxybenzoylchloride (2) in THF and characterized by ¹H NMR, ¹³C NMR and elemental analysis. Molecular structure of the crystal was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction and DFT calculations. 3 crystallizes in monoclinic P2₁/c space group. The influence of intermolecular interactions (dimerization and crystal packing) on molecular geometry has been evaluated by calculations performed for three different models; monomer (3), dimer (4) and dimer with added unit cell contacts (5). Molecular structure of 3, 4 and 5 was optimized by applying B3LYP method with 6-31G+(d,p) basis set in gas phase and compared with X-ray crystallographic data including bond lengths, bond angles and selected dihedral angles. It has been concluded that although the crystal packing and dimerization have a minor effect on bond lengths and angles, however, these interactions are important for the dihedral angles and the rotational conformation of aromatic rings. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  6. Crystal pathologies in macromolecular crystallography.

    PubMed

    Dauter, Zbigniew; Jaskólski, Mariusz

    Macromolecules, such as proteins or nucleic acids, form crystals with a large volume fraction of water, ~50% on average. Apart from typical physical defects and rather trivial poor quality problems, macromolecular crystals, as essentially any crystals, can also suffer from several kinds of pathologies, in which everything seems to be perfect, except that from the structural point of view the interpretation may be very difficult, sometimes even impossible. A frequent nuisance is pseudosymmetry, or non-crystallographic symmetry (NCS), which is particularly nasty when it has translational character. Lattice-translocation defects, also called order-disorder twinning (OD-twinning), occur when molecules are packed regularly in layers but the layers are stacked (without rotation) in two (or more) discrete modes, with a unique translocation vector. Crystal twinning arises when twin domains have different orientations, incompatible with the symmetry of the crystal structure. There are also crystals in which the periodic (lattice) order is broken or absent altogether. When the strict short-range translational order from one unit cell to the next is lost but the long-range order is restored by a periodic modulation, we have a modulated crystal structure. In quasicrystals (not observed for macromolecules yet), the periodic order (in 3D space) is lost completely and the diffraction pattern (which is still discrete) cannot be even indexed using three hkl indices. In addition, there are other physical defects and phenomena (such as high mosaicity, diffraction anisotropy, diffuse scattering, etc.) which make diffraction data processing and structure solution difficult or even impossible.

  7. Co-crystallization phase transformations in all π-conjugated block copolymers with different main-chain moieties.

    PubMed

    Lee, Yi-Huan; Chen, Wei-Chih; Yang, Yi-Lung; Chiang, Chi-Ju; Yokozawa, Tsutomu; Dai, Chi-An

    2014-05-21

    Driven by molecular affinity and balance in the crystallization kinetics, the ability to co-crystallize dissimilar yet self-crystallizable blocks of a block copolymer (BCP) into a uniform domain may strongly affect its phase diagram. In this study, we synthesize a new series of crystalline and monodisperse all-π-conjugated poly(2,5-dihexyloxy-p-phenylene)-b-poly(3-(2-ethylhexyl)thiophene) (PPP-P3EHT) BCPs and investigate this multi-crystallization effect. Despite vastly different side-chain and main-chain structures, PPP and P3EHT blocks are able to co-crystallize into a single uniform domain comprising PPP and P3EHT main-chains with mutually interdigitated side-chains spaced in-between. With increasing P3EHT fraction, PPP-P3EHTs undergo sequential phase transitions and form hierarchical superstructures including predominately PPP nanofibrils, co-crystalline nanofibrils, a bilayer co-crystalline/pure P3EHT lamellar structure, a microphase-separated bilayer PPP-P3EHT lamellar structure, and finally P3EHT nanofibrils. In particular, the presence of the new co-crystalline lamellar structure is the manifestation of the interaction balance between self-crystallization and co-crystallization of the dissimilar polymers on the resulting nanostructure of the BCP. The current study demonstrates the co-crystallization nature of all-conjugated BCPs with different main-chain moieties and may provide new guidelines for the organization of π-conjugated BCPs for future optoelectronic applications.

  8. Synthesis, crystal structure, vibrational spectroscopy and photoluminescence of new hybrid compound containing chlorate anions of stanate (II)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lassoued, Mohamed Saber; Abdelbaky, Mohammed S. M.; Lassoued, Abdelmajid; Meroño, Rafael Mendoza; Gadri, Abdellatif; Ammar, Salah; Ben Salah, Abdelhamid; García-Granda, Santiago

    2017-08-01

    The present work aimed at studying a new organic-inorganic bis (4-amino quinolinium) hexachloro stanate (II) dihydrate compound. It was prepared and characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction, X-ray powder, Hirshfeld surface, Spectroscopy measurement, thermal study and photoluminescence properties. It was found to crystallize in the monoclinic system (P21/c space group) with the following lattice parameters: a = 7.2558(6) Å, b = 13.4876(5) Å, c = 17.2107(13) Å, β = 102.028 (12)°. Its crystal structure was determined and refined down to an R value of 0.06 and a wR value of 0.087. The structure consisted of two different alternating organic-inorganic layers. The crystal packing was stabilized by Nsbnd H⋯Cl and Osbnd H⋯Cl hydrogen bonds and π-π interactions. Hirshfeld surface analysis was used to investigate intermolecular interactions, as well 2D finger plots were conducted to reveal the contribution of these interactions in the crystal structure quantitatively. The X-ray powder is in agreement with the X-ray structure. Scanning electronic microscopy (SEM) was carried out. Furthermore, the room temperature Infra Red (IR) spectrum of the title compound was analyzed on the basis of data found in the literature. Solid state 13C NMR spectrum shows ten signals, confirming the solid state structure determined by X-ray diffraction. Thermal analysis shows two anomalies at 380 and 610 °C. The optical properties of the crystal were studied using optical absorption UV-visible and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy, which were investigated at room temperature.

  9. Expression, purification and crystallization of Helicobacter pyloril-asparaginase

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dhavala, Prathusha; Krasotkina, Julya; Dubreuil, Christine

    2008-08-01

    l-Asparaginase from H. pylori was overexpressed in E. coli, purified and crystallized. The crystals belonged to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 63.6, b = 94.9, c = 100.2 Å and one molecule in the asymmetric unit. A complete data set to 1.6 Å resolution was collected using synchrotron radiation. The l-asparaginases from Escherichia coli and Erwinia chrysanthemi are effective drugs that have been used in the treatment of acute childhood lymphoblastic leukaemia for over 30 years. However, despite their therapeutic potential, they can cause serious side effects as a consequence of their intrinsic glutaminase activity, which leadsmore » to l-glutamine depletion in the blood. Consequently, new asparaginases with low glutaminase activity, fewer side effects and high activity towards l-asparagine are highly desirable as better alternatives in cancer therapy. l-Asparaginase from Helicobacter pylori was overexpressed in E. coli and purified for structural studies. The enzyme was crystallized at pH 7.0 in the presence of 16–19%(w/v) PEG 4000 and 0.1 M magnesium formate. Data were collected to 1.6 Å resolution at 100 K from a single crystal at a synchrotron-radiation source. The crystals belong to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 63.6, b = 94.9, c = 100.2 Å and one molecule of l-asparaginase in the asymmetric unit. Elucidation of the crystal structure will provide insight into the active site of the enzyme and a better understanding of the structure–activity relationship in l-asparaginases.« less

  10. Shear induced structures in crystallizing cocoa butter

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mazzanti, Gianfranco; Guthrie, Sarah E.; Sirota, Eric B.; Marangoni, Alejandro G.; Idziak, Stefan H. J.

    2004-03-01

    Cocoa butter is the main structural component of chocolate and many cosmetics. It crystallizes in several polymorphs, called phases I to VI. We used Synchrotron X-ray diffraction to study the effect of shear on its crystallization. A previously unreported phase (phase X) was found and a crystallization path through phase IV under shear was observed. Samples were crystallized under shear from the melt in temperature controlled Couette cells, at final crystallization temperatures of 17.5^oC, 20^oC and 22.5^oC in Beamline X10A of NSLS. The formation of phase X was observed at low shear rates (90 s-1) and low crystallization temperature (17.5^oC), but was absent at high shear (720 s-1) and high temperature (20^oC). The d-spacing and melting point suggest that this new phase is a mixture rich on two of the three major components of cocoa butter. We also found that, contrary to previous reports, the transition from phase II to phase V can happen through the intermediate phase IV, at high shear rates and temperature.

  11. Photonic quasi-crystal terahertz lasers

    PubMed Central

    Vitiello, Miriam Serena; Nobile, Michele; Ronzani, Alberto; Tredicucci, Alessandro; Castellano, Fabrizio; Talora, Valerio; Li, Lianhe; Linfield, Edmund H.; Davies, A. Giles

    2014-01-01

    Quasi-crystal structures do not present a full spatial periodicity but are nevertheless constructed starting from deterministic generation rules. When made of different dielectric materials, they often possess fascinating optical properties, which lie between those of periodic photonic crystals and those of a random arrangement of scatterers. Indeed, they can support extended band-like states with pseudogaps in the energy spectrum, but lacking translational invariance, they also intrinsically feature a pattern of ‘defects’, which can give rise to critically localized modes confined in space, similar to Anderson modes in random structures. If used as laser resonators, photonic quasi-crystals open up design possibilities that are simply not possible in a conventional periodic photonic crystal. In this letter, we exploit the concept of a 2D photonic quasi crystal in an electrically injected laser; specifically, we pattern the top surface of a terahertz quantum-cascade laser with a Penrose tiling of pentagonal rotational symmetry, reaching 0.1–0.2% wall-plug efficiencies and 65 mW peak output powers with characteristic surface-emitting conical beam profiles, result of the rich quasi-crystal Fourier spectrum. PMID:25523102

  12. Photonic quasi-crystal terahertz lasers

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vitiello, Miriam Serena; Nobile, Michele; Ronzani, Alberto; Tredicucci, Alessandro; Castellano, Fabrizio; Talora, Valerio; Li, Lianhe; Linfield, Edmund H.; Davies, A. Giles

    2014-12-01

    Quasi-crystal structures do not present a full spatial periodicity but are nevertheless constructed starting from deterministic generation rules. When made of different dielectric materials, they often possess fascinating optical properties, which lie between those of periodic photonic crystals and those of a random arrangement of scatterers. Indeed, they can support extended band-like states with pseudogaps in the energy spectrum, but lacking translational invariance, they also intrinsically feature a pattern of ‘defects’, which can give rise to critically localized modes confined in space, similar to Anderson modes in random structures. If used as laser resonators, photonic quasi-crystals open up design possibilities that are simply not possible in a conventional periodic photonic crystal. In this letter, we exploit the concept of a 2D photonic quasi crystal in an electrically injected laser; specifically, we pattern the top surface of a terahertz quantum-cascade laser with a Penrose tiling of pentagonal rotational symmetry, reaching 0.1-0.2% wall-plug efficiencies and 65 mW peak output powers with characteristic surface-emitting conical beam profiles, result of the rich quasi-crystal Fourier spectrum.

  13. Photonic quasi-crystal terahertz lasers.

    PubMed

    Vitiello, Miriam Serena; Nobile, Michele; Ronzani, Alberto; Tredicucci, Alessandro; Castellano, Fabrizio; Talora, Valerio; Li, Lianhe; Linfield, Edmund H; Davies, A Giles

    2014-12-19

    Quasi-crystal structures do not present a full spatial periodicity but are nevertheless constructed starting from deterministic generation rules. When made of different dielectric materials, they often possess fascinating optical properties, which lie between those of periodic photonic crystals and those of a random arrangement of scatterers. Indeed, they can support extended band-like states with pseudogaps in the energy spectrum, but lacking translational invariance, they also intrinsically feature a pattern of 'defects', which can give rise to critically localized modes confined in space, similar to Anderson modes in random structures. If used as laser resonators, photonic quasi-crystals open up design possibilities that are simply not possible in a conventional periodic photonic crystal. In this letter, we exploit the concept of a 2D photonic quasi crystal in an electrically injected laser; specifically, we pattern the top surface of a terahertz quantum-cascade laser with a Penrose tiling of pentagonal rotational symmetry, reaching 0.1-0.2% wall-plug efficiencies and 65 mW peak output powers with characteristic surface-emitting conical beam profiles, result of the rich quasi-crystal Fourier spectrum.

  14. Structural, spectroscopic and DFT study of 4-methoxybenzohydrazide Schiff bases. A new series of polyfunctional ligands.

    PubMed

    Ferraresi-Curotto, Verónica; Echeverría, Gustavo A; Piro, Oscar E; Pis-Diez, Reinaldo; González-Baró, Ana C

    2015-02-25

    Five Schiff bases obtained from condensation of 4-methoxybenzohydrazide with related aldehydes, namely o-vanillin, vanillin, 5-bromovanillin, 5-chlorosalicylaldehyde and 5-bromosalicylaldehyde were prepared. A detailed structural and spectroscopic study is reported. The crystal structures of four members of the family were determined and compared with one another. The hydrazones obtained from 5-chlorosalicylaldehyde and 5-bromosalicylaldehyde resulted to be isomorphic to each other. The solid-state structures are stabilized by intra-molecular O-H⋯N interactions in salicylaldehyde derivatives between the O-H moiety from the aldehyde and the hydrazone nitrogen atom. All crystals are further stabilized by inter-molecular H-bonds mediated by the crystallization water molecule. A comparative analysis between experimental and theoretical results is presented. The conformational space was searched and geometries were optimized both in gas phase and including solvent effects. The structure is predicted for the compound for which the crystal structure was not determined. Infrared and electronic spectra were measured and assigned with the help of data obtained from computational methods based on the Density Functional Theory. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  15. Recombinant production, crystallization and X-ray crystallographic structure determination of the peptidyl-tRNA hydrolase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Hughes, Ronny C.; McFeeters, Hana; Coates, Leighton

    The peptidyl-tRNA hydrolase enzyme from the pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pth; EC 3.1.1.29) has been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli and crystallized for X-ray structural analysis. Suitable crystals were grown using the sitting-drop vapour-diffusion method after one week of incubation against a reservoir solution consisting of 20% polyethylene glycol 4000, 100 mM Tris pH 7.5, 10%(v/v) isopropyl alcohol. The crystals were used to obtain the three-dimensional structure of the native protein at 1.77 Å resolution. The structure was determined by molecular replacement of the crystallographic data processed in space group P6122 with unit-cell parameters a = b = 63.62,c =more » 155.20 Å, α = β = 90, γ = 120°. The asymmetric unit of the crystallographic lattice was composed of a single copy of the enzyme molecule with a 43% solvent fraction, corresponding to a Matthews coefficient of 2.43 Å3 Da-1. The crystallographic structure reported here will serve as the foundation for future structure-guided efforts towards the development of novel small-molecule inhibitors specific to bacterial Pths.« less

  16. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Thiruselvam, Viswanathan; Sivaraman, Padavattan; Kumarevel, Thirumananseri, E-mail: kumarevel.thirumananseri@riken.jp

    Highlights: • Crystal structure of ferritin was determined. • Endogenously expressed iron’s were identified. • Binuclear iron sites were observed at A and B active sites. - Abstract: Ferritin is an iron regulatory protein. It is responsible for storage and detoxification of excess iron thereby it regulates iron level in the body. Here we report the crystal structure of ferritin with two endogenously expressed Fe atoms binding in both the sites. The protein was purified and characterized by MALDI-TOF and N-terminal amino acid sequencing. The crystal belongs to I4 space group and it diffracted up to 2.5 Å. The structuralmore » analysis suggested that it crystallizes as hexamer and confirmed that it happened to be the first report of endogenously expressed Fe ions incorporated in both the A and B sites, situated in between the helices.« less

  17. Hydrogen bonds directed 2D → 3D interdigitated Cd(II) compound: Synthesis, crystal structure and dual-emission luminescent properties

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Yu, Yuanyuan

    2017-06-01

    A new Cd(II) compound, namely [Cd2(btc)(phen)2Cl]n·n(H2O)·n(DMA) (1, H3btc = 1, 3, 5-benzenetricarboxylic acid, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline, DMA = N,N'-dimethylacetamide) has been synthesized and structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. This compound crystallizes in monoclinic P21/n space group with a = 13.5729(7) Å, b = 20.1049(7) Å, c = 13.9450(6) Å, β = 104.671(4)°, Z = 4. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis reveals that compound 1 features a 2D → 3D interdigitated framework directed by the intermolecular hydrogen bonds. In addition, the luminescent properties of compound 1 were also investigated in the solid state at room temperature.

