DOUBLE ENDOR with a linearly and a circularly polarized radiofrequency field
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Schweiger, A.; Rudin, M.; Forrer, J.; Günthard, Hs. H.
The combination of the two spectroscopical techniques, DOUBLE ENDOR and ENDOR with a circularly polarized radiofrequency field (CP-ENDOR), is described. with this new method, termed by the acronym CP-DOUBLE ENDOR, the selective induction of transitions of different types of nuclei and of different paramagnetic species allows a drastic reduction of the number of observed ENDOR lines. With this technique, analysis of hitherto not interpretable ENDOR spectra is often made possible. The experimental setup of the CP-DOUBLE ENDOR spectrometer is described. The advantage of using circularly polarized rf fields in DOUBLE ENDOR spectroscopy is illustrated by two applications on transition metal complexes in single crystals.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Murphy, Damien M.; Farley, Robert D.; Marshall, Joanne; Willock, David J.
2004-06-01
CW and pulsed ENDOR was used to probe the electron nuclear superhyperfine interactions between V 4+ ions and distant Sn nuclei in vanadium doped tin oxide (V/SnO 2). Whilst interactions with two sets of nearest neighbour Sn nuclei (with a V-Sn distance of 3.185 and 3.708 Å respectively) are observed by EPR, superhyperfine couplings to two remote sets of tins (with a V-Sn distance of 6.370 and ˜7.42 Å) are detected by ENDOR. The interaction was found to be largely isotropic and largest along the crystal c axis. Small differences in the remote tin environments were also detected by ENDOR.
ENDOR with band-selective shaped inversion pulses
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tait, Claudia E.; Stoll, Stefan
2017-04-01
Electron Nuclear DOuble Resonance (ENDOR) is based on the measurement of nuclear transition frequencies through detection of changes in the polarization of electron transitions. In Davies ENDOR, the initial polarization is generated by a selective microwave inversion pulse. The rectangular inversion pulses typically used are characterized by a relatively low selectivity, with full inversion achieved only for a limited number of spin packets with small resonance offsets. With the introduction of pulse shaping to EPR, the rectangular inversion pulses can be replaced with shaped pulses with increased selectivity. Band-selective inversion pulses are characterized by almost rectangular inversion profiles, leading to full inversion for spin packets with resonance offsets within the pulse excitation bandwidth and leaving spin packets outside the excitation bandwidth largely unaffected. Here, we explore the consequences of using different band-selective amplitude-modulated pulses designed for NMR as the inversion pulse in ENDOR. We find an increased sensitivity for small hyperfine couplings compared to rectangular pulses of the same bandwidth. In echo-detected Davies-type ENDOR, finite Fourier series inversion pulses combine the advantages of increased absolute ENDOR sensitivity of short rectangular inversion pulses and increased sensitivity for small hyperfine couplings of long rectangular inversion pulses. The use of pulses with an almost rectangular frequency-domain profile also allows for increased control of the hyperfine contrast selectivity. At X-band, acquisition of echo transients as a function of radiofrequency and appropriate selection of integration windows during data processing allows efficient separation of contributions from weakly and strongly coupled nuclei in overlapping ENDOR spectra within a single experiment.
DFT and ENDOR Study of Bixin Radical Cations and Neutral Radicals on Silica-Alumina.
Tay-Agbozo, Sefadzi S; Krzyaniak, Matthew D; Bowman, Michael K; Street, Shane; Kispert, Lowell D
2015-06-18
Bixin, a carotenoid found in annatto (Bixa orellana), is unique among natural carotenoids by being water-soluble. We stabilized free radicals from bixin on the surface of silica-alumina (Si-Al) and characterized them by pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR). DFT calculations of unpaired electron spin distribution for various bixin radicals predict the EPR hyperfine couplings. Least-square fitting of experimental ENDOR spectra by spectra calculated from DFT hyperfine couplings characterized the radicals trapped on Si-Al. DFT predicts that the trans bixin radical cation is more stable than the cis bixin radical cation by 1.26 kcal/mol. This small energy difference is consistent with the 26% trans and 23% cis radical cations in the ENDOR spectrum. The remainder of the ENDOR spectrum is due to several neutral radicals formed by loss of a H(+) ion from the 9, 9', 13, or 13' methyl group, a common occurrence in all water-insoluble carotenoids previously studied. Although carboxyl groups of bixin strongly affect its solubility relative to other natural carotenoids, they do not alter properties of its free radicals based on DFT calculations and EPR measurements which remain similar to typical water-insoluble carotenoids.
Fingerprints of single nuclear spin energy levels using STM - ENDOR
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Manassen, Yishay; Averbukh, Michael; Jbara, Moamen; Siebenhofer, Bernhard; Shnirman, Alexander; Horovitz, Baruch
2018-04-01
We performed STM-ENDOR experiments where the intensity of one of the hyperfine components detected in ESR-STM is recorded while an rf power is irradiated into the tunneling junction and its frequency is swept. When the latter frequency is near a nuclear transition a dip in ESR-STM signal is observed. This experiment was performed in three different systems: near surface SiC vacancies where the electron spin is coupled to a next nearest neighbor 29Si nucleus; Cu deposited on Si(111)7x7 surface, where the unpaired electron of the Cu atom is coupled to the Cu nucleus (63Cu, 65Cu) and on Tempo molecules adsorbed on Au(111), where the unpaired electron is coupled to a Nitrogen nucleus (14N). While some of the hyperfine values are unresolved in the ESR-STM data due to linewidth we find that they are accurately determined in the STM-ENDOR data including those from remote nuclei, which are not detected in the ESR-STM spectrum. Furthermore, STM-ENDOR can measure single nuclear Zeeman frequencies, distinguish between isotopes through their different nuclear magnetic moments and detect quadrupole spectra. We also develop and solve a Bloch type equation for the coupled electron-nuclear system that facilitates interpretation of the data. The improved spectral resolution of STM - ENDOR opens many possibilities for nanometric scale chemical analysis.
Fingerprints of single nuclear spin energy levels using STM - ENDOR.
Manassen, Yishay; Averbukh, Michael; Jbara, Moamen; Siebenhofer, Bernhard; Shnirman, Alexander; Horovitz, Baruch
2018-04-01
We performed STM-ENDOR experiments where the intensity of one of the hyperfine components detected in ESR-STM is recorded while an rf power is irradiated into the tunneling junction and its frequency is swept. When the latter frequency is near a nuclear transition a dip in ESR-STM signal is observed. This experiment was performed in three different systems: near surface SiC vacancies where the electron spin is coupled to a next nearest neighbor 29 Si nucleus; Cu deposited on Si(111)7x7 surface, where the unpaired electron of the Cu atom is coupled to the Cu nucleus ( 63 Cu, 65 Cu) and on Tempo molecules adsorbed on Au(111), where the unpaired electron is coupled to a Nitrogen nucleus ( 14 N). While some of the hyperfine values are unresolved in the ESR-STM data due to linewidth we find that they are accurately determined in the STM-ENDOR data including those from remote nuclei, which are not detected in the ESR-STM spectrum. Furthermore, STM-ENDOR can measure single nuclear Zeeman frequencies, distinguish between isotopes through their different nuclear magnetic moments and detect quadrupole spectra. We also develop and solve a Bloch type equation for the coupled electron-nuclear system that facilitates interpretation of the data. The improved spectral resolution of STM - ENDOR opens many possibilities for nanometric scale chemical analysis. Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
ENDOR-Induced EPR of Disordered Systems: Application to X-Irradiated Alanine.
Kusakovskij, Jevgenij; Maes, Kwinten; Callens, Freddy; Vrielinck, Henk
2018-02-15
The electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra of radiation-induced radicals in organic solids are generally composed of multiple components that largely overlap due to their similar weak g anisotropy and a large number of hyperfine (HF) interactions. Such properties make these systems difficult to study using standard cw EPR spectroscopy even in single crystals. Electron-nuclear double-resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy is a powerful and widely used complementary technique. In particular, ENDOR-induced EPR (EIE) experiments are useful for separating the overlapping contributions. In the present work, these techniques were employed to study the EPR spectrum of stable radicals in X-irradiated alanine, which is widely used in dosimetric applications. The principal values of all major proton HF interactions of the dominant radicals were determined by analyzing the magnetic field dependence of the ENDOR spectrum at 50 K, where the rotation of methyl groups is frozen. Accurate simulations of the EPR spectrum were performed after the major components were separated using an EIE analysis. As a result, new evidence in favor of the model of the second dominant radical was obtained.