  18. Some optical properties of one dimensional annular photonic crystal with plasma frequency

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pandeya, G. N.; Thapa, Khem B.

    2018-05-01

    This paper presents the reflection bands, photonic band gaps, of the one-dimensional annul photonic crystal (APC) containing double negative (DNG) metamaterials and air. The proposed annular structure consists of the alternate layers of dispersive DNG material and air immersed in free space. The reflectance properties of the APC by employing the transfer matrix method (TMM) in the cylindrical waves for TE polarization is studied theoretically. In addition of this, we have also studied the effect of plasma frequency on the reflection behavior of the considered annular structure.

  19. Crystallization of human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Takahashi, Ryo; Nakamura, Shota; Yoshida, Takuya

    2007-05-01

    Human nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase has been crystallized using microseeding methods and X-ray diffraction data have been collected at 2.0 Å resolution. In the NAD biosynthetic pathway, nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (NMPRTase; EC 2.4.2.12) plays an important role in catalyzing the synthesis of nicotinamide mononucleotide from nicotinamide and 5′-phosphoribosyl-1′-pyrophosphate. Because the diffraction pattern of the initally obtained crystals was not suitable for structure analysis, the crystal quality was improved by successive use of the microseeding technique. The resultant crystals diffracted to 2.0 Å resolution. These crystals belonged to space group P21, with unit-cell parameters a = 60.56, b = 106.40, c = 82.78 Å.more » Here, the crystallization of human NMPRTase is reported in the free form; the crystals should be useful for inhibitor-soaking experiments on the enzyme.« less

  20. Crystal structure of the kinase domain of human protein tyrosine kinase 6 (PTK6) at 2.33 Å resolution.

    PubMed

    Thakur, Manish Kumar; Kumar, Amit; Birudukota, Swarnakumari; Swaminathan, Srinivasan; Tyagi, Rajiv; Gosu, Ramachandraiah

    2016-09-16

    Human Protein tyrosine kinase 6 (PTK6) (EC:2.7.10.2), also known as the breast tumor kinase (BRK), is an intracellular non-receptor Src-related tyrosine kinase expressed in a majority of human breast tumors and breast cancer cell lines, but its expression is low or completely absent in normal mammary glands. In the recent past, several studies have suggested that PTK6 is a potential therapeutic target in cancer. To understand its structural and functional properties, the PTK6 kinase domain (PTK6-KD) gene was cloned, overexpressed in a baculo-insect cell system, purified and crystallized at room temperature. X-ray diffraction data to 2.33 Å resolution was collected on a single PTK6-KD crystal, which belonged to the triclinic space group P1. The Matthews coefficient calculation suggested the presence of four protein molecules per asymmetric unit, with a solvent content of ∼50%.The structure has been solved by molecular replacement and crystal structure data submitted to the protein data bank under the accession number 5D7V. This is the first report of apo PTK6-KD structure crystallized in DFG-in and αC-helix-out conformation. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  1. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2004-04-15

    This is an image of a colloidal crystal from the CDOT-2 investigation flown on STS-95. There are so many colloidal particles in this sample that it behaves like a glass. In the laboratory on Earth, the sample remained in an amorphous state, showing no sign of crystal growth. In microgravity the sample crystallized in 3 days, as did the other glassy colloidal samples examined in the CDOT-2 experiment. During the investigation, crystallization occurred in samples that had a volume fraction (number of particles per total volume) larger than the formerly reported glass transition of 0.58. This has great implications for theories of the structural glass transition. These crystals were strong enough to survive space shuttle re-entry and landing.

  2. Ab initio phasing by molecular averaging in real space with new criteria: application to structure determination of a betanodavirus.

    PubMed

    Yoshimura, Masato; Chen, Nai Chi; Guan, Hong Hsiang; Chuankhayan, Phimonphan; Lin, Chien Chih; Nakagawa, Atsushi; Chen, Chun Jung

    2016-07-01

    Molecular averaging, including noncrystallographic symmetry (NCS) averaging, is a powerful method for ab initio phase determination and phase improvement. Applications of the cross-crystal averaging (CCA) method have been shown to be effective for phase improvement after initial phasing by molecular replacement, isomorphous replacement, anomalous dispersion or combinations of these methods. Here, a two-step process for phase determination in the X-ray structural analysis of a new coat protein from a betanodavirus, Grouper nervous necrosis virus, is described in detail. The first step is ab initio structure determination of the T = 3 icosahedral virus-like particle using NCS averaging (NCSA). The second step involves structure determination of the protrusion domain of the viral molecule using cross-crystal averaging. In this method, molecular averaging and solvent flattening constrain the electron density in real space. To quantify these constraints, a new, simple and general indicator, free fraction (ff), is introduced, where ff is defined as the ratio of the volume of the electron density that is freely changed to the total volume of the crystal unit cell. This indicator is useful and effective to evaluate the strengths of both NCSA and CCA. Under the condition that a mask (envelope) covers the target molecule well, an ff value of less than 0.1, as a new rule of thumb, gives sufficient phasing power for the successful construction of new structures.

  3. Diffusion paths formation for Cu{sup +} ions in superionic Cu{sub 6}PS{sub 5}I single crystals studied in terms of structural phase transition

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Gagor, A.; Pietraszko, A.; Kaynts, D.

    2005-11-15

    In order to understand the structural transformations leading to high ionic conductivity of Cu{sup +} ions in Cu{sub 6}PS{sub 5}I argyrodite compound, the detailed structure analysis based on single-crystal X-ray diffraction has been performed. Below the phase transition at T{sub c}=(144-169)K Cu{sub 6}PS{sub 5}I belongs to monoclinic, ferroelastic phase (space group Cc) with ordered copper sublattice. Above T{sub c} delocalization of copper ions begins and crystal changes the symmetry to cubic superstructure with space group F-43c (a{sup '}=19.528A, z=32). Finally, above T{sub 1}=274K increasing disordering of the Cu{sup +} ions heightens the symmetry to F-43m (a=9.794A, z=4). In this work,more » the final structural model of two cubic phases is presented including the detailed temperature evolution of positions and site occupation factors of copper ions (R{sub 1}=0.0397 for F-43c phase, and 0.0245 for F-43m phase). Possible diffusion paths for the copper ions are represented by means of the atomic displacement factors and split model. The structural results coincide well with the previously reported non-Arrhenius behavior of conductivity and indicate significant change in conduction mechanism.« less

  4. Two new phases in the ternary RE-Ga-S systems with the unique interlinkage of GaS4 building units: synthesis, structure, and properties.

    PubMed

    Lin, Hua; Shen, Jin-Ni; Zhu, Wei-Wei; Liu, Yi; Wu, Xin-Tao; Zhu, Qi-Long; Wu, Li-Ming

    2017-10-17

    Two novel ternary rare-earth chalcogenides, Yb 6 Ga 4 S 15 and Lu 5 GaS 9 , have been prepared by solid-state reactions of an elemental mixture at high temperatures. Their structures were determined on the basis of single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Yb 6 Ga 4 S 15 crystallizes in the monoclinic space group C2/m (no.12) [a = 23.557(2) Å, b = 3.7664(4) Å, c = 12.466(1) Å, β = 90.915(9)°, V = 1105.9(2) Å 3 and Z = 2], whereas Lu 5 GaS 9 crystallizes in the triclinic space group P1[combining macron] (no.2) [a = 7.735(3) Å, b = 10.033(4) Å, c = 10.120(4) Å, α = 106.296(4)°, β = 100.178(5)°, γ = 101.946(3)°, V = 714.1(5) Å 3 and Z = 2]. Both the structures feature complicated three dimensional frameworks with the unique interlinkages of GaS 4 as basic building units. Significantly, photo-electrochemical measurements indicated that title compounds were photoresponsive under visible-light illumination. Furthermore, the UV-visible-near IR diffuse reflectance spectra, thermal stabilities, electronic structures, physical properties as well as a structure change trend of the ternary rare-earth/gallium/sulfur compounds have been evaluated.

  5. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Barahona, P., E-mail: pbaraho@ucm.cl; Galdámez, A., E-mail: agaldamez@uchile.cl; López-Vergara, F.

    CuTi{sub 2−x}M{sub x}S{sub 4} (M=Fe, Mn, Co; x=0.3, 0.5) and CuCr{sub 2−x}Ti{sub x}Se{sub 4} (x=0.3, 0.5, 0.7) chalcospinels were synthesized by conventional solid-state reactions. Their crystal structures were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. All of the phases crystallized in cubic spinel-type structures (space group, Fd3{sup ¯}m). For all of the chalcospinel compounds, the edge-length distortion parameter (ELD) indicated that the most distorted polyhedron was Q[(Ti,M){sub 3}Cu], which displayed an ∼8% distortion from an ideal tetrahedron structure (Q=S or Se). The Mn-based thiospinel CuMn{sub 0.3}Ti{sub 1.7}S{sub 4} is paramagnetic, whereas the Fe-based thiospinels (CuTi{sub 2−x}Fe{sub x}S{sub 4}; x=0.3 and 0.7) aremore » strongly antiferromagnetic due to their spin-glass states. The magnetic susceptibility measurements indicated ferromagnetic behavior for the selenospinels (CuCr{sub 2−x}Ti{sub x}Se{sub 4}; x=0.3, 0.5 and 0.7). - Graphical abstract: View along [1 0 0] of CuCr{sub 2−x}Ti{sub x}Se{sub 4} crystal structure showing tetrahedral and octahedral units. To the right, experimental X-ray powder diffraction pattern of CuCr{sub 1.7}Ti{sub 0.3}Se{sub 4} (top) in compared (in a like-mirror representation) to a simulated X-ray pattern from single-crystal data (bottom). - Highlights: • Chalcogenides belong to the family of compounds spinel-type. • Resolved single crystals of the solid solutions have space group Fd-3m. • The distortion of the tetrahedral and octahedral volume were calculated. • These solid solutions shows a ferromagnetic or spin-glass behavior.« less

  6. Dipicolinate salt of imidazole: Discovering its structure and properties using different experimental methodologies and quantum chemical investigations

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Thirumurugan, R.; Anitha, K.

    2018-03-01

    A novel organic proton transfer complex of imidazolium dipicolinate (ID) has been synthesized and it was grown as single crystals using slow evaporation method. The molecular structure of synthesized compound and vibrational modes of its functional groups were confirmed by (1H and 13C) NMR, FTIR and FT-Raman spectroscopic studies, respectively. Single crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD) analysis confirmed the orthorhombic system with noncentrosymmetric (NCS), P212121, space group of grown ID crystal. UV-Vis-NIR spectral study confirmed its high optical transparency within the region of 285-1500 nm. Powder second harmonic generation (SHG) efficiency of ID crystal was confirmed and it was 6.8 times that of KDP crystal. TG-DTA and DSC analysis revealed the higher thermal stability of grown crystal as 249 °C. The dielectric response and mechanical behaviour of grown crystal were studied effectively. Density functional theory calculations were performed to probe the relationship between the structure and its properties including molecular optimization, Mulliken atomic charge distribution, frontier molecular orbital (FMOs) and molecular electrostatic potential map (MEP) analysis and first hyperpolarizability. All these experimental and computational results were discussed in this communication and it endorsed the ID compound as a potential NLO candidate could be employed in optoelectronics device applications in near future.

  7. Future mission opportunities and requirements for advanced space photovoltaic energy conversion technology

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Flood, Dennis J.

    1990-01-01

    The variety of potential future missions under consideration by NASA will impose a broad range of requirements on space solar arrays, and mandates the development of new solar cells which can offer a wide range of capabilities to mission planners. Major advances in performance have recently been achieved at several laboratories in a variety of solar cell types. Many of those recent advances are reviewed, the areas are examined where possible improvements are yet to be made, and the requirements are discussed that must be met by advanced solar cell if they are to be used in space. The solar cells of interest include single and multiple junction cells which are fabricated from single crystal, polycrystalline and amorphous materials. Single crystal cells on foreign substrates, thin film single crystal cells on superstrates, and multiple junction cells which are either mechanically stacked, monolithically grown, or hybrid structures incorporating both techniques are discussed. Advanced concentrator array technology for space applications is described, and the status of thin film, flexible solar array blanket technology is reported.

  8. Basic approaches to and tasks of space technology

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Okhotin, A. S.

    1978-01-01

    The high vacuum and weightlessness of outer space offer great possibilities for the new field of space technology. To take advantage of this, it is necessary to study such physical and chemical phenomena as diffusion, surface tension, heat exchange, and crystallization. The research shows the possibility of obtaining materials with a more perfect structure. Methods of treating materials can be used in space which are impossible on earth. Achievements in material science in outer space will have a large impact on the national economy.

  9. Synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy of Ln{sub 3}NbO{sub 7} (Ln=La, Pr, Nd, Sm-Lu) ceramics obtained by molten-salt synthesis

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Siqueira, K.P.F.; Soares, J.C.; Granado, E.

    2014-01-15

    Ln{sub 3}NbO{sub 7} (Ln=La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu) ceramics were obtained by molten-salt synthesis and their structures were systematically investigated by synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SXRD), second harmonic generation (SHG) and Raman spectroscopy. It was observed that ceramics with the largest ionic radii (La, Pr, Nd) crystallized into the Pmcn space group, while the ceramics with intermediate ionic radii (Sm-Gd) exhibited a different crystal structure belonging to the Ccmm space group. For this last group of ceramics, this result was corroborated by SHG and Raman scattering and ruled out any possibility formore » the non-centrosymmetric C 222{sub 1} space group, solving a recent controversy in the literature. Finally, according to SXRD, Tb-Lu containing samples exhibited an average defect fluorite structure (Fm3{sup ¯}m space group). Nonetheless, broad scattering at forbidden Bragg reflections indicates the presence of short-range domains with lower symmetry. Vibrational spectroscopy showed the presence of six Raman-active modes, inconsistent with the average cubic fluorite structure, and in line with the existence of lower-symmetry nano-domains immersed in the average fluorite structure of these ceramics. - Graphical abstract: Raman spectrum for Sm{sub 3}NbO{sub 7} ceramics showing their 27 phonon modes adjusted through Lorentzian lines. According to synchrotron X-ray diffraction and Raman scattering, this material belongs to the space group Cmcm. Display Omitted - Highlights: • Ln{sub 3}NbO{sub 7} ceramics were obtained by molten-salt synthesis. • SXRD, SHG and Raman scattering confirmed orthorhombic and cubic structures. • Ccmm instead of C222{sub 1} is the correct structure for Sm–Gd ceramics. • Pmcn space group was confirmed for La-, Pr- and Nd-based ceramics. • For Tb–Lu ceramics, ordered domains of a pyrochlore structure were observed.« less

  10. How to assign a (3 + 1)-dimensional superspace group to an incommensurately modulated biological macromolecular crystal

    PubMed Central

    2017-01-01

    Periodic crystal diffraction is described using a three-dimensional (3D) unit cell and 3D space-group symmetry. Incommensurately modulated crystals are a subset of aperiodic crystals that need four to six dimensions to describe the observed diffraction pattern, and they have characteristic satellite reflections that are offset from the main reflections. These satellites have a non-integral relationship to the primary lattice and require q vectors for processing. Incommensurately modulated biological macromolecular crystals have been frequently observed but so far have not been solved. The authors of this article have been spearheading an initiative to determine this type of crystal structure. The first step toward structure solution is to collect the diffraction data making sure that the satellite reflections are well separated from the main reflections. Once collected they can be integrated and then scaled with appropriate software. Then the assignment of the superspace group is needed. The most common form of modulation is in only one extra direction and can be described with a (3 + 1)D superspace group. The (3 + 1)D superspace groups for chemical crystallographers are fully described in Volume C of International Tables for Crystallography. This text includes all types of crystallographic symmetry elements found in small-molecule crystals and can be difficult for structural biologists to understand and apply to their crystals. This article provides an explanation for structural biologists that includes only the subset of biological symmetry elements and demonstrates the application to a real-life example of an incommensurately modulated protein crystal. PMID:28808437

  11. Crystal structures of (Mg1-x,Fe(x))SiO3 postperovskite at high pressures.

    PubMed

    Yamanaka, Takamitsu; Hirose, Kei; Mao, Wendy L; Meng, Yue; Ganesh, P; Shulenburger, Luke; Shen, Guoyin; Hemley, Russell J

    2012-01-24

    X-ray diffraction experiments on postperovskite (ppv) with compositions (Mg(0.9)Fe(0.1))SiO(3) and (Mg(0.6)Fe(0.4))SiO(3) at Earth core-mantle boundary pressures reveal different crystal structures. The former adopts the CaIrO(3)-type structure with space group Cmcm, whereas the latter crystallizes in a structure with the Pmcm (Pmma) space group. The latter has a significantly higher density (ρ = 6.119(1) g/cm(3)) than the former (ρ = 5.694(8) g/cm(3)) due to both the larger amount of iron and the smaller ionic radius of Fe(2+) as a result of an electronic spin transition observed by X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES). The smaller ionic radius for low-spin compared to high-spin Fe(2+) also leads to an ordered cation distribution in the M1 and M2 crystallographic sites of the higher density ppv structure. Rietveld structure refinement indicates that approximately 70% of the total Fe(2+) in that phase occupies the M2 site. XES results indicate a loss of 70% of the unpaired electronic spins consistent with a low spin M2 site and high spin M1 site. First-principles calculations of the magnetic ordering confirm that Pmcm with a two-site model is energetically more favorable at high pressure, and predict that the ordered structure is anisotropic in its electrical and elastic properties. These results suggest that interpretations of seismic structure in the deep mantle need to treat a broader range of mineral structures than previously considered.

  12. Synthesis, characterization, crystal structure, superoxide dismutase and biological activities of nickel (II) complexes with bidentate ligands possessing N and O donor atoms

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sangeeta, S.; Ahmad, K.; Noorussabah, N.; Bharti, S.; Mishra, M. K.; Sharma, S. R.; Choudhary, M.

    2017-12-01

    Two new Schiff bases 2-((E)-(4-bromo-2-chlorophenylimino)methyl)-4-bromophenol(HL1) and1-((E)-(4-bromo-2-chlorophenylimino)methyl)naphthalene-2-ol (HL2) and their new nickel (II) complexes [Ni(L1)2]·DMF(1) and [Ni(L2)2] (2) have been synthesized and characterized by various physico- chemical and spectroscopic methods. The solid-state structures of synthesized compounds were determined by single crystal X-ray crystallography, which revealed square planar geometry around Ni (II) ion. Infrared spectra, UV-Vis, thermal analysis and magnetic susceptibility measurements agreed with the observed crystal structures. The ligand (HL1) crystallized in the Orthorhombic system of the space group Pbca,a = 7.5485(4)Å, b = 11.5514(5) Å, c = 30.1370(14)Å, α = 90°, β = 90°, γ = 90°and Z = 8. Complex[Ni(L1)2]·DMF(1) crystallized in the Triclinic system of the space group P-1, a = 8.9954(3) Å, b = 9.4593(4) Å, c = 13.2657(5) Å, α = 101.478°, β = 99.595°, γ = 117.651°and Z = 2, whereas complex [Ni(L2)2]·(2) crystallized in the Monoclinic system of the space group P21/c, a = 9.301(9)Å, b = 12.149(8)Å, c = 13.792(10)Å, α = 90°, β = 106.35(4).°, γ = 90°and Z = 2. The Schiff bases (HL1and HL2) behaved as monobasic bidentate ligands possessing N and O donor atoms. The SOD activities of HL1 and its Ni (II) complex[Ni(L1)2]·DMF(1) have been measured using xanthine-xanthine oxidase as a source of superoxide radical and NBT assay as O2- scavenger. In vitro antimicrobial activities of the Ni(II) complexes (1) and (2)against Bacillus cereus and Staphylococcus aureus as Gram + ve and Salmonella typhi, Klebsiella pneumonia and Escherichia coli as Gram-ve species have been investigated comparing with the Schiff base ligands (HL1and HL2).

  13. Determination of the X-ray structure of the snake venom protein omwaprin by total chemical synthesis and racemic protein crystallography.

    PubMed

    Banigan, James R; Mandal, Kalyaneswar; Sawaya, Michael R; Thammavongsa, Vilasak; Hendrickx, Antoni P A; Schneewind, Olaf; Yeates, Todd O; Kent, Stephen B H

    2010-10-01

    The 50-residue snake venom protein L-omwaprin and its enantiomer D-omwaprin were prepared by total chemical synthesis. Radial diffusion assays were performed against Bacillus megaterium and Bacillus anthracis; both L- and D-omwaprin showed antibacterial activity against B. megaterium. The native protein enantiomer, made of L-amino acids, failed to crystallize readily. However, when a racemic mixture containing equal amounts of L- and D-omwaprin was used, diffraction quality crystals were obtained. The racemic protein sample crystallized in the centrosymmetric space group P2(1)/c and its structure was determined at atomic resolution (1.33 A) by a combination of Patterson and direct methods based on the strong scattering from the sulfur atoms in the eight cysteine residues per protein. Racemic crystallography once again proved to be a valuable method for obtaining crystals of recalcitrant proteins and for determining high-resolution X-ray structures by direct methods.

  14. Computational modelling of mesoscale dislocation patterning and plastic deformation of single crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Xia, Shengxu; El-Azab, Anter

    2015-07-01

    We present a continuum dislocation dynamics model that predicts the formation of dislocation cell structure in single crystals at low strains. The model features a set of kinetic equations of the curl type that govern the space and time evolution of the dislocation density in the crystal. These kinetic equations are coupled to stress equilibrium and deformation kinematics using the eigenstrain approach. A custom finite element method has been developed to solve the coupled system of equations of dislocation kinetics and crystal mechanics. The results show that, in general, dislocations self-organize in patterns under their mutual interactions. However, the famous dislocation cell structure has been found to form only when cross slip is implemented in the model. Cross slip is also found to lower the yield point, increase the hardening rate, and sustain an increase in the dislocation density over the hardening regime. Analysis of the cell structure evolution reveals that the average cell size decreases with the applied stress, which is consistent with the similitude principle.

  15. Purification, crystallization and preliminary X-ray diffraction analysis of the glyoxalase II from Leishmania infantum

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Trincão, José; Sousa Silva, Marta; Barata, Lídia

    2006-08-01

    A glyoxalase II from L. infantum was cloned, purified and crystallized and its structure was solved by X-ray crystallography. In trypanosomatids, trypanothione replaces glutathione in all glutathione-dependent processes. Of the two enzymes involved in the glyoxalase pathway, glyoxalase I and glyoxalase II, the latter shows absolute specificity towards trypanothione thioester, making this enzyme an excellent model to understand the molecular basis of trypanothione binding. Cloned glyoxalase II from Leishmania infantum was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified and crystallized. Crystals belong to space group C222{sub 1} (unit-cell parameters a = 65.6, b = 88.3, c = 85.2 Å) and diffract beyondmore » 2.15 Å using synchrotron radiation. The structure was solved by molecular replacement using the human glyoxalase II structure as a search model. These results, together with future detailed kinetic characterization using lactoyltrypanothione, should shed light on the evolutionary selection of trypanothione instead of glutathione by trypano-somatids.« less

  16. Synthesis, crystal structure and electrical properties of N,N-dimethylanilinium trichloridostannate (II): (C8H12N)SnCl3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chouaib, H.; Kamoun, S.; Costa, L. C.; Graça, M. P. F.

    2015-12-01

    A new (C8H12N)SnCl3 crystal of the general formula AMX3 was grown by soft chemistry method. X-ray study shows that the crystal crystallized in a monoclinic system with the space group P21/a. The structure was solved by Patterson method and refined to a final value of R = 0.0304 for 1157 independent observed reflections. The cohesion and the stability of the atomic arrangement result from the N-H … Cl hydrogen bonds between (C8H12N)+ cations and isolated (SnCl3)- anions. At high temperature this compound exhibits a structural phase transition at 340 K. This transition has been characterized by differential scanning calorimetric and impedance spectroscopy. The impedance data were well fitted to an Rp//CPE equivalent electrical circuit model. The close values of activation energies, obtained from the thermal behavior of the conductivity and the relaxation time confirm the presence of a hopping transport mechanism.

  17. The nature of geometric frustration in the Kob-Andersen mixture

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Crowther, Peter; Turci, Francesco; Royall, C. Patrick

    2015-07-01

    Geometric frustration is an approach to the glass transition based upon the consideration of locally favoured structures (LFS), which are geometric motifs which minimise the local free energy. Geometric frustration proposes that a transition to a crystalline state is frustrated because these LFS do not tile space. However, this concept is based on icosahedra which are not always the LFS for a given system. The LFS of the popular Kob-Andersen (KA) model glassformer are the bicapped square antiprism, which does tile space. Such a LFS-crystal is indeed realised in the Al2Cu structure, which is predicted to be a low energy state for the KA model with a 2:1 composition. We, therefore, hypothesise that upon changing the composition in the KA model towards 2:1, geometric frustration may be progressively relieved, leading to larger and larger domains of LFS which would ultimately correspond to the Al2Cu crystal. Remarkably, rather than an increase, upon changing composition we find a small decrease in the LFS population, and the system remains impervious to nucleation of LFS crystals. We suggest that this may be related to the composition of the LFS, as only a limited subset is compatible with the crystal. We further demonstrate that the Al2Cu crystal will grow from a seed in the KA model with 2:1 composition and identify the melting temperature to be 0.447(2).

  18. Crystal Structure and Crystal Chemistry of Some Common REE Minerals and Nanpingite

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ni, Yunxiang

    1995-01-01

    Part I. Crystal structure and crystal chemistry of fluorocarbonate minerals. The crystal structure of bastnasite-(Ce) have been solved in P-62c and refined to R = 0.018. The structure is composed of (001) (CeF) layers interspersed with (CO_3) layers in a 1:1 ratio. The Ce atom is coordinated in rm CeO_6F_3 polyhedra. The atomic arrangement of synchysite-(Ce) has been solved and refined to R = 0.036 with a monoclinic space group C2/c. It possesses a (001) layer structure, with layers of (Ca) and (CeF) separated by layers of carbonate groups. The layers stack in a manner analogous to C2/c muscovite. Polytypism similar to the micas may exist in synchysite. The crystal structures of cordylite-(Ce) have been solved in P6 _3/mmc and refined to R = 0.023. The structure and chemical formula are different from those deduced by Oftedal. The formula is rm MBaCe_2(CO _3)_4F, where M is rm Na^+, Ca^{2+}_{1/2 }+ O_{1/2}, or any solution. The presence of (NaF) layer in the structure is the key difference from the Oftedal's structure. This redefinition of the chemical formula and crystal structure of cordylite will be proposed to IMA-CNMMN. Part II. Crystal structure and crystal chemistry of monazite-xenotime series. Monazite is monoclinic, P2 _1/n, and xenotime is isostructural with zircon (I4_1/amd). Both atomic arrangements are based on (001) chains of intervening phosphate tetrahedra and RE polyhedra, with a REO_8 polyhedron in xenotime that accommodates HRE (Tb - Lu) and a REO_9 polyhedron in monazite that preferentially incorporates LRE (La - Gd). As the structure "transforms" from xenotime to monazite, the crystallographic properties are comparable along the (001) chains, with structural adjustments of 2.2 A along (010) to accommodate the different size RE atoms. Part III. Crystal structure of nanpingite-2M _2, the Cs end-member of muscovite. The crystal structure of nanpingite has been refined to R = 0.058. Compared to K^+ in muscovite, the largest interlayer Cs^+ in nanpingite increases (001) separation between adjacent 2:1 layers, but has little effect on the dimensions in (001). The existence of rare 2M_2 polytype in nanpingite is attributed to this large layer separation, which minimizes the repulsion of the superimposed (along (001)) basal oxygens in neighboring tetrahedral layers.

  19. Growth and characterization of a novel nonlinear optical borate crystal - Yttrium calcium borate (YCB)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Arun Kumar, R.; Arivanandhan, M.; Dhanasekaran, R.; Hayakawa, Y.

    2013-06-01

    A new nonlinear optical single crystal yttrium calcium borate Y2CaB10O19 (YCB) was grown for the first time from its melt. The starting materials were prepared by the solid-state reaction method. The melting point of the synthesized material was identified to be 967 °C. YCB crystal exhibits monoclinic crystal structure with the space group C2. The crystalline perfection of the grown YCB crystal was found to be good. From the UV-VIS-NIR studies, the lower cutoff wavelength of the crystal occurs below 200 nm. The functional groups of the grown crystal were assigned using the FTIR data. The second harmonic generation (SHG) of the YCB crystal was observed using a Nd:YAG laser with a fundamental wavelength of 1064 nm. The laser damage threshold value of the YCB crystal was found to be very high - 10.5 GW/cm2.

  20. Solid-state reaction kinetics and optical studies of cadmium doped magnesium hydrogen phosphate crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Verma, Madhu; Gupta, Rashmi; Singh, Harjinder; Bamzai, K. K.