ENDOR/ESR of Mn atoms and MnH molecules in solid argon
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
van Zee, R. J.; Garland, D. A.; Weltner, W., Jr.
1986-09-01
Mn atoms and MnH molecules, the latter formed by reaction between metal and hydrogen atoms, were trapped in solid argon and their ESR/ENDOR spectra measured at 4 K. At each pumping magnetic field two ENDOR lines were observed for 55Mn(I=5/2) atoms, corresponding to hyperfine transitions within the MS =±1/2 levels. Values of the hyperfine interaction constant and nuclear moment of 55Mn were derived from the six sets of data. For MnH, three sets of signals were detected: a proton ``matrix ENDOR'' line, transitions in the MS =0,±1 levels involving MI (55Mn)=1/2, 3/2, 5/2 levels, and proton transitions corresponding to νH and νH±aH. Analysis yielded the hyperfine constant aH =6.8(1) MHz and the nuclear quadrupole coupling constant Q'(55Mn)=-11.81(2) MHz. The latter compared favorably with a theoretical value derived earlier by Bagus and Schaefer. A higher term in the spin Hamiltonian appeared to be necessary to fit the proton hyperfine data.
Radiation-Induced Damage to Nucleic Acid Constituents
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kim, Heasook
The objective of this research was to identify the primary free radical species produced by ionizing radiation in DNA. The ultimate goal would be to use these data obtained from model compounds to analyze radiation-induced damage in DNA itself. The different single crystals were studied in detail. The first was the sodium salt of guanosine-3 ^':5^' -cyclic monophosphate (cyclic GMP). The results of studies on crystals irradiated at 4.2^ circK distinguished two species. One of these species exhibited a non-exchangeable proton coupling that was characterized by ENDOR spectroscopy and shown to be sigma proton. The spin density on C8 was deduced from the ENDOR hyperfine coupling tensor and found to be 0.15. The second species also exhibited a non-exchangeable sigma proton coupling and a beta proton coupling. The spin densities on C8 and N9 were deduced from ENDOR measurements to be 0.09 and 0.36. The former is attributed to the oxidation product and the latter to the primary reduction product. These products are respectively the guanine cation and anion. The second single crystal studied was a sodium salt of 2^'-deoxyguanosine -5^'-monophosphate tetrahydrate. The ESR and ENDOR spectra obtained from this crystal after x-irradiation at 4.2^circK were complex and the paramagnetic species were tentatively identified as ionic species. The third DNA model compound studied was thymidine. Single crystal of thymidine were irradiated at 1.6^ circK and at 4.2^circ K. The lower temperature preserved a more primitive stage of the radiation damage process. ENDOR measurements distinguished three paramagnetic species. The most interesting component of the paramagnetic absorption in crystals irradiated at 1.6^circK is attributed to trapped electron. These electrons are stabilized by the electrostatic fields generated by hydroxy dipoles. The hyperfine couplings between the trapped electron and the proton of these polar groups were deduced from ENDOR measurements. The ESR and ENDOR measurements described in this report were carried out DNA model compounds x-irradiated and measured at lower temperatures than reported previously. The experiments have demonstrated that an earlier stage of radiation damage can sometimes be stabilized and characterized in single crystals by maintaining the sample at 1.4 ^circK. (Abstract shortened with permission of author.).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Canora, F.; Fidelibus, M. D.; Spilotro, G.
2009-04-01
A study aimed at understanding the hydrological processes in karst areas related to the presence of natural and artificial endoreic basins and their modification due to land use change, as well as the influence of above factors on the infiltration rate has been carried out in the Alta Murgia region (Apulia, Southern Italy). The region is a Cretaceous limestone plateau of the Apulian platform, characterized by a mature karstic landscape: due to its elevation, climatic conditions and lithology, the plateau constitutes the main recharge area of the Murgia aquifer. The typical karst topography is essentially related to the subterranean drainage (sinkholes, caves, conduit): surface and subsurface karst geomorphology is strictly interrelated with hydrology. The morphological features of the karstic plateau are defined by the high density of surface karstic forms (mainly dolines), the presence of exposed karst and karren fields, as well as by the extensive outcrop of fractured rocks. Karst surface shows, on the bottom of the morpho-structural depressions called "lame", natural distribution of modest deposits of "terra rossa" and regolith. The "lame" work as streams during and after intense rainfall events, often outlining a primordial ephemeral hydrographical network, frequently convergent towards dolines, poljes or endoreic basins. Alta Murgia shows many natural endoreic basin conditions in a quite flat morphology. In this environment, when intense rainfall events cover large areas and rainfall intensity exceeds the infiltration capacity of soils and/or sinkholes, significant runoff amounts are produced and stored in the basins causing floods. Most of the natural endoreic basins are small and independent: while the majority of them continue functioning as endoreic even in presence of extreme events of high return time, others (quasi-endoreic), under the same circumstances can start contributing to other basins, due to exceeding their water storage capability. This way, very large flow can cascade down towards more depressed areas. Another important feature of the Alta Murgia territory is that the whole area is characterised by a high degree of division into parcels, physically delimited by a well developed network of drystone walls. These have been built during centuries by using stones retrieved from the same fields, having the main role of preserving soils from erosion. The drystone walls that limit the parcels define induced endoreic conditions, where runoff, mostly prevented from discharging out, rather converges toward natural drainage systems and internal depressions, where afterwards infiltrates: the walls allow a high infiltration rate of precipitation of low and medium intensity with low evapotranspiration, while the runoff basically activates only during highest intensity events. The drystone walls have preserved in the time the characteristics of the karst surface, with its high hydraulic conductivity consequent to the negligible outcrop of soils; because of their capability of decreasing the runoff triggering threshold, drystone walls have always worked positively inside the endoreic and quasi-endoreic basins. The above characteristics of both natural and artificial endoreic basins indicate that the definition of the water balance for the Alta Murgia aquifer is complex, requiring a model able to take into account, not only the absorption capacity of the karstic surface textures (which, indeed, are able to delay the start of the runoff due to the need to reach first the saturation of terra rossa in the fissures, pockets and fillings of karst hollows) but also the hydraulic behaviour and geomorphological features of the basins constituting on the whole the recharge area. To make the situation even more complex, in the last decades, the territory was subject to a particular type of land use change, the stone shattering (that is performed by crushing and grinding the karst surface), aimed at making suitable the parcels for mechanized agriculture. While the original situation of Alta Murgia recharge area was able to assure the best conditions for high infiltration rate, not only for the positive role of the drystone walls in holding the soil and slowing down the runoff, but also for the morphological characteristics of the karstic surface textures, stone shattering, by flattening and deeply modifying large part of the original karstic textures and landscape and by demolishing drystone walls, produced severe alteration of the hydrological behaviour of surface and epikarstic textures, increase of runoff and erosion, and substantial geomorphological variations. The land use change thus caused a significant damage to the fragile karstic environment, increasing its vulnerability, and clearly modifying the hydrogeological balance. To assess the impact of endoreic (natural and induced) conditions on the water balance and the significance of the karstic textures modifications, field and laboratory surveys have been carried out for defining at field scale the hydraulic and physical characteristics of the epikarstic textures and their influence respect to the flowing runoff threshold. Such a characterization was mainly aimed at assessing their infiltration capacity. Moreover, detailed geomorphological surveys, in situ investigations, and aerial photo analysis were used to verify the role of the endoreic (natural and induced) conditions, in order to define their control on hydrogeological processes. Simulations of the water balance carried out in a selected part of the recharge area subject to land use change, which originally included natural surface textures and drystone walls. The comparison between the infiltration rate in the natural conditions (by considering the role of natural endoreic basins and a variable retaining capability of induced endoreic conditions created by drystone walls) and that one calculated for the present situation (stone shattered soil with geomorphological variations due to demolition of walls) indicated a significant decrease of the infiltration rate.
Davydov, Roman; Dawson, John H.; Perera, Roshan; Hoffman, Brian M.
2013-01-01
EPR and 1H ENDOR spectroscopies have been used to analyze intermediate states formed during the hydroxylation of (1R)-camphor [H2-camphor] and (1R)-5,5-dideuterocamphor [D2-camphor] as induced by cryoreduction (77 K)/annealing of the ternary ferrous cytochrome P450cam-O2-substrate complex. Hydroxylation of H2-camphor produced a primary product state in which 5-exo-hydroxycamphor is coordinated with Fe(III). ENDOR spectra contained signals derived from two protons [Fe(III)-bound C5-OHexo and C5-Hendo] from camphor. When D2-camphor was hydroxylated under the same condition in H2O or D2O buffer, both ENDOR Hexo and Hendo signals are absent. For D2-camphor in H2O buffer, H/D exchange causes the C5-OHexo signal to reappear during relaxation upon annealing to 230 K; for H2-camphor in D2O, the C5-OHexo signal decreases through H/D exchange. These observations clearly show that Cpd I is the reactive species in the hydroxylation of camphor in P450cam. PMID:23215047
Horitani, Masaki; Offenbacher, Adam R; Carr, Cody A Marcus; Yu, Tao; Hoeke, Veronika; Cutsail, George E; Hammes-Schiffer, Sharon; Klinman, Judith P; Hoffman, Brian M
2017-02-08
In enzymatic C-H activation by hydrogen tunneling, reduced barrier width is important for efficient hydrogen wave function overlap during catalysis. For native enzymes displaying nonadiabatic tunneling, the dominant reactive hydrogen donor-acceptor distance (DAD) is typically ca. 2.7 Å, considerably shorter than normal van der Waals distances. Without a ground state substrate-bound structure for the prototypical nonadiabatic tunneling system, soybean lipoxygenase (SLO), it has remained unclear whether the requisite close tunneling distance occurs through an unusual ground state active site arrangement or by thermally sampling conformational substates. Herein, we introduce Mn 2+ as a spin-probe surrogate for the SLO Fe ion; X-ray diffraction shows Mn-SLO is structurally faithful to the native enzyme. 13 C ENDOR then reveals the locations of 13 C10 and reactive 13 C11 of linoleic acid relative to the metal; 1 H ENDOR and molecular dynamics simulations of the fully solvated SLO model using ENDOR-derived restraints give additional metrical information. The resulting three-dimensional representation of the SLO active site ground state contains a reactive (a) conformer with hydrogen DAD of ∼3.1 Å, approximately van der Waals contact, plus an inactive (b) conformer with even longer DAD, establishing that stochastic conformational sampling is required to achieve reactive tunneling geometries. Tunneling-impaired SLO variants show increased DADs and variations in substrate positioning and rigidity, confirming previous kinetic and theoretical predictions of such behavior. Overall, this investigation highlights the (i) predictive power of nonadiabatic quantum treatments of proton-coupled electron transfer in SLO and (ii) sensitivity of ENDOR probes to test, detect, and corroborate kinetically predicted trends in active site reactivity and to reveal unexpected features of active site architecture.
Flores, M; Wajnberg, E; Bemski, G
2000-01-01
Electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy has been used to study protons in nitrosyl horse heart myoglobin (MbNO). (1)H ENDOR spectra were recorded for different settings of the magnetic field. Detailed analysis of the ENDOR powder spectra, using computer simulation, based on the "orientation-selection" principle, leads to the identification of the available protons in the heme pocket. We observe hyperfine interactions of the N(HisF8)-Fe(2+)-N(NO) complex with five protons in axial and with eight protons in the rhombic symmetry along different orientations, including those of the principal axes of the g-tensor. Protons from His-E7 and Val-E11 residues are identified in the two symmetries, rhombic and axial, exhibited by MbNO. Our results indicate that both residues are present inside the heme pocket and help to stabilize one particular conformation. PMID:10733988
High-Frequency EPR and ENDOR Spectroscopy on Semiconductor Quantum Dots.
Baranov, Pavel G; Orlinskii, Sergei B; de Mello Donegá, Celso; Schmidt, Jan
2010-10-01
It is shown that high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy are excellent tools for the investigation of the electronic properties of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs). The great attractions of these techniques are that, in contrast to optical methods, they allow the identification of the dopants and provide information about the spatial distribution of the electronic wave function. This latter aspect is particularly attractive because it allows for a quantitative measurement of the effect of confinement on the shape and properties of the wave function. In this contribution EPR and ENDOR results are presented on doped ZnO QDs. Shallow donors (SDs), related to interstitial Li and Na and substitutional Al atoms, have been identified in this material by pulsed high-frequency EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy. The shallow character of the wave function of the donors is evidenced by the multitude of ENDOR transitions of the (67)Zn nuclear spins and by the hyperfine interaction of the (7)Li, (23)Na and (27)Al nuclear spins that are much smaller than for atomic lithium, sodium and aluminium. The EPR signal of an exchange-coupled pair consisting of a shallow donor and a deep Na-related acceptor has been identified in ZnO nanocrystals with radii smaller than 1.5 nm. From ENDOR experiments it is concluded that the deep Na-related acceptor is located at the interface of the ZnO core and the Zn(OH)(2) capping layer, while the shallow donor is in the ZnO core. The spatial distribution of the electronic wave function of a shallow donor in ZnO semiconductor QDs has been determined in the regime of quantum confinement by using the nuclear spins as probes. Hyperfine interactions as monitored by ENDOR spectroscopy quantitatively reveal the transition from semiconductor to molecular properties upon reduction of the size of the nanoparticles. In addition, the effect of confinement on the g-factor of SDs in ZnO as well as in CdS QDs is observed. Finally, it is shown that an almost complete dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) of the (67)Zn nuclear spins in the core of ZnO QDs and of the (1)H nuclear spins in the Zn(OH)(2) capping layer can be obtained. This DNP is achieved by saturating the EPR transition of SDs present in the QDs with resonant high-frequency microwaves at low temperatures. This nuclear polarization manifests itself as a hole and an antihole in the EPR absorption line of the SD in the QDs and a shift of the hole (antihole). The enhancement of the nuclear polarization opens the possibility to study semiconductor nanostructures with nuclear magnetic resonance techniques.
High-Frequency EPR and ENDOR Spectroscopy on Semiconductor Quantum Dots
Baranov, Pavel G.; de Mello Donegá, Celso; Schmidt, Jan
2010-01-01
It is shown that high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy are excellent tools for the investigation of the electronic properties of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs). The great attractions of these techniques are that, in contrast to optical methods, they allow the identification of the dopants and provide information about the spatial distribution of the electronic wave function. This latter aspect is particularly attractive because it allows for a quantitative measurement of the effect of confinement on the shape and properties of the wave function. In this contribution EPR and ENDOR results are presented on doped ZnO QDs. Shallow donors (SDs), related to interstitial Li and Na and substitutional Al atoms, have been identified in this material by pulsed high-frequency EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy. The shallow character of the wave function of the donors is evidenced by the multitude of ENDOR transitions of the 67Zn nuclear spins and by the hyperfine interaction of the 7Li, 23Na and 27Al nuclear spins that are much smaller than for atomic lithium, sodium and aluminium. The EPR signal of an exchange-coupled pair consisting of a shallow donor and a deep Na-related acceptor has been identified in ZnO nanocrystals with radii smaller than 1.5 nm. From ENDOR experiments it is concluded that the deep Na-related acceptor is located at the interface of the ZnO core and the Zn(OH)2 capping layer, while the shallow donor is in the ZnO core. The spatial distribution of the electronic wave function of a shallow donor in ZnO semiconductor QDs has been determined in the regime of quantum confinement by using the nuclear spins as probes. Hyperfine interactions as monitored by ENDOR spectroscopy quantitatively reveal the transition from semiconductor to molecular properties upon reduction of the size of the nanoparticles. In addition, the effect of confinement on the g-factor of SDs in ZnO as well as in CdS QDs is observed. Finally, it is shown that an almost complete dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) of the 67Zn nuclear spins in the core of ZnO QDs and of the 1H nuclear spins in the Zn(OH)2 capping layer can be obtained. This DNP is achieved by saturating the EPR transition of SDs present in the QDs with resonant high-frequency microwaves at low temperatures. This nuclear polarization manifests itself as a hole and an antihole in the EPR absorption line of the SD in the QDs and a shift of the hole (antihole). The enhancement of the nuclear polarization opens the possibility to study semiconductor nanostructures with nuclear magnetic resonance techniques. PMID:20936163
Van Doorslaer, S; Schweiger, A
2000-06-01
During the last two decades, the possibilities of pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and pulse electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy have increased tremendously. While at the beginning of the 1980s pulse-EPR and ENDOR applications were still a rarity, the techniques are now very frequently applied in chemistry, physics, materials science, biology and mineralogy. This is mainly due to the considerable efforts invested in the last few years on instrument development and pulse-sequence design. Pulse-EPR spectrometers are now commercially available, which enables many research groups to use these techniques. In this work, an overview of state-of-the-art pulse EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy is given. The rapid expansion of the field, however, does not allow us to give an exhaustive record of all the pulse methods introduced so far. After a brief and very qualitative description of the basic principles of pulse EPR, we discuss some of the experiments in more detail and illustrate the potential of the methods with a number of selected applications.