    2018-04-01

    The growth of cadmium doped magnesium hydrogen phosphate was successfully carried out by using room temperature solution technique i.e., gel encapsulation technique. Grown crystals were confirmed by single crystal X-ray diffraction (XRD). The structure of the grown crystal belongs to orthorhombic crystal system and crystallizes in centrosymmetric space group. Kinetics of the decomposition of the grown crystals were studied by non-isothermal analysis. Thermo gravimetric / differential thermo analytical (TG/DTA) studies revealed that the grown crystal is stable upto 119 °C. The various steps involved in the thermal decomposition of the material have been analysed using Horowitz-Metzger, Coats-Redfern and Piloyan-Novikova equations for evaluating various kinetic parameters. The optical studies shows that the grown crystals possess wide transmittance in the visible region and significant optical band gap of 5.5ev with cut off wavelength of 260 nm.

  1. Synthesis and crystal structure of bis(di- n-butyldithiocarbamato)(1,10-phenanthroline)cadmium(II)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ivanchenko, A. V.; Gromilov, S. A.; Zemskova, S. M.; Baidina, I. A.; Glinskaya, L. A.

    2002-02-01

    A new mixed-ligand complex, Cd(S2CN(C4H9)2)2Phen, is synthesized and investigated by thermal, element, and IR analyses and by diffractometry of polycrystals (DRON-3M, CuKα radiation, Ni filter). The crystal structure was determined on a CAD-4 Enraf-Nonius automatic diffractometer (MoKα radiation, θ from 1.5 to 25‡, 2325 nonzero independent reflections, 190 refined parameters, R = 0.036 for I > 2Σ(I)). Crystal data for C30H44CdN4S4 : a = 15.592(3), b = 22.724(5), c = 9.922(2) å, space group Pbcn, V = 3515.5(12) å3, Z = 4, M = 701.33, dcalc = 1.325 g/cm3. The structure involves monomeric molecules in which the cadmium atom has a distorted octahedral environment.

  2. Microwave-assisted synthesis and crystal structure of oxo(diperoxo)(4,4'-di-tert-butyl-2,2'-bipyridine)-molybdenum(VI).

    PubMed

    Amarante, Tatiana R; Almeida Paz, Filipe A; Gago, Sandra; Gonçalves, Isabel S; Pillinger, Martyn; Rodrigues, Alírio E; Abrantes, Marta

    2009-09-16

    The oxodiperoxo complex MoO(O2)(2)(tbbpy) (tbbpy = 4,4'-di-tert-butyl-2,2'- bipyridine) was isolated from the reaction of MoO2Cl(2)(tbbpy) in water under microwaveassisted heating at 120 masculineC for 4 h. The structure of the oxodiperoxo complex was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The Mo(VI) centre is seven-coordinated with a geometry which strongly resembles a highly distorted bipyramid. Individual MoO(O2)(2)(tbbpy) complexes are interdigitated along the [010] direction to form a column. The crystal structure is formed by the close packing of the columnar-stacked complexes. Interactions between neighbouring columns are essentially of van der Waals type mediated by the need to effectively fill the available space.

  3. Conformational flexibility and packing plausibility of repaglinide polymorphs

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rani, Dimpy; Goyal, Parnika; Chadha, Renu

    2018-04-01

    The present manuscript highlights the structural insight into the repaglinide polymorphs. The experimental screening for the possible crystal forms were carried out using various solvents, which generated three forms. The crystal structure of Form II and III was determined using PXRD pattern whereas structural analysis of Form I has already been reported. Form I, II and II was found to exist in P212121, PNA21 and P21/c space groups respectively. Conformational analysis was performed to account the conformational flexibility of RPG. The obtained conformers were further utilized to obtain the information about the crystal packing pattern of RPG polymorphs by polymorph prediction module. The lattice energy landscape, depicting the relationship between lattice energy and density of the polymorphs has been obtained for various possible polymorphs. The experimentally isolated polymorphs were successfully fitted into lattice energy landscape.

  4. Leakage current suppression with a combination of planarized gate and overlap/off-set structure in metal-induced laterally crystallized polycrystalline-silicon thin-film transistors

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chae, Hee Jae; Seok, Ki Hwan; Lee, Sol Kyu; Joo, Seung Ki

    2018-04-01

    A novel inverted staggered metal-induced laterally crystallized (MILC) polycrystalline-silicon (poly-Si) thin-film transistors (TFTs) with a combination of a planarized gate and an overlap/off-set at the source-gate/drain-gate structure were fabricated and characterized. While the MILC process is advantageous for fabricating inverted staggered poly-Si TFTs, MILC TFTs reveal higher leakage current than TFTs crystallized by other processes due to their high trap density of Ni contamination. Due to this drawback, the planarized gate and overlap/off-set structure were applied to inverted staggered MILC TFTs. The proposed device shows drastic suppression of leakage current and pinning phenomenon by reducing the lateral electric field and the space-charge limited current from the gate to the drain.

  5. Crystal structure of Cr-bearing Mg3BeAl8O16, a new polytype of magnesiotaaffeite-2N'2S.

    PubMed

    Malcherek, Thomas; Schlüter, Jochen

    2016-07-01

    The crystal structure of a new polytype of magnesiotaaffeite-2N'2S, ideally Mg3BeAl8O16 (trimagnesium beryllium octa-aluminium hexa-deca-oxide), is described in space-group symmetry P-3m1. It has been identified in a fragment of a mineral sample from Burma (Myanmar). The new polytype is composed of two Mg2Al4O8 (S)- and two BeMgAl4O8 (N')-modules in a stacking sequence N'SSN'' which differs from the N'SN'S-stacking sequence of the known magnesiotaaffeite-2N'2S polytype. The crystal structure can be derived from a close-packed arrangement of O atoms and is discussed with regard to its polytypism and its Cr(3+) chromophore content.

  6. Efficient modeling of photonic crystals with local Hermite polynomials

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Boucher, C. R.; Li, Zehao; Albrecht, J. D.

    2014-04-21

    Developing compact algorithms for accurate electrodynamic calculations with minimal computational cost is an active area of research given the increasing complexity in the design of electromagnetic composite structures such as photonic crystals, metamaterials, optical interconnects, and on-chip routing. We show that electric and magnetic (EM) fields can be calculated using scalar Hermite interpolation polynomials as the numerical basis functions without having to invoke edge-based vector finite elements to suppress spurious solutions or to satisfy boundary conditions. This approach offers several fundamental advantages as evidenced through band structure solutions for periodic systems and through waveguide analysis. Compared with reciprocal space (planemore » wave expansion) methods for periodic systems, advantages are shown in computational costs, the ability to capture spatial complexity in the dielectric distributions, the demonstration of numerical convergence with scaling, and variational eigenfunctions free of numerical artifacts that arise from mixed-order real space basis sets or the inherent aberrations from transforming reciprocal space solutions of finite expansions. The photonic band structure of a simple crystal is used as a benchmark comparison and the ability to capture the effects of spatially complex dielectric distributions is treated using a complex pattern with highly irregular features that would stress spatial transform limits. This general method is applicable to a broad class of physical systems, e.g., to semiconducting lasers which require simultaneous modeling of transitions in quantum wells or dots together with EM cavity calculations, to modeling plasmonic structures in the presence of EM field emissions, and to on-chip propagation within monolithic integrated circuits.« less

  7. Synthesis and characterization of two layered aluminophosphates, ( T) 2HAl 2P 3O 12 ( T=2-BuNH 3+) and ( T)H 2Al 2P 3O 12 ( T=pyH +)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Chippindale, Ann M.; Powell, Anthony V.; Bull, Lucy M.; Jones, Richard H.; Cheetham, Anthony K.; Thomas, John M.; Xu, Ruren

    1992-01-01

    Two new aluminophosphates, ( T) 2HAl 2P 3O 12 ( T=2-BuNH 3+) ( I) and ( T)H 2Al 2P 3O 12 ( T=pyH +) ( II) with the same framework stoichiometry but different layer structures have been prepared under nonaqueous conditions and the structures determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Compound ( I) crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P2 1/ c ( Z=4), with lattice parameters a=9.261(1) b=8.365(6), c=27.119(4) Å, β=91.50(1)δ, and V=2100.1 Å 3 ( R=0.072 and R w=0.090). The structure consists of Al-and P-centered tetrahedra linked to form layers. Protonated 2-butylamine molecules are located in the interlayer spaces and hydrogen bonded to the layers through NH 3+ groups. Weak hydrophobic van der Waals' interactions between alkyl groups of the 2-BuNH 3+ cations hold the layers together. Compound ( II) crystallizes in the triclinic space group P-1 ( Z=2), with a=8.574(2), b=8.631(3), c=10.371(2) Å, α=81.84(3), β=87.53(2), γ=69.07(2)δ, and V=709.49Å 3 ( R=0.039 and R w=0.052). The structure contains tetrahedrally coordinated P atoms and both tetrahedral and trigonal pyramidal Al atoms linked to form layers which are held together through hydrogen bonding, creating cavities in which pyH + cations reside.

  8. Structure cristalline de NaLiYb/sub 2/F/sub 8/: composes isotypes

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dib, A.; Gorius, M.F.; Aleonard, S.

    1986-11-15

    NaLiYb/sub 2/F/sub 8/ crystallizes in the monoclinic system, space group C2/c, with a = 10.3516(9), b = 8.2069(9), c = 6,9674(7) A, ..beta.. = 90/sup 0/, Z = 4. The crystal structure has been solved from single crystal diffractometer measurements (AgK..cap alpha.. radiation) using Patterson and Fourier syntheses and refined by a least-squares method. The final R value is 0.021 for 1756 independent observed reflections. Two YbF/sub 8/ polyhedra share one of their edges to form Yb/sub 2/F/sub 14/ groups which are three-dimensionally linked and create cavities in which Na and Li are located. Yb/sub 2/F/sub 14/ groups share twomore » of their edges with these of one NaF/sub 7/ (or NaF/sub 9/ polyhedron to form Y/sub 2/NaF/sub 20/ blocks. As well, the structure may be described by the packing of planes formed by these two-dimensionally linked blocks. The description of this structure is compared with that ascribed to NaLiY/sub 2/F/sub 8/, which has been described in the monoclinic system, space group P2/sub 1//m, with a' = (a + b)/2, b' = c,c' = (b - a)/2, Z = 2. It is shown that positions of the atoms confer pseudoorthorhombic symmetry on the cell. Lattice parameters of isotypic compounds are given in the pseudoorthorhombic lattice and they are compared with those recently published with the structure described in the monoclinic system, space group P2/sub 1//m.« less

  9. Genarris: Random generation of molecular crystal structures and fast screening with a Harris approximation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Li, Xiayue; Curtis, Farren S.; Rose, Timothy; Schober, Christoph; Vazquez-Mayagoitia, Alvaro; Reuter, Karsten; Oberhofer, Harald; Marom, Noa

    2018-06-01

    We present Genarris, a Python package that performs configuration space screening for molecular crystals of rigid molecules by random sampling with physical constraints. For fast energy evaluations, Genarris employs a Harris approximation, whereby the total density of a molecular crystal is constructed via superposition of single molecule densities. Dispersion-inclusive density functional theory is then used for the Harris density without performing a self-consistency cycle. Genarris uses machine learning for clustering, based on a relative coordinate descriptor developed specifically for molecular crystals, which is shown to be robust in identifying packing motif similarity. In addition to random structure generation, Genarris offers three workflows based on different sequences of successive clustering and selection steps: the "Rigorous" workflow is an exhaustive exploration of the potential energy landscape, the "Energy" workflow produces a set of low energy structures, and the "Diverse" workflow produces a maximally diverse set of structures. The latter is recommended for generating initial populations for genetic algorithms. Here, the implementation of Genarris is reported and its application is demonstrated for three test cases.

  10. N-2-Hydroxy-4-methoxyacetophenone- N'-4-nitrobenzoyl hydrazine: Synthesis and structural characterization

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bessy Raj, B. N.; Kurup, M. R. Prathapachandra

    2007-04-01

    A new aroyl hydrazone, N-2-hydroxy-4-methoxyacetophenone- N'-4-nitrobenzoyl hydrazine was prepared by the condensation reaction of 2-hydroxy-4-methoxyacetophenone and 4-nitrobenzoyl hydrazine. Characterization of the compound was done by elemental analysis and electronic, infrared and NMR spectral analyses. The complete structural assignment of the compound was done by NMR studies by using COSY homonuclear and HSQC heteronuclear techniques. The crystal and molecular structure was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction studies: crystallized in the monoclinic system, space group P2 1/ n, Z = 4, a = 7.3343(9) Å, b = 20.3517(9) Å, c = 10.1375(5) Å, α = 90.00°, β = 95.735(7)° and γ = 90.00°. From the crystal structure, it is concluded that the compound exists as the keto isomer in the solid state. There is a completely extended conformation in the central part of the molecule C5 sbnd C8 dbnd N1 sbnd N2 sbnd C10 dbnd O2 with an E configuration at the double bond of the hydrazinic bridge.

  11. Determining crystal structures through crowdsourcing and coursework

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Horowitz, Scott; Koepnick, Brian; Martin, Raoul; Tymieniecki, Agnes; Winburn, Amanda A.; Cooper, Seth; Flatten, Jeff; Rogawski, David S.; Koropatkin, Nicole M.; Hailu, Tsinatkeab T.; Jain, Neha; Koldewey, Philipp; Ahlstrom, Logan S.; Chapman, Matthew R.; Sikkema, Andrew P.; Skiba, Meredith A.; Maloney, Finn P.; Beinlich, Felix R. M.; Caglar, Ahmet; Coral, Alan; Jensen, Alice Elizabeth; Lubow, Allen; Boitano, Amanda; Lisle, Amy Elizabeth; Maxwell, Andrew T.; Failer, Barb; Kaszubowski, Bartosz; Hrytsiv, Bohdan; Vincenzo, Brancaccio; de Melo Cruz, Breno Renan; McManus, Brian Joseph; Kestemont, Bruno; Vardeman, Carl; Comisky, Casey; Neilson, Catherine; Landers, Catherine R.; Ince, Christopher; Buske, Daniel Jon; Totonjian, Daniel; Copeland, David Marshall; Murray, David; Jagieła, Dawid; Janz, Dietmar; Wheeler, Douglas C.; Cali, Elie; Croze, Emmanuel; Rezae, Farah; Martin, Floyd Orville; Beecher, Gil; de Jong, Guido Alexander; Ykman, Guy; Feldmann, Harald; Chan, Hugo Paul Perez; Kovanecz, Istvan; Vasilchenko, Ivan; Connellan, James C.; Borman, Jami Lynne; Norrgard, Jane; Kanfer, Jebbie; Canfield, Jeffrey M.; Slone, Jesse David; Oh, Jimmy; Mitchell, Joanne; Bishop, John; Kroeger, John Douglas; Schinkler, Jonas; McLaughlin, Joseph; Brownlee, June M.; Bell, Justin; Fellbaum, Karl Willem; Harper, Kathleen; Abbey, Kirk J.; Isaksson, Lennart E.; Wei, Linda; Cummins, Lisa N.; Miller, Lori Anne; Bain, Lyn; Carpenter, Lynn; Desnouck, Maarten; Sharma, Manasa G.; Belcastro, Marcus; Szew, Martin; Szew, Martin; Britton, Matthew; Gaebel, Matthias; Power, Max; Cassidy, Michael; Pfützenreuter, Michael; Minett, Michele; Wesselingh, Michiel; Yi, Minjune; Cameron, Neil Haydn Tormey; Bolibruch, Nicholas I.; Benevides, Noah; Kathleen Kerr, Norah; Barlow, Nova; Crevits, Nykole Krystyne; Dunn, Paul; Silveira Belo Nascimento Roque, Paulo Sergio; Riber, Peter; Pikkanen, Petri; Shehzad, Raafay; Viosca, Randy; James Fraser, Robert; Leduc, Robert; Madala, Roman; Shnider, Scott; de Boisblanc, Sharon; Butkovich, Slava; Bliven, Spencer; Hettler, Stephen; Telehany, Stephen; Schwegmann, Steven A.; Parkes, Steven; Kleinfelter, Susan C.; Michael Holst, Sven; van der Laan, T. J. A.; Bausewein, Thomas; Simon, Vera; Pulley, Warwick; Hull, William; Kim, Annes Yukyung; Lawton, Alexis; Ruesch, Amanda; Sundar, Anjali; Lawrence, Anna-Lisa; Afrin, Antara; Maheshwer, Bhargavi; Turfe, Bilal; Huebner, Christian; Killeen, Courtney Elizabeth; Antebi-Lerrman, Dalia; Luan, Danny; Wolfe, Derek; Pham, Duc; Michewicz, Elaina; Hull, Elizabeth; Pardington, Emily; Galal, Galal Osama; Sun, Grace; Chen, Grace; Anderson, Halie E.; Chang, Jane; Hewlett, Jeffrey Thomas; Sterbenz, Jennifer; Lim, Jiho; Morof, Joshua; Lee, Junho; Inn, Juyoung Samuel; Hahm, Kaitlin; Roth, Kaitlin; Nair, Karun; Markin, Katherine; Schramm, Katie; Toni Eid, Kevin; Gam, Kristina; Murphy, Lisha; Yuan, Lucy; Kana, Lulia; Daboul, Lynn; Shammas, Mario Karam; Chason, Max; Sinan, Moaz; Andrew Tooley, Nicholas; Korakavi, Nisha; Comer, Patrick; Magur, Pragya; Savliwala, Quresh; Davison, Reid Michael; Sankaran, Roshun Rajiv; Lewe, Sam; Tamkus, Saule; Chen, Shirley; Harvey, Sho; Hwang, Sin Ye; Vatsia, Sohrab; Withrow, Stefan; Luther, Tahra K.; Manett, Taylor; Johnson, Thomas James; Ryan Brash, Timothy; Kuhlman, Wyatt; Park, Yeonjung; Popović, Zoran; Baker, David; Khatib, Firas; Bardwell, James C. A.