Mims electron-nuclear double resonance in LiYF4:Ce3+ crystal
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gafurov, M.; Mamin, G.; Kurkin, I.; Orlinskii, S.
2018-05-01
We report the observation of the pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectra from 19F and 7Li nuclei on impurity Ce3+ ions in LiYF4 crystal. The resolved structure from the nearby and remote nuclei in spectra is observed. The outcome shows that LiYF4:Ce3+ system can be exploited as a convenient matrix for performing spin manipulations and adjusting quantum computation protocols while ENDOR technique is usable for the investigation of electron-nuclear interaction with all the nuclei of the system.
Radiation damage in vitamin B 1: An endor study of an x-irradiated single crystal of thiamine
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Geoffroy, M.; Reddy, M. V. V. S.; Lambelet, P.; Horman, I.
A single crystal of thiamine chloride hydrochloride has been x-irradiated at room temperature and studied by 1H-ENDOR spectroscopy at 110 K. It is shown that at least two radical species are trapped in the crystal. Several 1H-hyperfine tensors have been determined for each radical; they indicate that one species is due to cleavage of the thiamine molecule into its pyrimidine and thiazole moieties while the other species is due to hydrogen addition onto the pyrimidine ring.
Butler, Clive S; Fairhurst, Shirley A; Ferguson, Stuart J; Thomson, Andrew J; Berks, Ben C; Richardson, David J; Lowe, David J
2002-01-01
The first electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) study of a member of the Mo-bis-molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide family of molybdoenzymes is presented, using the periplasmic nitrate reductase from Paracoccus pantotrophus. Rapid freeze-quenched time-resolved EPR revealed that during turnover the intensity of a Mo(V) EPR signal known as High-g [resting] increases. This signal is split by two interacting protons that are not solvent-exchangeable. X-band proton-ENDOR analysis resolved broad symmetrical resonance features that arose from four classes of protons weakly coupled to the Mo(V). Signals from two of these were lost upon exchange into deuterated buffer, suggesting that they may originate from OH(-) or H(2)O groups. One of these signals was also lost when the enzyme was redox-cycled in the presence of azide. Since these protons are very weakly coupled OH/H(2)O groups, they are not likely to be ligated directly to the Mo(V). This suggests that protonation of a Mo(VI)zO group does not occur on reduction to Mo(V), but most probably accompanies reduction of Mo(V) to Mo(IV). A resonance feature from a more strongly coupled proton, that was not lost following exchange into deuterated buffer, could also be resolved at 22-24 MHz. The anisotropy of this feature, determined from ENDOR spectra collected at a range of field positions, indicated a Mo-proton distance of approx. 3.2 A, consistent with this being one of the beta-methylene protons of a Mo-Cys ligand. PMID:11964184
Radiation effects in x-irradiated hydroxy compounds
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Budzinski, Edwin E.; Potter, William R.; Box, Harold C.
1980-01-01
Radiation effects are compared in single crystals of xylitol, sorbitol, and dulcitol x-irradiated at 4.2 °K. In xylitol and dulcitol, but not in sorbitol, a primary oxidation product is identified as an alkoxy radical. ENDOR measurements detected three proton hyperfine couplings associated with the alkoxy ESR absorption, one of which is attributed to a proton three bond lengths removed from the seat of unpaired spin density. Intermolecular trapping of electrons is observed in all three crystals. ENDOR measurements were made of the hyperfine couplings between the trapped electron and the hydroxy protons forming the trap.
Clay, Michael D.; Yang, Tran-Chin; Jenney, Francis E.; Kung, Irene Y.; Cosper, Christopher A.; Krishnan, Rangan; Kurtz, Donald M.; Adams, Michael W.W.; Hoffman, Brian M.; Johnson, Michael K.
2008-01-01
We have added cyanide to oxidized 1Fe and 2Fe superoxide reductase (SOR) as a surrogate for the putative ferric-(hydro)peroxo intermediate in the reaction of the enzymes with superoxide, and have used vibrational and ENDOR spectroscopies to study the properties of the active-site paramagnetic iron center. Addition of cyanide changes the active-site iron center in oxidized SOR from rhombic high-spin ferric (S = 5/2) to axial-like low-spin ferric (S = 1/2). Low-temperature resonance Raman and ENDOR data show that the bound cyanide adopts three distinct conformations in Fe(III)-CN SOR. On the basis of 13CN, C15N, and 13C15N isotope shifts of the Fe–CN stretching/Fe–C–N bending modes, resonance Raman studies of 1Fe-SOR indicate one near-linear conformation (Fe–C–N angle ∼175°) and two distinct bent conformations (Fe–C–N angles < 140°). FTIR studies of 1Fe-SOR at ambient temperatures reveals three bound C–N stretching frequencies in the oxidized (ferric) state and one in the reduced (ferrous) state indicating that the conformational heterogeneity in cyanide binding is a characteristic of the ferric state and is not caused by freezing-in of conformational substates at low temperature. 13C-ENDOR spectra for the 13CN-bound ferric active sites in both 1Fe- and 2Fe-SORs also show three well-resolved Fe–C–N conformations. Analysis of the 13C hyperfine tensors for the three substates of the 2Fe-SOR within a simple heuristic model for the Fe-C bonding gives values for the Fe–C–N angles in the three substates of ca. 123° (C3), 133° (C2), taking a reference value from vibrational studies of 175° (C1 species). Resonance Raman and ENDOR studies of SOR variants, in which the conserved glutamate and lysine residues in a flexible loop above the substrate binding pocket have been individually replaced by alanine, indicate that the side chains of these two residues are not involved in direct interaction with bound cyanide. The implications of these results for understanding the mechanism of SOR are discussed. PMID:16401073
Paramagnetic resonance studies of bistrispyrazolylborate cobalt(II) and related derivatives
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Myers, William K.
Herein, a systematic frozen solution electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) study of high-spin Co(II) complexes is reported to demonstrate the efficacy of methyl substitutions as a means of separating dipolar and contact coupling, and further, to increase the utility of high-spin Co(II) as a spectroscopic probe for the ubiquitous, but spectroscopically-silent Zn(II) metalloenzymes. High-spin (hs) Co(II) has been subject of paramagnetic resonance studies for over 50 years and has been used as a spectroscopic probe for Zn metalloenzymes for over 35 years. However, as will be seen, the inherent complexity of the electronic properties of the cobaltous ion remains to be exploited to offer a wealth of information on Zn(II) enzymatic environments. Specifically, ENDOR measurements on bistrispyrazolylborate cobalt(II) confirm the utility of the novel method of methyl substitution to differentiate dipolar and Fermi contact couplings. An extensive set of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) simulations were performed. Software was developed to implement an ENDOR control interface. Finally, proton relaxation measurements were made in the range of 12-42 MHz, which were accounted for with the large g-value anisotropy of the Co(II) compounds. Taken as a whole, these studies point to the rich complexity of the electronic structure of high-spin cobalt(II) and, when sufficiently well-characterized, the great utility it has as a surrogate of biological Zn(II).
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Davis, M.S.; Forman, A.; Hanson, L.K.
Optical, ESR, ENDOR, and redox characteristics of anion and cation radicals of bacteriochlorophyll b (BChl) and bacteriopheophytin b (BPh) have been obtained in nonaqueous solvents. The radicals exhibit properties similar to those of BChl a derivatives, as expected from extended Huckel and Pariser-Parr-Pople MO calculations. The electronic configurations of the radicals have been assigned on the basis of the MO calculations and by analogy with BChl a and BPh a results. Oxidized reaction centers of Rhodopseudomonas viridis do not display the ..sqrt..2 narrowing of the ESR line width nor the 50% decrease in ENDOR splittings expected for a symmetric cationmore » dimer, when compared to BChl b/sup +/. Nonetheless, computer simulations indicate that a dimeric model for P960, the primary donor of R. viridis, can be rationalized by imposing a torsional angle on ring IV different from that found in crystals of Chl a, i.e., P960 may be a dimer with a twist. Comparison of the resolved ESR spectra and ENDOR splittings of the primary acceptor (I/sup -/) of R. viridis with in-vitro results indicates that I/sup -/ is a monomeric anion. Optical and redox data favor BPh over BChl as the primary acceptor. These results allow a description of the electronic profile of the species which evolve within a picosecond time domain in the primary conversion of light into chemical energy at approx. 1000 nm.« less
Baranov, P. G.; Poluektov, O. G.; Schmidt, J.
2010-01-01
Silver halides have unique features in solid state physics because their properties are considered to be of borderline nature between ionic and covalent bonding. In AgCl, the self-trapped hole (STH) is centered and partly trapped in the cationic sublattice, forming an Ag2+ ion inside of a (AgCl6)4− complex as a result of the Jahn–Teller distortion. The STH in AgCl can capture an electron from the conduction band forming the self-trapped exciton (STE). Recent results of a study of STE by means of high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance, electron spin echo, electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) are reviewed. The properties of the STE in AgCl crystals, such as exchange coupling, the ordering of the triplet and singlet sublevels, the dynamical properties of the singlet and triplet states, and the hyperfine interaction with the Ag and Cl (Br) nuclei are discussed. Direct information about the spatial distribution of the wave function of STE unpaired electrons was obtained by ENDOR. From a comparison with the results of an ENDOR study of the shallow electron center and STH, it is concluded that the electron is mainly contained in a hydrogen-like 1s orbital with a Bohr radius of 15.1 ± 0.6 Å, but near its center the electron density reflects the charge distribution of the hole. The hole of the STE is virtually identical to an isolated STH center. For AgCl nanocrystals embedded into the KCl crystalline matrix, the anisotropy of the g-factor of STE and STH was found to be substantially reduced compared with that of bulk AgCl crystals, which can be explained by a considerable suppression of the Jahn–Teller effect in nanoparticles. A study of ODMR in AgBr nanocrystals in KBr revealed spatial confinement effects and allowed estimating the nanocrystal size from the shape of the ODMR spectra. PMID:21151483
Electrical detection of nuclear spins in organic light-emitting diodes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Malissa, H.; Kavand, M.; Waters, D. P.; Lupton, J. M.; Vardeny, Z. V.; Saam, B.; Boehme, C.
2014-03-01
We present pulsed combined electrically detected electron paramagnetic and nuclear magnetic resonance experiments on MEH-PPV OLEDs. Spin dynamics in these structures are governed by hyperfine interactions between charge carriers and the surrounding hydrogen nuclei, which are abundant in these materials. Hyperfine coupling has been observed by monitoring the device current during coherent spin excitation. Electron spin echoes (ESEs) are detected by applying one additional readout pulse at the time of echo formation. This allows for the application of high-resolution spectroscopy based on ESE detection, such as electron spin echo envelope modulation (ESEEM) and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) available for electrical detection schemes. We conduct electrically detected ESEEM and ENDOR experiments and show how hyperfine interactions in MEH-PPV with and without deuterated polymer side groups can be observed by device current measurements. We acknowledge support by the Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award #DE-SC0000909.
A multi-frequency EPR and ENDOR study of Rh and Ir complexes in alkali and silver halides
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Callens, F.; Vrielinck, H.; Matthys, P.
2003-01-01
Aliovalent Rh and Ir cations have been frequently used to influence the photographic properties of silver halide emulsions. The doping introduces several types of related defects with distinct trapping and recombination properties. EPR and ENDOR are, in principle, ideally suited for the determination of the microscopic structure of the individual centres but it will be demonstrated that well-chosen, sometimes sophisticated multi-frequency experiments are necessary in order to (partially) reach this goal. Model studies on single crystals of AgCl and NaCl also appeared indispensable for the unravelling of the spectra. In the review of Rh-centres in NaCl and AgCl special attention is paid to methods that allow to detect cation vacancies near Rh2+ complexes. An alternative explanation for the high temperature behaviour of the [RhCl6](4-) complexes in AgCl is presented.
Yago, Tomoaki; Link, Gerhard; Kothe, Gerd; Lin, Tien-Sung
2007-09-21
Pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) using a modified Davies-type [Phys. Lett. 47A, 1 (1974)] sequence is employed to study the hyperfine (HF) structure of the photoexcited triplet state of pentacene dispersed in protonated and deuterated p-terphenyl single crystals. The strong electron spin polarization and long phase memory time of triplet pentacene enable us to perform the ENDOR measurements on the S=1 spin system at room temperature. Proton HF tensor elements and spin density values of triplet pentacene are extracted from a detailed angular-dependent study in which the orientation of the magnetic field is varied systematically in two different pentacene planes. Analysis reveals that the pentacene molecule is no longer planar in the p-terphenyl host lattice. The distortion is more pronounced in the deuterated crystal where the unit cell dimensions are slightly smaller than those of the protonated crystal.
Oxidation and reduction in irradiated binary crystals of resorcinol and progesterone
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Box, Harold C.; Budzinski, Edwin E.
1985-12-01
The binary single crystals of resorcinol and progesterone were x-irradiated at 4.2 K. The semiquinone of resorcinol was generated by radiation induced oxidation. The oxidation and reduction products were identified from ESR and ENDOR measurements. (AIP)
Astashkin, Andrei V.; Fan, Weihong; Elmore, Bradley O.; Guillemette, J. Guy; Feng, Changjian
2011-01-01
Mammalian nitric oxide synthase (NOS) is a flavo-hemoprotein that catalyzes the oxidation of L-arginine to nitric oxide. Information about the relative alignment of the heme and FMN domains of NOS is important for understanding the electron transfer between the heme and FMN centers, but no crystal structure data for NOS holoenzyme are available. In our previous work [Astashkin, A. V.; Elmore, B. O.; Fan, W.; Guillemette, J. G.; Feng, C. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 12059–12067], the distance between the imidazole-coordinated low-spin Fe(III) heme and FMN semiquinone in a human inducible NOS (iNOS) oxygenase/FMN construct has been determined by pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). The orientation of the Fe – FMN radius-vector, RFe-FMN, with respect to the heme g-frame was also determined. In the present study, pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) investigation of the deuterons at carbons C2 and C5 in the deuterated coordinated imidazole was used to determine the relative orientation of the heme g- and molecular frames, from which RFe-FMN can be referenced to the heme molecular frame. Numerical simulations of the ENDOR spectra showed that the g-factor axis corresponding to the low-field EPR turning point is perpendicular to the heme plane, while the axis corresponding to the high-field turning point is in the heme plane and makes an angle of about 80° with the coordinated imidazole plane. The FMN-heme domain docking model obtained in the previous work was found to be in qualitative agreement with the combined experimental results of the two pulsed EPR works. PMID:21834532
Monovalent Cation Activation of the Radical SAM Enzyme Pyruvate Formate-Lyase Activating Enzyme.