    2016-09-01

    We show here that computer game players can build high-quality crystal structures. Introduction of a new feature into the computer game Foldit allows players to build and real-space refine structures into electron density maps. To assess the usefulness of this feature, we held a crystallographic model-building competition between trained crystallographers, undergraduate students, Foldit players and automatic model-building algorithms. After removal of disordered residues, a team of Foldit players achieved the most accurate structure. Analysing the target protein of the competition, YPL067C, uncovered a new family of histidine triad proteins apparently involved in the prevention of amyloid toxicity. From this study, we conclude that crystallographers can utilize crowdsourcing to interpret electron density information and to produce structure solutions of the highest quality.

  12. Determining crystal structures through crowdsourcing and coursework.

    PubMed

    Horowitz, Scott; Koepnick, Brian; Martin, Raoul; Tymieniecki, Agnes; Winburn, Amanda A; Cooper, Seth; Flatten, Jeff; Rogawski, David S; Koropatkin, Nicole M; Hailu, Tsinatkeab T; Jain, Neha; Koldewey, Philipp; Ahlstrom, Logan S; Chapman, Matthew R; Sikkema, Andrew P; Skiba, Meredith A; Maloney, Finn P; Beinlich, Felix R M; Popović, Zoran; Baker, David; Khatib, Firas; Bardwell, James C A

    2016-09-16

    We show here that computer game players can build high-quality crystal structures. Introduction of a new feature into the computer game Foldit allows players to build and real-space refine structures into electron density maps. To assess the usefulness of this feature, we held a crystallographic model-building competition between trained crystallographers, undergraduate students, Foldit players and automatic model-building algorithms. After removal of disordered residues, a team of Foldit players achieved the most accurate structure. Analysing the target protein of the competition, YPL067C, uncovered a new family of histidine triad proteins apparently involved in the prevention of amyloid toxicity. From this study, we conclude that crystallographers can utilize crowdsourcing to interpret electron density information and to produce structure solutions of the highest quality.

  13. Crystallization and preliminary characterization of a highly thermostable lectin from Trichosanthes dioica and comparison with other Trichosanthes lectins

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dharkar, Poorva D.; Anuradha, P.; Gaikwad, Sushama M.

    2006-03-01

    A lectin from Trichosanthes dioica seeds has been purified and crystallized using 25%(w/v) PEG 2K MME, 0.2 M ammonium acetate, 0.1 M Tris–HCl pH 8.5 and 50 µl 0.5%(w/v) n-octyl β-d-glucopyranoside as thick needles belonging to hexagonal space group P6{sub 4}. A lectin from Trichosanthes dioica seeds has been purified and crystallized using 25%(w/v) PEG 2K MME, 0.2 M ammonium acetate, 0.1 M Tris–HCl pH 8.5 and 50 µl 0.5%(w/v) n-octyl β-d-glucopyranoside as thick needles belonging to hexagonal space group P6{sub 4}. Unit-cell parameters were a = b = 167.54, c = 77.42 Å. The crystals diffracted to a Braggmore » spacing of 2.8 Å. Both the structures of abrin-a and T. kirilowii lectin could be used as a model in structure determination using the molecular-replacement method; however, T. kirilowii lectin coordinates gave better values of reliability and correlation parameters. The thermal, chemical and pH stability of this lectin have also been studied. When heated, its haemagglutination activity remained unaffected up to 363 K. Other stability studies show that 4 M guanidinium hydrochloride (Gdn–HCl) initiates unfolding and that the protein is completely unfolded at 6 M Gdn–HCl. Treatment with urea resulted in a total loss of activity at higher concentrations of denaturant with no major structural changes. The protein remained stable over a wide pH range, from pH 6 to pH 12, except for partial unfolding at extremely alkaline pH. The role of disulfide bonds in the protein stability was found to be insignificant. Rayleigh light-scattering studies showed no molecular aggregation in any of the extreme treated conditions. The unusual stability of this lectin resembles that of type II ribosome-inactivating proteins (type II RIPs), which is also supported by structure determination. The structural features observed in a preliminary electron-density map were compared with the other two available Trichosanthes lectin structures.« less

  14. Electron density distribution and disordered crystal structure of 15R-SiAlON, SiAl{sub 4}O{sub 2}N{sub 4}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Banno, Hiroki; Hanai, Takaaki; Asaka, Toru

    2014-03-15

    The crystal structure of SiAl{sub 4}O{sub 2}N{sub 4} was characterized by laboratory X-ray powder diffraction (CuKα{sub 1}). The title compound is trigonal with space group R3-bar m. The hexagonal unit-cell dimensions (Z=3) are a=0.301332(3) nm, c=4.18616(4) nm and V=0.3291825(5) nm{sup 3}. The initial structural model was successfully derived by the charge-flipping method and further refined by the Rietveld method. The final structural model showed the positional disordering of one of the three (Si,Al) sites. The maximum-entropy method-based pattern fitting (MPF) method was used to confirm the validity of the split-atom model, in which conventional structure bias caused by assuming intensitymore » partitioning was minimized. The reliability indices calculated from the MPF were R{sub wp}=5.05%, S (=R{sub wp}/R{sub e})=1.21, R{sub p}=3.77%, R{sub B}=1.29% and R{sub F}=1.01%. The disordered crystal structure was successfully described by overlapping three types of domains with ordered atom arrangements. The distribution of atomic positions in one of the three types of domains can be achieved in the space group R3-bar m. The atom arrangements in the other two types of domains are noncentrosymmetrical with the space group R3m. These two structural configurations are related by the pseudo-symmetry inversion. -- Graphical abstract: A bird's eye view of electron densities up to 75.3% (0.133 nm{sup −3}) of the maximum on the plane parallel to (110) with the corresponding atomic arrangements of SiAl{sub 4}O{sub 2}N{sub 4}. Highlights: • Crystal structure of SiAl{sub 4}O{sub 2}N{sub 4} is determined by laboratory X-ray powder diffraction. • The atom arrangements are represented by the split-atom model. • The maximum-entropy method-based pattern fitting method is used to confirm the validity of the model. • The disordered structure is described by overlapping three types of domains with ordered atom arrangements.« less

  15. Co-crystal and crystal: Supramolecular arrangement obtained from 4-aminosalicylic acid, bpa ligand and cobalt ion

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Garcia, Humberto C.; Cunha, Ronaldo T.; Diniz, Renata; de Oliveira, Luiz Fernando C.

    2012-02-01

    In this study, the synthesis, spectroscopic properties (infrared and Raman) and crystal structures of two new compounds co-crystal and crystal named HASbpa (1) and [Co(bpa)(H2O)4]AS2ṡ4H2O (2) have been reported, where bpa is trans-1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane, HAS is 4-aminosalicylic acid and AS- is aminosalicylate anion. The crystalline arrangement of the compound 1 exhibits a triclinic system with space group P1¯. The formation of a structure known as co-crystal, composed by building blocks in their neutral form; being the first work of this type involving the HAS and nitrogen ligand as bpa. For compound 2, a monoclinic system was observed with P21/c space group. The crystalline arrangement of the structure consisted of a covalent one-dimensional cationic [Co(bpa)(H2O)4]2+ chain, which interacts by hydrogen bonding, π-stacking and electrostatic interactions with aminosalicylate anions and water molecules that were trapped in the crystal. These interactions form supramolecular cavities denominated as pseudo honeycombs. For compound 1, the infrared spectrum revealed the presence of bands at 1643 and 1601 cm-1 assigned to the stretching mode of CO [ν(CO)] and CC/CN groups [ν(CC/CN)]. For the Raman spectrum, these same modes appear around 1644 and 1602 cm-1 related to HAS and bpa blocks, respectively. For compound 2, the largest displacement of the bands compared to free ligand suggested the formation of covalent bonds between bpa ligand and metallic site and loss of the proton in HAS molecule. In the infrared spectrum we can observe the presence of bands around 1635 and 1618 cm-1 attributed to the stretching ν(COO-) and ν(CC/CN), for the Raman spectrum these same modes appear around 1631 and 1619 cm-1 related to AS- and bpa ligand respectively.

  16. Investigation of intermolecular interactions in finasteride drug crystals in view of X-ray and Hirshfeld surface analysis

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bojarska, Joanna; Maniukiewicz, Waldemar

    2015-11-01

    The N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) solvate hemihydrate (1) of finasteride, has been structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction at 100 K and compared with previously reported finasteride crystalline forms. In addition, in order to resolve ambiguity concerning H-bond interactions, the crystal structure of finasteride hemihydrate, (2), originally reported by Schultheiss et al. in 2009, has been redetermined with higher precision. The (1) and (2) pseudopolymorphs of finasteride crystallize as orthorhombic in chiral P212121 space group with two very similar host molecules in the asymmetric unit. The conformation of fused 6-membered rings are screw-boat, chair and chair for both molecules, while 5-membered rings assume chair in (1), and half-chair in (2). There is a fairly close resemblance of the molecular geometry for all analyzed compounds, arising due to the rigid host molecule. Inter- and intramolecular host-host, host-guest strong O-H⋯O, N-H⋯O hydrogen bonds and weak C-H⋯O interactions form 3D net conferring stability to the crystal packing. Finasterides can be classified as synthon pseudopolymorphs. Isostructural solvates crystallizing in the orthorhombic space group P212121, with Z‧ = 2, exhibit R22(8) C22(15) network, monoclinic solvate (Z‧ = 1) possess D11(2), while both orthorhombic and monoclinic polymorphs have C(4) motifs, respectively. The structural similarities and subtle differences have been interpreted in view of the 3D Hirshfeld surface analysis and associated 2D fingerprint plots, which enabled detailed qualitative and quantitative insight into the intermolecular interactions. The 97-100% of Hirshfeld surface areas are due to H···H, O···H/H⋯O, C···H/H⋯C and N⋯H/H⋯N contacts. Furthermore, the electrostatic potential has been mapped over the Hirshfeld surfaces to decode the electrostatic complementarities, which exist in the crystal packing.

  17. Unidirectional Wave Vector Manipulation in Two-Dimensional Space with an All Passive Acoustic Parity-Time-Symmetric Metamaterials Crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Liu, Tuo; Zhu, Xuefeng; Chen, Fei; Liang, Shanjun; Zhu, Jie

    2018-03-01

    Exploring the concept of non-Hermitian Hamiltonians respecting parity-time symmetry with classical wave systems is of great interest as it enables the experimental investigation of parity-time-symmetric systems through the quantum-classical analogue. Here, we demonstrate unidirectional wave vector manipulation in two-dimensional space, with an all passive acoustic parity-time-symmetric metamaterials crystal. The metamaterials crystal is constructed through interleaving groove- and holey-structured acoustic metamaterials to provide an intrinsic parity-time-symmetric potential that is two-dimensionally extended and curved, which allows the flexible manipulation of unpaired wave vectors. At the transition point from the unbroken to broken parity-time symmetry phase, the unidirectional sound focusing effect (along with reflectionless acoustic transparency in the opposite direction) is experimentally realized over the spectrum. This demonstration confirms the capability of passive acoustic systems to carry the experimental studies on general parity-time symmetry physics and further reveals the unique functionalities enabled by the judiciously tailored unidirectional wave vectors in space.

  18. Validation of molecular crystal structures from powder diffraction data with dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D).

    PubMed

    van de Streek, Jacco; Neumann, Marcus A

    2014-12-01

    In 2010 we energy-minimized 225 high-quality single-crystal (SX) structures with dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) to establish a quantitative benchmark. For the current paper, 215 organic crystal structures determined from X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) data and published in an IUCr journal were energy-minimized with DFT-D and compared to the SX benchmark. The on average slightly less accurate atomic coordinates of XRPD structures do lead to systematically higher root mean square Cartesian displacement (RMSCD) values upon energy minimization than for SX structures, but the RMSCD value is still a good indicator for the detection of structures that deserve a closer look. The upper RMSCD limit for a correct structure must be increased from 0.25 Å for SX structures to 0.35 Å for XRPD structures; the grey area must be extended from 0.30 to 0.40 Å. Based on the energy minimizations, three structures are re-refined to give more precise atomic coordinates. For six structures our calculations provide the missing positions for the H atoms, for five structures they provide corrected positions for some H atoms. Seven crystal structures showed a minor error for a non-H atom. For five structures the energy minimizations suggest a higher space-group symmetry. For the 225 SX structures, the only deviations observed upon energy minimization were three minor H-atom related issues. Preferred orientation is the most important cause of problems. A preferred-orientation correction is the only correction where the experimental data are modified to fit the model. We conclude that molecular crystal structures determined from powder diffraction data that are published in IUCr journals are of high quality, with less than 4% containing an error in a non-H atom.

  19. Validation of molecular crystal structures from powder diffraction data with dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D)

    PubMed Central

    van de Streek, Jacco; Neumann, Marcus A.