Shisler, Krista A; Hutcheson, Rachel U; Horitani, Masaki; Duschene, Kaitlin S; Crain, Adam V; Byer, Amanda S; Shepard, Eric M; Rasmussen, Ashley; Yang, Jian; Broderick, William E; Vey, Jessica L; Drennan, Catherine L; Hoffman, Brian M; Broderick, Joan B
2017-08-30
Pyruvate formate-lyase activating enzyme (PFL-AE) is a radical S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) enzyme that installs a catalytically essential glycyl radical on pyruvate formate-lyase. We show that PFL-AE binds a catalytically essential monovalent cation at its active site, yet another parallel with B 12 enzymes, and we characterize this cation site by a combination of structural, biochemical, and spectroscopic approaches. Refinement of the PFL-AE crystal structure reveals Na + as the most likely ion present in the solved structures, and pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) demonstrates that the same cation site is occupied by 23 Na in the solution state of the as-isolated enzyme. A SAM carboxylate-oxygen is an M + ligand, and EPR and circular dichroism spectroscopies reveal that both the site occupancy and the identity of the cation perturb the electronic properties of the SAM-chelated iron-sulfur cluster. ENDOR studies of the PFL-AE/[ 13 C-methyl]-SAM complex show that the target sulfonium positioning varies with the cation, while the observation of an isotropic hyperfine coupling to the cation by ENDOR measurements establishes its intimate, SAM-mediated interaction with the cluster. This monovalent cation site controls enzyme activity: (i) PFL-AE in the absence of any simple monovalent cations has little-no activity; and (ii) among monocations, going down Group 1 of the periodic table from Li + to Cs + , PFL-AE activity sharply maximizes at K + , with NH 4 + closely matching the efficacy of K + . PFL-AE is thus a type I M + -activated enzyme whose M + controls reactivity by interactions with the cosubstrate, SAM, which is bound to the catalytic iron-sulfur cluster.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Tokdemir, Sibel
Four different derivatives of hypoxanthine (hypoxanthine-HCl·H 2O, Na+·Inosine-·2.5H 2O, sodium inosine monophosphate, and calcium inosine monophosphate) were irradiated in the form of single crystals with the objective of identifying the radical products. To do so, magnetic resonance methods (EPR, ENDOR experiments and EPR spectrum simulations) were used to study radical products in crystals following x-irradiation at ˜10 K without warming, and under conditions of controlled warming. Also, computational chemistry methods were used in combination with the experimental methods to assist in identifying the radical products. Immediately following irradiation at 10 K, at least three different radicals were observed for hypoxanthine·HCl·H2O. R5.1 was identified at the product of electron addition followed by protonation of the parent at N3. R5.2 was identified as the product of electron loss followed by deprotonation at N7, and R5.3 was tentatively identified as the product of electron gain followed by protonation at 06. On warming to room temperature, three new radicals were observed: R6.1 and R6.3 were the products of net H addition to C8 and C2 respectively, while R6.2 was the product of OH addition to C8. At least four different radical products of Na+·Inosine - were detected immediately after irradiation at 10 K. R7.1 was identified as the electron-loss product of the parent hypoxanthine base, and R7.2 was identified as the product of net H-abstraction from C5 ' of the sugar. R7.3 and R7.4 were tentatively identified as the products of net H-addition to 06 (probably via electron addition followed by protonation), and the (doubly-negative) product of electron-gain, respectively. R7.5, the C8-H addition radical, was the only product detected on warming sodium inosine crystals to room temperature. Because the ENDOR spectra from sodium IMP irradiated at 10K were complex, it was possible to identify only two radicals. R8.1 was identified as the purine base electron-abstraction product, and R8.2 was identified as the 06 hydrogen-addition product. ENDOR spectra could be obtained from calcium IMP only at a few orientations. Thus, all radical identifications in this system are based on EPR spectrum simulations using likely radical structures based on results from other hypoxanthine-based systems.
Bencivenni, Giorgio; Cesari, Riccardo; Nanni, Daniele; El Mkami, Hassane
2010-01-01
Summary The reactions of group 13 metal trichlorides with aromatic azides were examined by CW EPR and pulsed ENDOR spectroscopies. Complex EPR spectra were obtained from reactions of aluminium, gallium and indium trichlorides with phenyl azides containing a variety of substituents. Analysis of the spectra showed that 4-methoxy-, 3-methoxy- and 2-methoxyphenyl azides all gave ‘dimer’ radical cations [ArNHC6H4NH2]+• and trimers [ArNHC6H4NHC6H4NH2]+• followed by polymers. 4-Azidobenzonitrile, with its electron-withdrawing substituent, did not react. In general the aromatic azides appeared to react most rapidly with AlCl3 but this reagent tended to generate much polymer. InCl3 was the least reactive group 13 halide. DFT computations of the radical cations provided corroborating evidence and suggested that the unpaired electrons were accommodated in extensive π-delocalised orbitals. A mechanism to account for the reductive conversion of aromatic azides to the corresponding anilines and thence to the dimers and trimers is proposed. PMID:21049080
Stull, Jamie A; Stich, Troy A; Service, Rachel J; Debus, Richard J; Mandal, Sanjay K; Armstrong, William H; Britt, R David
2010-01-20
Antiferromagnetically coupled Mn(III)Mn(IV) dimers have been commonly used to study biological systems that exhibit complex exchange interactions. Such is the case for the oxygen evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II (PSII), where we have studied whether the C-terminal carboxylate of D1-Ala344 is directly bound to the Mn cluster. To probe these protein-derived carboxylate hyperfine interactions, which give direct bonding information, Q-band (34 GHz) Mims ENDOR was performed on a Mn(III)Mn(IV) dimer ([Mn(III)Mn(IV)(mu-O)(2)mu-OAc(TACN)(2)](BPh(4))(2)) (1) that was labeled with (13)C (I = (1)/(2)) at the carboxylate position of the acetate bridge. A(dip) is computed based on atomic coordinates from available X-ray crystal structures to be [-2.4, -0.8, 3.2] MHz. The value for A(iso) was determined based on simulation of the experimental ENDOR data, for complex 1 A(iso) = -1 MHz. Similar studies were then performed on PSII from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, in which all alanine-derived C=O groups are labeled with (13)C including the C-terminal alpha-COO(-) group of D1 (Ala344), as well as PSII proteins uniformly labeled with (13)C. Using recent X-ray crystallography data from T. elongatus the values for A(dip) were calculated and simulations of the experimental data led to A(iso) values of 1.2, 1, and 2 MHz, respectively. We infer from complex 1 that an A(iso) significantly larger than 1.2 MHz for a Mn-coordinating carboxylate moiety is unlikely. Therefore, we support the closer arrangement of Ala344 suggested by the Loll and Guskov structures and conclude that the C-terminal carboxylate of D1 polypeptide is directly bound to the Mn cluster.
Sun, Chang; Taguchi, Alexander T; Vermaas, Josh V; Beal, Nathan J; O'Malley, Patrick J; Tajkhorshid, Emad; Gennis, Robert B; Dikanov, Sergei A
2016-10-11
The respiratory cytochrome bo 3 ubiquinol oxidase from Escherichia coli has a high-affinity ubiquinone binding site that stabilizes the one-electron reduced ubisemiquinone (SQ H ), which is a transient intermediate during the electron-mediated reduction of O 2 to water. It is known that SQ H is stabilized by two strong hydrogen bonds from R71 and D75 to ubiquinone carbonyl oxygen O1 and weak hydrogen bonds from H98 and Q101 to O4. In this work, SQ H was investigated with orientation-selective Q-band (∼34 GHz) pulsed 1 H electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy on fully deuterated cytochrome (cyt) bo 3 in a H 2 O solvent so that only exchangeable protons contribute to the observed ENDOR spectra. Simulations of the experimental ENDOR spectra provided the principal values and directions of the hyperfine (hfi) tensors for the two strongly coupled H-bond protons (H1 and H2). For H1, the largest principal component of the proton anisotropic hfi tensor T z' = 11.8 MHz, whereas for H2, T z' = 8.6 MHz. Remarkably, the data show that the direction of the H1 H-bond is nearly perpendicular to the quinone plane (∼70° out of plane). The orientation of the second strong hydrogen bond, H2, is out of plane by ∼25°. Equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations on a membrane-embedded model of the cyt bo 3 Q H site show that these H-bond orientations are plausible but do not distinguish which H-bond, from R71 or D75, is nearly perpendicular to the quinone ring. Density functional theory calculations support the idea that the distances and geometries of the H-bonds to the ubiquinone carbonyl oxygens, along with the measured proton anisotropic hfi couplings, are most compatible with an anionic (deprotonated) ubisemiquinone.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mentink-Vigier, Frédéric; Binet, Laurent; Vignoles, Gerard; Gourier, Didier; Vezin, Hervé
2010-11-01
The hyperfine interactions of the unpaired electron with eight surrounding G69a and G71a nuclei in Ti-doped β-Ga2O3 were analyzed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopies. They are dominated by strong isotropic hyperfine couplings due to a direct Fermi contact interaction with Ga nuclei in octahedral sites of rutile-type chains oriented along b axis, revealing a large anisotropic spatial extension of the electron wave function. Titanium in β-Ga2O3 is thus best described as a diffuse (Ti4+-e-) pair rather than as a localized Ti3+ . Both electron and G69a nuclear spin Rabi oscillations could be observed by pulsed EPR and pulsed ENDOR, respectively. The electron spin decoherence time is about 1μs (at 4 K) and an upper bound of 520μs (at 8 K) is estimated for the nuclear decoherence time. Thus, β-Ga2O3:Ti appears to be a potential spin-bus system for quantum information processing with a large nuclear spin quantum register.