    2014-01-01

    In 2010 we energy-minimized 225 high-quality single-crystal (SX) structures with dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) to establish a quantitative benchmark. For the current paper, 215 organic crystal structures determined from X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) data and published in an IUCr journal were energy-minimized with DFT-D and compared to the SX benchmark. The on average slightly less accurate atomic coordinates of XRPD structures do lead to systematically higher root mean square Cartesian displacement (RMSCD) values upon energy minimization than for SX structures, but the RMSCD value is still a good indicator for the detection of structures that deserve a closer look. The upper RMSCD limit for a correct structure must be increased from 0.25 Å for SX structures to 0.35 Å for XRPD structures; the grey area must be extended from 0.30 to 0.40 Å. Based on the energy minimizations, three structures are re-refined to give more precise atomic coordinates. For six structures our calculations provide the missing positions for the H atoms, for five structures they provide corrected positions for some H atoms. Seven crystal structures showed a minor error for a non-H atom. For five structures the energy minimizations suggest a higher space-group symmetry. For the 225 SX structures, the only deviations observed upon energy minimization were three minor H-atom related issues. Preferred orientation is the most important cause of problems. A preferred-orientation correction is the only correction where the experimental data are modified to fit the model. We conclude that molecular crystal structures determined from powder diffraction data that are published in IUCr journals are of high quality, with less than 4% containing an error in a non-H atom. PMID:25449625

  20. A bicontinuous tetrahedral structure in a liquid-crystalline lipid

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Longley, William; McIntosh, Thomas J.

    1983-06-01

    The structure of most lipid-water phases can be visualized as an ordered distribution of two liquid media, water and hydrocarbons, separated by a continuous surface covered by the polar groups of the lipid molecules1. In the cubic phases in particular, rod-like elements are linked into three-dimensional networks1,2. Two of these phases (space groups Ia3d and Pn3m) contain two such three-dimensional networks mutually inter-woven and unconnected. Under the constraints of energy minimization3, the interface between the components in certain of these `porous fluids' may well resemble one of the periodic minimal surface structures of the type described mathematically by Schwarz4,5. A structure of this sort has been proposed for the viscous isotropic (cubic) form of glycerol monooleate (GMO) by Larsson et al.6 who suggested that the X-ray diagrams of Lindblom et al.7 indicated a body-centred crystal structure in which lipid bilayers might be arranged as in Schwarz's octahedral surface4. We have now found that at high water contents, a primitive cubic lattice better fits the X-ray evidence with the material in the crystal arranged in a tetrahedral way. The lipid appears to form a single bilayer, continuous in three dimensions, separating two continuous interlinked networks of water. Each of the water networks has the symmetry of the diamond crystal structure and the bilayer lies in the space between them following a surface resembling Schwarz's tetrahedral surface4.

  1. Characterization of CdGeAs 2 grown by the float zone technique under microgravity

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Labrie, D.; George, A. E.; Simpson, A. M.; Paton, B. E.; Ginovker, A.; Saghir, M. Z.

    2000-01-01

    One polycrystalline and one single-crystal CdGeAs 2 feed rods with 9 mm diameter were processed by the float-zone technique under microgravity on SPACEHAB-SH04 during the STS-77 Space Shuttle Endeavour mission. An eutectic salt of LiCl and KCl was used as an encapsulant to suppress Cd and As evaporation from the melt. Post-flight chemical, structural, electronic, and optical characterization of the two samples is presented. Single-crystal growth was achieved using a seed crystal.

  2. Cloning, preparation and preliminary crystallographic studies of penicillin V acylase autoproteolytic processing mutants

    PubMed Central

    Chandra, P. Manish; Brannigan, James A.; Prabhune, Asmita; Pundle, Archana; Turkenburg, Johan P.; Dodson, G. Guy; Suresh, C. G.

    2005-01-01

    The crystallization of three catalytically inactive mutants of penicillin V acylase (PVA) from Bacillus sphaericus in precursor and processed forms is reported. The mutant proteins crystallize in different primitive monoclinic space groups that are distinct from the crystal forms for the native enzyme. Directed mutants and clone constructs were designed to study the post-translational autoproteolytic processing of PVA. The catalytically inactive mutants will provide three-dimensional structures of precursor PVA forms, plus open a route to the study of enzyme–substrate complexes for this industrially important enzyme. PMID:16508111

  3. Statistical physics of modulated phases in nematic liquid crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shamid, Shaikh M.

    Nematic liquid crystals are the state of the matter in which there is no positional order like crystals but it has orientational order of the constituent molecules. In the conventional nematics, the long axes of the rod-like molecules tend to align up or down uniformly along a director n. If the constituent molecules are chiral, they tend to form a modulated structure in one of the space dimensions. They are called the chiral nematics. If the chirality is strong enough we get the modulated structures in all three dimensions called the chiral blue phase. On the other hand, if the molecules are achiral, but an additional polar dipole is attached to the molecules, they also tend to form a modulated structure. In these types of materials we observe an important physical effect called flexoelectric effect, in which the polar order is linearly coupled to the director gradients. This dissertation work presents analytical and simulation studies of that modulated structures using the flexoelectric mechanism. Classic work by R. B. Meyer and further studies by I. Dozov predicted two possible structures, known as twist-bend and splay-bend. One of these predictions, the twist-bend phase, has recently been identified in experiments on bent-shaped liquid crystals. In this recently discovered twist-bend nematic phase the modulation is along one of the space dimensions. If this flexoelectric coupling is strong enough, in addition to twist-bend and splay-bend, here we predict the formation of polar analog of chiral blue phases (in both 2D and 3D) made of achiral polar liquid crystal materials by using Elastic continuum theory-based numerical calculations and computer simulations. This dissertation work also presents the coarse-grained theory of twist-bend phase. This theory predicts normal modes of fluctuation in both sides of nematic to twist-bend transition, which then compared with light scattering experiments. Macroscopic elastic and electric properties of twist-bend nematics can be realized using this coarse-grained description.

  4. Polymorphism in R-tamsulosin (an alpha blocker): The unexpected manifestation of a sulfonamide⋯o-diethoxybenzene heterosynthon

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Nanubolu, Jagadeesh Babu; Sridhar, Balasubramanian; Ravikumar, Krishnan

    2014-12-01

    A two point Nsbnd H⋯O dimer or an infinite catemer are the most preferred motifs/synthons for sulfonamide structures. Such synthons are known to be so robust that they are only disrupted in the presence of highly activated O acceptors such as pyridine-N-oxide and sulfoxide. We demonstrate in this article that a multi-point synthon offered by much weaker ethoxy O and amine N acceptors can however strongly compete and disrupt the robust sulfonamide homosynthons. This has been illustrated with the synthon analysis in three polymorphic crystal structures of R-tamsulosin, an active drug used in the treatment of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) and its hydrochloride salt. These crystalline solids are characterized by Single crystal X-ray diffraction (SC-XRD), powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD), Fourier Transform Infrared (FT-IR) and Raman spectroscopy. Forms I, II of the free base and hydrochloride salt crystallize in the monoclinic P21, C2, and P21 space groups respectively with two molecules in the asymmetric unit (Z‧ = 2), whereas, form III of freebase crystallize in the orthorhombic P212121 space group with Z‧ = 1. Remarkably, all four crystal structures contain a totally unexpected sulfonamide⋯o-diethoxybenzene heterosynthon. The multi-point motifs observed in polymorphs are relatively stronger than those in the hydrochloride salt because of the gauche conformation of the tamsulosin linker chain which renders an additional hydrogen bond interaction with amine N acceptor, and resemble the crown ether sulfonamide recognition pattern. Observation of this new heterosynthon offers potential scope in the design of pharmaceutical cocrystals for sulfonamide bearing drug molecules. The present study also presents a detailed hydrogen bond motif analysis in 310 primary sulfonamide structures culled from the latest version of Cambridge Structural Database (CSD). The role of various competing groups is discussed in the context of understanding the most recurring sulfonamide homo and heterosynthons.

  5. Expression and X-Ray Structural Determination of the Nucleoprotein of Lassa Fever Virus.

    PubMed

    Qi, Xiaoxuan; Wang, Wenjian; Dong, Haohao; Liang, Yuying; Dong, Changjiang; Ly, Hinh

    2018-01-01

    We describe methods to express the nucleoprotein (NP) of Lassa fever virus (LASV) in E. coli, to purify and crystallize it using the sitting-drop vapor diffusion method. The crystals were screened using Rigaku micro-007 X-ray generator and a dataset was collected at a resolution of 2.36 Å. The crystals belong to space group P3, with the unit cell parameters a = b = 176.35 Å, c = 56.40 Å, α = β = 90°, and γ = 120°. Using the X-ray diffraction method, we constructed a three-dimensional structure of the LASV NP that should aid in the development of novel therapeutic strategies against this virus, for which vaccine and effective treatment modalities are currently unavailable.

  6. Crystal structure and superconducting properties of KSr2Nb3O10

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kawaguchi, T.; Horigane, K.; Itoh, Y.; Kobayashi, K.; Horie, R.; Kambe, T.; Akimitsu, J.

    2018-05-01

    We performed X-ray diffraction (XRD) and DC magnetic susceptibility measurements to elucidate the crystal structure and superconducting properties of KSr2Nb3O10. From the diffraction pattern indexing, it was found that KSr2Nb3O10 crystallizes with monoclinic symmetry, space group P21/m(11). We succeeded in preparing high temperature (HT) and low temperature (LT) phases of KSr2Nb3O10 powder samples synthesized by a conventional solid state reaction and an ion-exchange reaction, respectively. Superconductivity was observed at 4 K by Li intercalation and it was found that the superconducting volume fraction of the LT phase ( 1.4%) is clearly larger than that of the HT phase (0.07%).

  7. Redetermination of the crystal structure of the 2D heterometallic framework prepared from [Ni(cyclam)]2+ and [Re(CN)7]3-

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sukhikh, Taisiya S.; Vostrikova, Kira E.

    2018-02-01

    A new XRD experiment and crystal structure refinement was performed for the earlier published compound in the paper "Heterobimetallic coordination polymers involving 3d metal complexes and heavier transition metals cyanometallates" by Peresypkina et al. (2015) [1]. A choice of a crystal cell taking in consideration the superstructural reflections allowed to obtain more reliable data about the symmetry and bond distances in the heterometallic 2D framework {[Ni(cyclam)]2[ReO(OH)0.5(MeOH)0.5(CN)4]}2.5+. Additionally, doubling of the parameter c permitted to get more details about interlayer space. As a result, disordered perchlorate anions and solvate molecules were located.

  8. Crystal structure of choline fenofibrate (Trilipix®), (C5H14NO) (C17H14ClO4)

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kaduk, James A.; Zhong, Kai; Gindhart, Amy M.

    2016-04-04

    The crystal structure of choline fenofibrate has been solved and refined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data, and optimized using density functional techniques. Choline fenofibrate crystallizes in space groupPbca(#61) witha= 12.341 03(2),b= 28.568 70(6),c= 12.025 62(2) Å,V= 4239.84(1) Å 3, andZ= 8. The hydroxyl group of the choline anion makes a strong hydrogen bond to the ionized carboxylate group of the fenofibrate anion. Together with C–H···O hydrogen bonds, these link the cations and anions into layers parallel to theac-plane. The powder pattern has been submitted to ICDD for inclusion in the Powder Diffraction File™.

  9. Expression, purification and crystallization of pecan (Carya illinoinensis) vicilin.

    PubMed

    Lee, BoRam; Zhang, Renhao; Du, Wen-Xian; Grauke, Larry J; McHugh, Tara H; Zhang, Yu-Zhu

    2014-08-01

    Tree nuts are responsible for many cases of severe food allergies. The 7S seed storage protein vicilin has been identified as a food allergen in many kinds of tree nuts. The vicilin protein consists of an N-terminal low-complexity region with antimicrobial activity and a C-terminal domain that forms a trimeric structure that belongs to the cupin superfamily. In this study, vicilin from pecan (Carya illinoinensis) was isolated and was expressed in bacteria for the first time. The cupin structural core of the protein, residues 369-792, was purified by metal-affinity and gel-filtration chromatography to high purity. Vicilin crystals were obtained and the best crystal diffracted to 2.65 Å resolution in space group P212121.

  10. Expression, purification and crystallization of pecan (Carya illinoinensis) vicilin

    PubMed Central

    Lee, BoRam; Zhang, Renhao; Du, Wen-Xian; Grauke, Larry J.; McHugh, Tara H.; Zhang, Yu-Zhu

    2014-01-01

    Tree nuts are responsible for many cases of severe food allergies. The 7S seed storage protein vicilin has been identified as a food allergen in many kinds of tree nuts. The vicilin protein consists of an N-terminal low-complexity region with antimicrobial activity and a C-terminal domain that forms a trimeric structure that belongs to the cupin superfamily. In this study, vicilin from pecan (Carya illinoinensis) was isolated and was expressed in bacteria for the first time. The cupin structural core of the protein, residues 369–792, was purified by metal-affinity and gel-filtration chromatography to high purity. Vicilin crystals were obtained and the best crystal diffracted to 2.65 Å resolution in space group P212121. PMID:25084379

  11. A model of insulin fibrils derived from the x-ray crystal structure of a monomeric insulin (despentapeptide insulin).

    PubMed

    Brange, J; Dodson, G G; Edwards, D J; Holden, P H; Whittingham, J L

    1997-04-01

    The crystal structure of despentapeptide insulin, a monomeric insulin, has been refined at 1.3 A spacing and subsequently used to predict and model the organization in the insulin fibril. The model makes use of the contacts in the densely packed despentapeptide insulin crystal, and takes into account other experimental evidence, including binding studies with Congo red. The dimensions of this model fibril correspond well with those measured experimentally, and the monomer-monomer contacts within the fibril are in accordance with the known physical chemistry of insulin fibrils. Using this model, it may be possible to predict mutations in insulin that might alleviate problems associated with fibril formation during insulin therapy.

  12. A Study of the Crystal Structure of Co40Fe40B20 Epitaxial Films on a Bi2Te3 Topological Insulator

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kaveev, A. K.; Suturin, S. M.; Sokolov, N. S.; Kokh, K. A.; Tereshchenko, O. E.

    2018-03-01

    Laser molecular-beam epitaxy has been used to form Co40Fe40B20 layers on Bi2Te3 topological insulator substrates, and their growth conditions have been studied. The possibility of growing epitaxial ferromagnetic layers on the surface of a topological insulator is demonstrated for the first time. The CoFeB layers have a body-centered cubic crystal structure with the (111) crystal plane parallel to the (0001) plane of Bi2Te3. 3D mapping in the reciprocal space of high-energy electron-diffraction patterns made it possible to determine the epitaxial relationships between the film and the substrate.

  13. High pressure synthesis, crystal growth and magnetic properties of TiOF

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Cumby, J.; Burchell, M. B.; Attfield, J. P.

    2018-06-01

    Polycrystalline samples of TiOF have been prepared at 1300 °C and 8 GPa, with small single crystals grown at the same conditions. The crystal structure remains tetragonal rutile-type down to at least 90 K (space group P42/mnm, a = 4.6533 (2) Å and c = 3.0143 (2) Å at 90 K) and the Ti(O,F)6 octahedra are slightly compressed, consistent with Jahn-Teller distortion of 3d1 Ti3+. Diffuse scattering reveals disordered structural correlations that may arise from local cis-order of oxide anions driven by covalency. TiOF is paramagnetic down to 5 K and observation of a small paramagnetic moment and a substantial Pauli term indicates that the d-electrons are partially delocalised.

  14. Radiation damage in a micron-sized protein crystal studied via reciprocal space mapping and Bragg coherent diffractive imaging.

    PubMed

    Coughlan, H D; Darmanin, C; Phillips, N W; Hofmann, F; Clark, J N; Harder, R J; Vine, D J; Abbey, B

    2015-07-01

    For laboratory and synchrotron based X-ray sources, radiation damage has posed a significant barrier to obtaining high-resolution structural data from biological macromolecules. The problem is particularly acute for micron-sized crystals where the weaker signal often necessitates the use of higher intensity beams to obtain the relevant data. Here, we employ a combination of techniques, including Bragg coherent diffractive imaging to characterise the radiation induced damage in a micron-sized protein crystal over time. The approach we adopt here could help screen for potential protein crystal candidates for measurement at X-ray free election laser sources.

  15. Radiation damage in a micron-sized protein crystal studied via reciprocal space mapping and Bragg coherent diffractive imaging

    PubMed Central

    Coughlan, H. D.; Darmanin, C.; Phillips, N. W.; Hofmann, F.; Clark, J. N.; Harder, R. J.; Vine, D. J.; Abbey, B.

    2015-01-01

    For laboratory and synchrotron based X-ray sources, radiation damage has posed a significant barrier to obtaining high-resolution structural data from biological macromolecules. The problem is particularly acute for micron-sized crystals where the weaker signal often necessitates the use of higher intensity beams to obtain the relevant data. Here, we employ a combination of techniques, including Bragg coherent diffractive imaging to characterise the radiation induced damage in a micron-sized protein crystal over time. The approach we adopt here could help screen for potential protein crystal candidates for measurement at X-ray free election laser sources. PMID:26798804

  16. Radiation damage in a micron-sized protein crystal studied via reciprocal space mapping and Bragg coherent diffractive imaging

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Coughlan, H. D.; Darmanin, C.; Phillips, N. W.

    For laboratory and synchrotron based X-ray sources, radiation damage has posed a significant barrier to obtaining high-resolution structural data from biological macromolecules. The problem is particularly acute for micron-sized crystals where the weaker signal often necessitates the use of higher intensity beams to obtain the relevant data. Here, we employ a combination of techniques, including Bragg coherent diffractive imaging to characterise the radiation induced damage in a micron-sized protein crystal over time. The approach we adopt here could help screen for potential protein crystal candidates for measurement at X-ray free election laser sources.

  17. Radiation damage in a micron-sized protein crystal studied via reciprocal space mapping and Bragg coherent diffractive imaging

    DOE PAGES

    Coughlan, H. D.; Darmanin, C.; Phillips, N. W.; ...

    2015-04-29

    For laboratory and synchrotron based X-ray sources, radiation damage has posed a significant barrier to obtaining high-resolution structural data from biological macromolecules. The problem is particularly acute for micron-sized crystals where the weaker signal often necessitates the use of higher intensity beams to obtain the relevant data. Here, we employ a combination of techniques, including Bragg coherent diffractive imaging to characterise the radiation induced damage in a micron-sized protein crystal over time. The approach we adopt here could help screen for potential protein crystal candidates for measurement at X-ray free election laser sources.

  18. Semiconductor crystal growth and segregation problems on earth and in space

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Gatos, H. C.

    1982-01-01

    Semiconductor crystal growth and segregation problems are examined in the context of their relationship to material properties, and some of the problems are illustrated with specific experimental results. The compositional and structural defects encountered in semiconductors are largely associated with gravity-induced convective currents in the melt; additional problems are introduced by variations in stoichiometry. It is demonstrated that in near-zero gravity environment, crystal growth and segregation takes place under ideal steady-state conditions with minimum convective interference. A discussion of the advantages of zero-gravity crystal growth is followed by a summary of problems arising from the absence of gravitational forces.

  19. X-Ray Computed Tomography of Tranquility Base Moon Rock

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jones, Justin S.; Garvin, Jim; Viens, Mike; Kent, Ryan; Munoz, Bruno

    2016-01-01

    X-ray Computed Tomography (CT) was used for the first time on the Apollo 11 Lunar Sample number 10057.30, which had been previously maintained by the White House, then transferred back to NASA under the care of Goddard Space Flight Center. Results from this analysis show detailed images of the internal structure of the moon rock, including vesicles (pores), crystal needles, and crystal bundles. These crystals, possibly the common mineral ilmenite, are found in abundance and with random orientation. Future work, in particular a greater understanding of these crystals and their formation, may lead to a more in-depth understanding of the lunar surface evolution and mineral content.

  20. Crystal structure of carnidazole form II from synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction: structural comparison with form I, the hydrated form and the low energy conformations in vacuo.

    PubMed

    de Armas, Héctor Novoa; Peeters, Oswald M; Blaton, Norbert; Van den Mooter, Guy; De Ridder, Dirk J A; Schenk, Henk

    2006-10-01

    The crystal structure of carnidazole form II, O-methyl [2-(2-methyl-5-nitro-1H-imidazole-1-yl)ethyl]thiocarbamate, has been determined using synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction in combination with simulated annealing and whole profile pattern matching, and refined by the Rietveld method. For structure solution, 12 degrees of freedom were defined: one motion group and six torsions. Form II crystallizes in space group P2(1)/n, Z=4, with unit cell parameters after Rietveld refinement: a=13.915(4), b=8.095(2), c=10.649(3) A, beta=110.83(1) degrees, and V=1121.1(5) A3. The two polymorphic forms, as well as the hydrate, crystallize in the monoclinic space group P2(1)/n having four molecules in the cell. In form II, the molecules are held together by forming two infinite zig-zag chains via hydrogen bonds of the type N--H...N, the same pattern as in form I. A conformational study of carnidazole, at semiempirical PM3 level, was performed using stochastic approaches based on modification of the flexible torsion angles. The values of the torsion angles for the molecules of the two polymorphic forms and the hydrate of carnidazole are compared to those obtained from the conformational search. Form I and form II are enantiotropic polymorphic pairs this agrees with the fact that the two forms are conformational polymorphs. Copyright (c) 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association

  1. New polymorphs of Ru IIIP 3O 9: Cyclo-hexaphosphate Ru 2P 6O 18 and metaphosphate Ru(PO 3) 3 with a novel structure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fukuoka, Hiroshi; Imoto, Hideo; Saito, Taro

    1995-10-01

    Two new polymorphs of ruthenium phosphate with RuP 3O 9 composition were prepared and their crystal structures were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. They are cyclo-hexaphosphate Ru 2P 6O 18 and metaphosphate Ru(PO 3) 3. Ru 2P 6O 18 crystallizes in the monoclinic space group P2 1/ c with a = 6.292(2) Å, b = 15.276(2) Å, c = 8.365(2) Å, β = 106.54(2)°, V = 770.6(3) Å 3, Z = 2, R = 0.043, RW = 0.035. The structure contains cyclo-hexaphosphate rings stacking obliquely along the [100] direction and is isotypic with B-form cyclo-phosphates. Ru(PO 3) 3 has a novel structure and crystallizes in the triclinic space group P overline1 with a = 6.957(1) Å, b = 10.324(2) Å, c = 5.030(1) Å, α = 92.45(2)°, β = 92.31(2)°, γ = 98.61(1)°, V = 356.5(1) Å 3, Z = 2, R = 0.030, RW = 0.027. It is built up of a network of infinite [PO 3-] ∞ chains and RuO 6 octahedra. The configuration of the metaphosphate chains is different from that in the C-form Ru(PO 3) 3. While the chains in the C-form consisting of PO 3OPO 3 units are condensed in nearly staggered configurations, the units in the new phosphate are eclipsed.

  2. Structure of fructose bisphosphate aldolase from Bartonella henselae bound to fructose 1,6-bisphosphate

    PubMed Central

    Gardberg, Anna; Abendroth, Jan; Bhandari, Janhavi; Sankaran, Banumathi; Staker, Bart

    2011-01-01

    Fructose bisphosphate aldolase (FBPA) enzymes have been found in a broad range of eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. FBPA catalyses the cleavage of fructose 1,6-bisphosphate into glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and dihydroxy­acetone phosphate. The SSGCID has reported several FBPA structures from pathogenic sources, including the bacterium Brucella melitensis and the protozoan Babesia bovis. Bioinformatic analysis of the Bartonella henselae genome revealed an FBPA homolog. The B. henselae FBPA enzyme was recombinantly expressed and purified for X-ray crystallographic studies. The purified enzyme crystallized in the apo form but failed to diffract; however, well diffracting crystals could be obtained by cocrystallization in the presence of the native substrate fructose 1,6-bisphosphate. A data set to 2.35 Å resolution was collected from a single crystal at 100 K. The crystal belonged to the orthorhombic space group P212121, with unit-cell parameters a = 72.39, b = 127.71, c = 157.63 Å. The structure was refined to a final free R factor of 22.2%. The structure shares the typical barrel tertiary structure and tetrameric quaternary structure reported for previous FBPA structures and exhibits the same Schiff base in the active site. PMID:21904049

  3. Crystal structure of the new A2SnTa6X18 (A = K, Rb, Cs; X = Cl, Br) cluster compounds

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Lemoine, P.; Wilmet, M.; Malaman, B.; Paofai, S.; Dumait, N.; Cordier, S.

    2018-01-01

    The crystal structure of the new cluster compounds A2SnTa6X18 (with A = K, Rb, Cs, and X = Cl, Br) was determined by using single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction, and 119Sn Mössbauer spectroscopy. Those compounds crystallize in the Cs2EuNb6Br18-type structure of space group R 3 ̅. This type of structure is built up on discrete edge-bridged [M6Xi12Xa6]4- cluster units arranged according to a pseudo face-centered cubic stacking, where the octahedral and tetrahedral vacancies are fully occupied by divalent tin cations and monovalent alkaline cations, respectively. The tin cations influence on the halogen matrix and the electronic effects on the cluster units in the Cs2EuNb6Br18-type structure are discussed by comparison with isotype compounds. From those analyses, the ionic radius of Sn2+ in coordination number VI is estimated to be 1.14(1) Å. Finally, K2SnTa6Br18 might be considered as a new example of compound containing a quite bare stannous ion (5 s2 configuration).

  4. Synthesis, crystal structure investigation and magnetism of the complex metal-rich boride series Crx(Rh1-yRuy)7-xB3 (x=0.88-1; y=0-1) with Th7Fe3-type structure

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Misse, Patrick R. N.; Mbarki, Mohammed; Fokwa, Boniface P. T.

    2012-08-01

    Powder samples and single crystals of the new complex boride series Crx(Rh1-yRuy)7-xB3 (x=0.88-1; y=0-1) have been synthesized by arc-melting the elements under purified argon atmosphere on a water-cooled copper crucible. The products, which have metallic luster, were structurally characterized by single-crystal and powder X-ray diffraction as well as EDX measurements. Within the whole solid solution range the hexagonal Th7Fe3 structure type (space group P63mc, no. 186, Z=2) was identified. Single-crystal structure refinement results indicate the presence of chromium at two sites (6c and 2b) of the available three metal Wyckoff sites, with a pronounced preference for the 6c site. An unexpected Rh/Ru site preference was found in the Ru-rich region only, leading to two different magnetic behaviors in the solid solution: The Rh-rich region shows a temperature-independent (Pauli) paramagnetism whereas an additional temperature-dependent paramagnetic component is found in the Ru-rich region.

  5. Synthesis, crystal structure, and properties of new lead barium borate with B3O6 plane hexagonal rings

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Zhao, Wenwu

    2017-08-01

    A new lead barium borate Ba8.02Pb0.98(B3O6)6 with B3O6 plane hexagonal rings was synthesized through spontaneous nucleation from a high-temperature solution utilizing PbO, H3BO3, and BaF2 as reagents. Its crystal structure was determined from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data and further characterized by FT-IR. It crystallizes in space group R32 and the crystallographic structure of Ba8.02Pb0.98(B3O6)6 can be described as a layer-like structure, there is stacking along the c-axis of B3O6 plane hexagonal rings with the Ba2 and Pb/Ba1 atoms alternately occupying sites between the B3O6 sheets. A comparison of the structures of Ba8.02Pb0.98(B3O6)6, PbBa2(B3O6)2 and α-BaB2O4 is presented. UV-Vis-NIR diffuse-reflectance spectrum indicates that the absorption edge of Ba8.02Pb0.98(B3O6)6 is about 399 nm.

  6. Transverse angular momentum in topological photonic crystals

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Deng, Wei-Min; Chen, Xiao-Dong; Zhao, Fu-Li; Dong, Jian-Wen

    2018-01-01

    Engineering local angular momentum of structured light fields in real space enables applications in many fields, in particular, the realization of unidirectional robust transport in topological photonic crystals with a non-trivial Berry vortex in momentum space. Here, we show transverse angular momentum modes in silicon topological photonic crystals when considering transverse electric polarization. Excited by a chiral external source with either transverse spin angular momentum or transverse phase vortex, robust light flow propagating along opposite directions is observed in several kinds of sharp-turn interfaces between two topologically-distinct silicon photonic crystals. A transverse orbital angular momentum mode with alternating phase vortex exists at the boundary of two such photonic crystals. In addition, unidirectional transport is robust to the working frequency even when the ring size or location of the pseudo-spin source varies in a certain range, leading to the superiority of the broadband photonic device. These findings enable one to make use of transverse angular momentum, a kind of degree of freedom, to achieve unidirectional robust transport in the telecom region and other potential applications in integrated photonic circuits, such as on-chip robust delay lines.