Van Doorslaer, Sabine; Trandafir, Florin; Harmer, Jeffrey R; Moens, Luc; Dewilde, Sylvia
2014-06-01
Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) data reveal large differences between the ferric ((13)C-)cyanide complexes of wild-type human neuroglobin (NGB) and its H64Q and F28L point mutants and the cyanide complexes of mammalian myo- and haemoglobin. The point mutations, which involve residues comprising the distal haem pocket in NGB, induce smaller, but still significant changes, related to changes in the stabilization of the cyanide ligand. Furthermore, for the first time, the full (13)C hyperfine tensor of the cyanide carbon of cyanide-ligated horse heart myoglobin (hhMb) was determined using Davies ENDOR (electron nuclear double resonance). Disagreement of these experimental data with earlier predictions based on (13)C NMR data and a theoretical model reveal significant flaws in the model assumptions. The same ENDOR procedure allowed also partial determination of the corresponding (13)C hyperfine tensor of cyanide-ligated NGB and H64QNGB. These (13)C parameters differ significantly from those of cyanide-ligated hhMb and challenge our current theoretical understanding of how the haem environment influences the magnetic parameters obtained by EPR and NMR in cyanide-ligated haem proteins. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lin, Jinru; Chen, Ning; Nilges, Mark J.; Pan, Yuanming
2013-04-01
Gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) is a major by-product of mining and milling processes of borate, phosphate and uranium deposits worldwide and, therefore, potentially plays an important role in the stability and bioavailability of heavy metalloids, including As, in tailings and surrounding areas. Gypsum containing 1900 and 185 ppm As, synthesized with Na2HAsO4·7H2O and NaAsO2 in the starting materials, respectively, have been investigated by synchrotron X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), single-crystal electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR), and pulsed electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopy (ENDOR). Quantitative analyses of As K edge XANES and EXAFS spectra show that arsenic occurs in both +3 and +5 oxidation states and the As3+/As5+ value varies from 0.35 to 0.79. Single-crystal EPR spectra of gamma-ray-irradiated gypsum reveal two types of arsenic-associated oxyradicals: [AsO3]2- and an [AsO2]2-. The [AsO3]2- center is characterized by principal 75As hyperfine coupling constants of A1 = 1952.0(2) MHz, A2 = 1492.6(2) MHz and A3 = 1488.7(2) MHz, with the unique A axis along the S-O1 bond direction, and contains complex 1H superhyperfine structures that have been determined by pulsed ENDOR. These results suggest that the [AsO3]2- center formed from electron trapping on the central As5+ ion of a substitutional (AsO4)3- group after removal of an O1 atom. The [AsO2]2- center is characterized by its unique A(75As) axis approximately perpendicular to the O1-S-O2 plane and the A2 axis along the S-O2 bond direction, consistent with electron trapping on the central As3+ ion of a substitutional (AsO3)3- group after removal of an O2 atom. These results confirm lattice-bound As5+ and As3+ in gypsum and point to potential application of this mineral for immobilization and removal of arsenic pollution.
Free H₂ rotation vs Jahn-Teller constraints in the nonclassical trigonal (TPB)Co-H₂ complex.
Gunderson, William A; Suess, Daniel L M; Fong, Henry; Wang, Xiaoping; Hoffmann, Christina M; Cutsail, George E; Peters, Jonas C; Hoffman, Brian M
2014-10-22
Proton exchange within the M-H2 moiety of (TPB)Co(H2) (Co-H2; TPB = B(o-C6H4P(i)Pr2)3) by 2-fold rotation about the M-H2 axis is probed through EPR/ENDOR studies and a neutron diffraction crystal structure. This complex is compared with previously studied (SiP(iPr)3)Fe(H2) (Fe-H2) (SiP(iPr)3 = [Si(o-C6H4P(i)Pr2)3]). The g-values for Co-H2 and Fe-H2 show that both have the Jahn-Teller (JT)-active (2)E ground state (idealized C3 symmetry) with doubly degenerate frontier orbitals, (e)(3) = [|mL ± 2>](3) = [x(2) - y(2), xy](3), but with stronger linear vibronic coupling for Co-H2. The observation of (1)H ENDOR signals from the Co-HD complex, (2)H signals from the Co-D2/HD complexes, but no (1)H signals from the Co-H2 complex establishes that H2 undergoes proton exchange at 2 K through rotation around the Co-H2 axis, which introduces a quantum-statistical (Pauli-principle) requirement that the overall nuclear wave function be antisymmetric to exchange of identical protons (I = 1/2; Fermions), symmetric for identical deuterons (I = 1; Bosons). Analysis of the 1-D rotor problem indicates that Co-H2 exhibits rotor-like behavior in solution because the underlying C3 molecular symmetry combined with H2 exchange creates a dominant 6-fold barrier to H2 rotation. Fe-H2 instead shows H2 localization at 2 K because a dominant 2-fold barrier is introduced by strong Fe(3d)→ H2(σ*) π-backbonding that becomes dependent on the H2 orientation through quadratic JT distortion. ENDOR sensitively probes bonding along the L2-M-E axis (E = Si for Fe-H2; E = B for Co-H2). Notably, the isotropic (1)H/(2)H hyperfine coupling to the diatomic of Co-H2 is nearly 4-fold smaller than for Fe-H2.
EPR and ENDOR Studies of Point Defects in Lithium Tetraborate Crystals
2012-12-14
the US and its allies. Terrorist groups have shown interest in seeking and deploying weapons of mass destruction and mass disruption--weapons that...5]. Lithium tetraborate, has been grown pure and doped with many different elements including transition metals, actinides , and rare earth...microwave cavity is said to be “ critically coupled” when there is no reflected microwave power. Absorption of microwaves, which occurs when the magnetic
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Morigaki, K.
We discuss recombination processes and nature of the tail and gap states in a-Si:H and a-Si:H/a-SiNx:H multilayers on the basis of our ODMR, luminescence, photoinduced absorption and ENDOR measurements. We present other results relevant to this subject and attempt to interpret them in terms of our model.
Overcoming Endocrine Resistance by Targeting ER/FoxA1/IL 8 Axis
2016-10-01
INTRODUCTION Approximately 75% of breast cancers express the hormone estrogen receptor α (ER). As a critical determinant in estrogen response and oncogenic...factor of estrogen receptor α (ER)–chromatin binding and function, yet its aberration in endocrine-resistant (Endo-R) breast cancer is unknown. Here, we...positive tumors. FOXA1 | estrogen receptor | breast cancer | transcriptional reprogramming | endocrine resistance About 75% of breast cancers express
Lithium formate for EPR dosimetry: radiation-induced radical trapping at low temperatures.
Krivokapić, André; Aalbergsjø, Siv G; De Cooman, Hendrik; Hole, Eli Olaug; Nelson, William H; Sagstuen, Einar
2014-05-01
Radiation-induced primary radicals in lithium formate. A material used in EPR dosimetry have been studied using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and ENDOR-Induced EPR (EIE) techniques. In this study, single crystals were X irradiated at 6-8 K and radical formation at these and higher temperatures were investigated. Periodic density functional theory calculations were used to assist in assigning the radical structures. Mainly two radicals are present at 6 K, the well-known CO2(•-) radical and a protonated electron-gain product. Hyperfine coupling tensors for proton and lithium interactions were obtained for these two radicals and show that the latter radical exists in four conformations with various degrees of bending at the radical center. Pairs of CO2(•-) radicals were also observed and the tensor for the electron-electron dipolar coupling was determined for the strongest coupled pair, which exhibited the largest spectral intensity. Upon warming, both the radical pairs and the reduction product decay, the latter apparently by a transient species. Above 200 K the EPR spectrum was mainly due to the CO2(•-) (mono) radicals, which were previously characterized as the dominant species present at room temperature and which account for the dosimetric EPR signal.