  7. Revisiting polarimetry near the isotropic point of an optically active, non-enantiomorphous, molecular crystal.

    PubMed

    Martin, Alexander T; Tan, Melissa; Nichols, Shane M; Timothy, Emily; Kahr, Bart

    2018-07-01

    Accurate polarimetric measurements of the optical activity of crystals along low symmetry directions are facilitated by isotropic points, frequencies where dispersion curves of eigenrays cross and the linear birefringence disappears. We report here the optical properties and structure of achiral, uniaxial (point group D 2d ) potassium trihydrogen di-(cis-4-cyclohexene-1,2-dicarboxylate) dihydrate, whose isotropic point was previously detected (S. A. Kim, C. Grieswatch, H. Küppers, Zeit. Krist. 1993; 208:219-222) and exploited for a singular measurement of optical activity normal to the optic axis. The crystal structure associated with the aforementioned study was never published. We report it here, confirming the space group assignment I 4¯c2, along with the frequency dependence of the fundamental optical properties and the constitutive tensors by fitting optical dispersion relations to measured Mueller matrix spectra. k-Space maps of circular birefringence and of the Mueller matrix near the isotropic wavelength are measured and simulated. The signs of optical rotation are correlated with the absolute crystallographic directions. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

  8. Structural, microstructural and vibrational analyses of the monoclinic tungstate BiLuWO{sub 6}

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Ait Ahsaine, H.; Taoufyq, A.; Institut Matériaux Microélectronique et Nanosciences de Provence, IM2NP, UMR CNRS 7334, Université de Toulon, BP 20132, 83957 La Garde Cedex

    2014-10-15

    The bismuth lutetium tungstate phase BiLuWO{sub 6} has been prepared using a solid state route with stoichiometric mixtures of oxide precursors. The obtained polycrystalline phase has been characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and Raman spectroscopy. In the first step, the crystal structure has been refined using Rietveld method: the crystal cell was resolved using monoclinic system (parameters a, b, c, β) with space group A2/m. SEM images showed the presence of large crystallites with a constant local nominal composition (BiLuW). TEM analyses showed that the actual local structure could be better representedmore » by a superlattice (a, 2b, c, β) associated with space groups P2 or P2/m. The Raman spectroscopy showed the presence of vibrational bands similar to those observed in the compounds BiREWO{sub 6} with RE=Y, Gd, Nd. However, these vibrational bands were characterized by large full width at half maximum, probably resulting from the long range Bi/Lu disorder and local WO{sub 6} octahedron distortions in the structure. - Graphical abstract: The average structure of BiLuWO{sub 6} determined from X-ray diffraction data can be represented by A2/m space group. Experimental Electron Diffraction patterns along the [0vw] zone axes of the monoclinic structure and associated simulated patterns show the existence of a monoclinic superstructure with space group P2 or P2/m. - Highlights: • A new monoclinic BiLuWO{sub 6} phase has been elaborated from solid-state reaction. • The space group of the monoclinic disordered average structure should be A2/m. • Transmission electron microscopy leads to a superlattice with P2/m space group. • Raman spectroscopy suggests existence of local disorder.« less

  9. Phase coexistence and domain configuration in Pb(Mg{sub 1/3}Nb{sub 2/3})O{sub 3}-0.34PbTiO{sub 3} single crystal revealed by synchrotron-based X-ray diffractive three-dimensional reciprocal space mapping and piezoresponse force microscopy

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wang, Ruixue; Yang, Bin, E-mail: binyang@hit.edu.cn; Sun, Enwei

    The crystalline phases and domain configuration in the morphotropic phase boundary composition Pb(Mg{sub 1/3}Nb{sub 2/3})O{sub 3}-0.34PbTiO{sub 3} (PMN-0.34PT) single crystal have been investigated by synchrotron-based X-ray 3D Reciprocal Space Mapping (3D-RSM) and Piezoresponse Force Microscopy. The coexistence of tetragonal (T) and monoclinic M{sub C} phases in this PMN-0.34PT single crystal is confirmed. The affiliation of each diffraction spot in the 3D-RSM was identified with the assistance of qualitative simulation. Most importantly, the twinning structure between different domains in such a mixed phase PMN-PT crystal is firmly clarified, and the spatial distribution of different twin domains is demonstrated. In addition, themore » lattice parameters of T and M{sub C} phases in PMN-0.34PT single crystal as well as the tilting angles of crystal lattices caused by the interfacial lattice mismatch are determined.« less

  10. Rational design of crystal contact-free space in protein crystals for analyzing spatial distribution of motions within protein molecules.

    PubMed

    Matsuoka, Rei; Shimada, Atsushi; Komuro, Yasuaki; Sugita, Yuji; Kohda, Daisuke

    2016-03-01

    Contacts with neighboring molecules in protein crystals inevitably restrict the internal motions of intrinsically flexible proteins. The resultant clear electron densities permit model building, as crystallographic snapshot structures. Although these still images are informative, they could provide biased pictures of the protein motions. If the mobile parts are located at a site lacking direct contacts in rationally designed crystals, then the amplitude of the movements can be experimentally analyzed. We propose a fusion protein method, to create crystal contact-free space (CCFS) in protein crystals and to place the mobile parts in the CCFS. Conventional model building fails when large amplitude motions exist. In this study, the mobile parts appear as smeared electron densities in the CCFS, by suitable processing of the X-ray diffraction data. We applied the CCFS method to a highly mobile presequence peptide bound to the mitochondrial import receptor, Tom20, and a catalytically relevant flexible segment in the oligosaccharyltransferase, AglB. These two examples demonstrated the general applicability of the CCFS method to the analysis of the spatial distribution of motions within protein molecules. © 2016 The Protein Society.

  11. Crystallization of the C-terminal globular domain of avian reovirus fibre

    PubMed Central

    van Raaij, Mark J.; Hermo Parrado, X. Lois; Guardado Calvo, Pablo; Fox, Gavin C.; Llamas-Saiz, Antonio L.; Costas, Celina; Martínez-Costas, José; Benavente, Javier

    2005-01-01

    Avian reovirus fibre, a homotrimer of the σC protein, is responsible for primary host-cell attachment. Using the protease trypsin, a C-terminal σC fragment containing amino acids 156–326 has been generated which was subsequently purified and crystallized. Two different crystal forms were obtained, one grown in the absence of divalent cations and belonging to space group P6322 (unit-cell parameters a = 75.6, c = 243.1 Å) and one grown in the presence of either zinc or cadmium sulfate and belonging to space group P321 (unit-cell parameters a = 74.7, c = 74.5 Å and a = 73.1, c = 69.9 Å for the ZnII- and CdII-grown crystals, respectively). The first crystal form diffracted synchrotron radiation to 3.0 Å resolution and the second form to 2.2–2.3 Å. Its closest related structure, the C-­terminal fragment of mammalian reovirus fibre, has only 18% sequence identity and molecular-replacement attempts were unsuccessful. Therefore, a search is under way for suitable heavy-atom derivatives and attempts are being made to grow protein crystals containing selenomethionine instead of methionine. PMID:16511119

  12. Using cryoEM Reconstruction and Phase Extension to Determine Crystal Structure of Bacteriophage $${\\Phi}$$6 Major Capsid Protein

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Nemecek, Daniel; Plevka, Pavel; Boura, Evzen

    2013-11-29

    Bacteriophagemore » $${\\Phi}$$6 is a double-stranded RNA virus that has been extensively studied as a model organism. In this paper we describe structure determination of $${\\Phi}$$6 major capsid protein P1. The protein crystallized in base centered orthorhombic space group C2221. Matthews’s coefficient indicated that the crystals contain from four to seven P1 subunits in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. The self-rotation function had shown presence of fivefold axes of non-crystallographic symmetry in the crystals. Thus, electron density map corresponding to a P1 pentamer was excised from a previously determined cryoEM reconstruction of the $${\\Phi}$$6 procapsid at 7 Å resolution and used as a model for molecular replacement. The phases for reflections at higher than 7 Å resolution were obtained by phase extension employing the fivefold non-crystallographic symmetry present in the crystal. Lastly, the averaged 3.6 Å-resolution electron density map was of sufficient quality to allow model building.« less

  13. Synthesis, structural, optical, thermal and dielectric studies on new organic nonlinear optical crystal by solution growth technique.

    PubMed

    Prakash, M; Geetha, D; Lydia Caroline, M

    2013-04-15

    Single crystals of L-phenylalanine-benzoic acid (LPBA) were successfully grown from aqueous solution by solvent evaporation technique. Purity of the crystals was increased by the method of recrystallization. The XRD analysis confirms that the crystal belongs to the monoclinic system with noncentrosymmetric space group P21. The chemical structure of compound was established by FT-NMR technique. The presence of functional groups was estimated qualitatively by Fourier transform infrared analysis (FT-IR). Ultraviolet-visible spectral analyses showed that the crystal has low UV cut-off at 254 nm combined with very good transparency of 90% in a wide range. The optical band gap was estimated to be 6.91 eV. Thermal behavior has been studied with TGA/DTA analyses. The existence of second harmonic generation (SHG) efficiency was found to be 0.56 times the value of KDP. The dielectric behavior of the sample was also studied for the first time. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  14. Site selectivity on chalcogen atoms in superconducting La(O,F)BiSSe

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Tanaka, Masashi, E-mail: Tanaka.Masashi@nims.go.jp; Matsushita, Yoshitaka; Fujioka, Masaya

    2015-03-16

    Single crystals of La(O,F)BiSSe were grown by using a CsCl flux method. Single crystal X-ray structural analysis reveals that the crystal structure is isostructural to the BiS{sub 2}- or BiSe{sub 2}-based compounds crystallizing with space group P4/nmm (lattice parameters a = 4.1110(2) Å, c = 13.6010(7) Å). However, the S atoms are selectively occupied at the apical site of the Bi-SSe pyramids in the superconducting layer. The single crystals show a superconducting transition at around 4.2 K in the magnetic susceptibility and resistivity measurements. The superconducting anisotropic parameter is determined to be 34–35 from its upper critical magnetic field. The anisotropy is in the same range withmore » that of other members of the La(O,F)BiCh{sub 2} (Ch = S, Se) family under ambient pressure.« less

  15. Human Recombinant Insulin 1g - ug

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    2004-01-01

    Proteins are the building blocks of our bodies and the living world around us. Within our bodies proteins make it possible for red blood cells to carry oxygen throughout the body. Others help transmit nerve impulses so we can hear, smell and feel the world around us. While others play a crucial role in preventing or causing disease. If the structure of a protein is known, then companies can develop new or improved drugs to fight the disease of which the protein is a part. To determine protein structure, researchers must grow near-perfect crystals of the protein. On Earth convection currents, sedimentation and other gravity-induced phenomena hamper crystal growth efforts. In microgravity researchers can grow near-perfect crystals in an environment free of these effects. Because of the enormous potential for new pharmaceutical products the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography--the NASA Commercial Space Center responsible for commercial protein crystal growth efforts has more than fifty major industry and academic partners. Research on crystals of human insulin could lead to improved treatments for diabetes.

  16. Microgravity

    NASA Image and Video Library

    2004-04-15

    Proteins are the building blocks of our bodies and the living world around us. Within our bodies proteins make it possible for red blood cells to carry oxygen throughout the body. Others help transmit nerve impulses so we can hear, smell and feel the world around us. While others play a crucial role in preventing or causing disease. If the structure of a protein is known, then companies can develop new or improved drugs to fight the disease of which the protein is a part. To determine protein structure, researchers must grow near-perfect crystals of the protein. On Earth convection currents, sedimentation and other gravity-induced phenomena hamper crystal growth efforts. In microgravity researchers can grow near-perfect crystals in an environment free of these effects. Because of the enormous potential for new pharmaceutical products the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography--the NASA Commercial Space Center responsible for commercial protein crystal growth efforts has more than fifty major industry and academic partners. Research on crystals of human insulin could lead to improved treatments for diabetes.

  17. Crystallization, X-ray diffraction analysis and preliminary structure determination of the polygalacturonase PehA from Agrobacterium vitis

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Vordtriede, Paul B.; Yoder, Marilyn D., E-mail: yoderm@umkc.edu

    2008-07-01

    The acidic polygalacturonase PehA from A. vitis has been crystallized. A molecular-replacement solution indicated a right-handed parallel β-helix fold. Polygalacturonases are pectate-degrading enzymes that belong to glycoside hydrolase family 28 and hydrolyze the α-1,4 glycosidic bond between neighboring galacturonasyl residues of the homogalacturonan substrate. The acidic polygalacturonase PehA from Agrobacterium vitis was overexpressed in Escherichia coli, where it accumulated in the periplasmic fraction. It was purified to homogeneity via a two-step chromatography procedure and crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion technique. PehA crystals belonged to space group P2{sub 1}, with unit-cell parameters a = 52.387, b = 62.738, c = 149.165more » Å, β = 89.98°. Crystals diffracted to 1.59 Å resolution and contained two molecules per asymmetric unit. An initial structure determination by molecular replacement indicated a right-handed parallel β-helix fold.« less

  18. Synthesis, growth, structure and nonlinear optical properties of a semiorganic 2-carboxy pyridinium dihydrogen phosphate single crystal

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Nagapandiselvi, P.; Baby, C.; Gopalakrishnan, R.

    2015-09-01

    A new semiorganic compound namely, 2-carboxy pyridinium dihydrogen phosphate (2CPDP) was synthesised and grown as single crystals by slow evaporation solution growth technique. Single crystal XRD showed that 2CPDP belongs to monoclinic crystal system with space group P21/n. The molecular structure was further confirmed by modern spectroscopic techniques like FT-NMR (1H, 13C &31P), FT-IR, UV-Vis-NIR and Fluorescence. The UV-Vis-NIR analysis revealed suitability of the crystal for nonlinear optical applications. The photo active nature of the material is established from fluorescence studies. TG-DSC analysis showed that 2CPDP was thermally stable up to 170 °C. The dependence of dielectric properties on frequency and temperature were also studied. Nonlinear optical absorption determined from open aperture Z-Scan analysis by employing picosecond Nd-YAG laser, revealed that 2CPDP can serve as a promising candidate for optical limiting applications.

  19. Crystallization and preliminary X-ray crystallographic analysis of a highly specific serpin from the beetle Tenebrio molitor

    PubMed Central

    Park, Sun Hee; Piao, Shunfu; Kwon, Hyun-Mi; Kim, Eun-Hye; Lee, Bok Luel; Ha, Nam-Chul

    2010-01-01

    The Toll signalling pathway, which is crucial for innate immunity, is transduced in insect haemolymph via a proteolytic cascade consisting of three serine proteases. The proteolytic cascade is downregulated by a specific serine protease inhibitor (serpin). Recently, the serpin SPN48 was found to show an unusual specific reactivity towards the terminal serine protease, Spätzle-processing enzyme, in the beetle Tenebrio molitor. In this study, the mature form of SPN48 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The purified SPN48 protein was crystallized using 14% polyethylene glycol 8000 and 0.1 M 2-(N-morpho­lino)ethanesulfonic acid pH 6.0 as the precipitant. The crystals diffracted X-rays to 2.1 Å resolution and were suitable for structure determination. The crystals belonged to space group P21. The crystal structure will provide information regarding how SPN48 achieves its unusual specificity for its target protease. PMID:20124722

  20. Crystallization of recombinant cyclo-oxygenase-2

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Stevens, Anna M.; Pawlitz, Jennifer L.; Kurumbail, Ravi G.; Gierse, James K.; Moreland, Kirby T.; Stegeman, Roderick A.; Loduca, Jina Y.; Stallings, William C.

    1999-01-01

    The integral membrane protein, prostaglandin H 2 synthase, or cyclo-oxygenase (COX), catalyses the first step in the conversion of arachidonic acid to prostaglandins (PGs) and is the target of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Two isoforms are known. The constitutive enzyme, COX-1, is present in most tissues and is responsible for the physiological production of PGs. The isoform responsible for the elevated production of PGs during inflammation is COX-2 which is induced specifically at inflammatory sites. Three-dimensional structures of inhibitor complexes of COX-2, and of site variants of COX-2 which mimic COX-1, provide insight into the structural basis for selective inhibition of COX-2. Additionally, structures of COX-2 mutants and complexes with the substrate can provide a clearer understanding of the catalytic mechanism of the reaction. A crystallization protocol has been developed for COX-2 which reproducibly yields diffraction quality crystals. Polyethyleneglycol 550 monomethylether (MMP550) and MgCl 2 were systematically varied and used in conjunction with the detergent β- D-octylglucopyranoside ( β-OG). As a result of many crystallization trials, we determined that the initial β-OG concentration should be held constant, allowing the salt concentration to modulate the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the detergent. Over 25 crystal structures have been solved using crystals generated from this system. Most crystals belong to the space group P2 12 12, with lattice constants of a=180, b=134, c=120 Å in a pseudo body-centered lattice.

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