Tokdemir, Sibel; Nelson, William H
2005-06-01
Three radical species were detected in an EPR/ENDOR study of X-irradiated hypoxanthine.HCl.H2O single crystals at room temperature: RI was identified as the product of net H addition to C8, RII was identified as the product of net H addition to C2, and RIII was identified as the product of OH addition to C8. The observed set of radicals was the same for room-temperature irradiation as for irradiation at 10 K followed by warming the crystals to room temperature; however, the C2 H-addition and C8 OH-addition radicals were not detectable after storage of the crystals for about 2 months at room temperature. Use of selectively deuterated crystals permitted unique assignment of the observed hyperfine couplings, and results of density functional theory calculations on each of the radical structures were consistent with the experimental results. Comparison of these experimental results with others from previous crystal-based systems and model system computations provides insight into the mechanisms by which the biologically important purine C8 hydroxyl addition products are formed. The evidence from solid systems supports the mechanism of net water addition to one-electron oxidized purine bases and demonstrates the importance of a facial approach between the reactants.
Zhou, Yiying; Nelson, William H
2011-10-27
With K-band EPR (Electron Paramagnetic Resonance), ENDOR (Electron-Nuclear DOuble Resonance), and EIE (ENDOR-induced EPR) techniques, three free radicals (RI-RIII) in L-lysine hydrochloride dihydrate single crystals X-irradiated at 298 K were detected at 298 K, and six radicals (R1, R1', R2-R5) were detected if the temperature was lowered to 66 K from 298 K. R1 and RI dominated the central portion of the EPR at 66 and 298 K, respectively, and were identified as main chain deamination radicals, (-)OOCĊH(CH(2))(4)(NH(3))(+). R1' was identified as a main chain deamination radical with the different configuration from R1 at 66 K, and it probably formed during cooling the temperature from 298 to 66 K. The configurations of R1, R1', and RI were analyzed with their coupling tensors. R2 and R3 each contain one α- and four β-proton couplings and have very similar EIEs at three crystallographic axes. The two-layer ONIOM calculations (at B3LYP/6-31G(d,p):PM3) support that R2 and R3 are from different radicals: dehydrogenation at C4, (-)OOCCH(NH(3))(+)CH(2)ĊH(CH(2))(2)(NH(3))(+), and dehydrogenation at C5, (-)OOCCH(NH(3))(+)(CH(2))(2)ĊHCH(2)(NH(3))(+), respectively. The comparisons of the coupling tensors indicated that R2 (66 K) is the same radical as RII (298 K), and R3 is the same as RIII. Thus, RII and RIII also are the radicals of C4 and C5 dehydrogenation. R4 and R5 are minority radicals and were observed only when temperature was lowered to 66 K. R4 and R5 were only tentatively assigned as the side chain deamination radical, (-)OOCCH (NH(3))(+)(CH(2))(3)ĊH(2), and the radical dehydrogenation at C3, (-)OOCCH(NH(3))(+)ĊH(CH(2))(3)(NH(3))(+), respectively, although the evidence was indirect. From simulation of the EPR (B//a, 66 K), the concentrations of R1, R1', and R2-R5 were estimated as: R1, 50%; R1', 11%; R2, 14%; R3, 16%; R4, 6%; R5, 3%.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Box, Harold C.; Budzinski, Edwin E.; Freund, Harold G.
1984-12-01
It is shown that various radicals exhibiting diverse ESR and ENDOR spectral characteristics are nonetheless a closely related family of alkoxy radicals. The relationship is established by correlating the g tensor with crystal structure and by relating dihedral angles inferred from proton hyperfine couplings to dihedral angles inferred from the g tensor and crystal structure. The analysis also serves to demonstrate that an ESR absorption observed in x-irradiated single crystals of uridine 5'-monophosphate is due to an alkoxy radical.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Jee, Bettina; Hartmann, Martin; Pöppl, Andreas
2013-10-01
The adsorption of hydrogen has become interesting in terms of gas separation as well as safe and reversible storage of hydrogen as an energy carrier. In this regard, metal-organic framework compounds are potential candidates. The metal-organic framework [Cu?Zn?(btc)?]? as a partially Zn-substituted analogue of the well known compound HKUST-1 is well suited for studying adsorption geometries at cupric ions by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) methods due to the formation of few mixed Cu/Zn paddle wheel units with isolated S = 1/2 electron spins. The adsorption of hydrogen (H2) as well as the deuterium (D2) and HD molecules were investigated by continuous wave EPR and pulsed ENDOR and HYSCORE spectroscopy. The principal values of the proton and deuterium hyperfine coupling tensors ? and ? were determined by spectral simulations as well as of the deuterium nuclear quadrupole tensor ? for adsorbed HD and D2. The results show a side-on coordination of HD and D2 with identical Cu-H and Cu-D distances rCuX = 2.8 Å with the tensors ? and ? aligned parallel to the C4 symmetry axis of the paddle wheel unit. A thermodynamic non-equilibrium state with J = 1, mJ = ±1 is indicated by the experimental data with ? and ? averaged by rotation around C4.
Chiral recognition by formation of paramagnetic diastereomeric complexes
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Scheffler, K.; Höfler, U.; Schuler, P.; Stegmann, H. B.
The chiral 4-(α-hydroxy-benzyl)-2,6-di-tert. butyl-phenoxyl has been examined in its racemic form in toluene and carbontetrachloride. On adding of chiral auxiliaries (R)-resp. (S)-N,N-dimethyl-1-phenylethylamine or (S)-phenylethyl-amine two different couplings of the β-proton are recorded by ENDOR spectroscopy. The experimental results are interpreted by a ternary equilibrium between radical, solvent and auxiliary. A model for the suggested association processes is given and equilibrium constants and corresponding enthalpies are calculated.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
McManus, H.J.D.; Young Soo Kang; Kevan, L.
1993-01-07
The study of model membrane systems enjoys increasing attention within the area of solar energy research. An electron nuclear double resonance and electron spin resonance study of photogenerated N,N,N[prime],N[prime]-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) cation in frozen suspensions of lithium (LDS) and sodium (SDS) dodecyl sulfate micelles containing various concentrations of cyclic polyethers was undertaken. The relative location of the TMB cation within the organic aggregate was determined from the proton matrix ENDOR line width at 142 K. A broader line width was observed in LDS compared to SDS micelles, which is due to the fact that the larger lithium cation opens the micellarmore » interface resulting in increased hydration and deeper solubilization of TMB. The proton matrix ENDOR line width decreased upon addition of crown ethers. This decrease may be explained by displacement of the TMB toward the interface as a result of the decrease in ionic strength caused by the complexation of the countercations. The photoyield shows a slight increase with addition of crown ethers. This increase is most likely caused by the increase in the effective anionic charge of the micelle effected by the complexation of the sodium or lithium ions by the crown ethers. This increase in the anionic charge mitigates the rate of thermal back electron transfer resulting in an increased photoyield. 54 refs., 6 figs., 2 tabs.« less
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kochem, Amelie; O'Hagan, Molly J.; Wiedner, Eric S.
2015-07-13
The [Ni(PR2NR’2)2]2+ family of complexes are exceptionally active catalysts for proton reduction to H2. In this manuscript, we explore the first protonation step of the proposed catalytic cycle by using a catalytically inactive NiI complex possessing a sterically demanding variation of the ligand. Due to the paramagnetic nature of the NiI oxidation state, the protonated NiI intermediate has been characterized through a combination of cyclic voltammetry, ENDOR, and HYSCORE spectroscopy. Both the electrochemical and spectroscopic studies indicate that the NiI complex is protonated at a pendant amine that is endo to Ni, which suggests the presence of an intramolecular NiI•••HNmore » bonding interaction. Using density functional theory, the proton was found to hydrogen bond to three doubly-occupied, localized molecular orbitals: the 3dxz, 3dz2, and 3dyz orbitals of nickel. These studies provide the first direct experimental evidence for this critical catalytic intermediate, and implications for catalytic H2 production are discussed. Research was supported by the Max Planck Society (EPR, ENDOR, and HYSCORE spectroscopy, computational studies), and as part of the Center for Molecular Electrocatalysis, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (electrochemistry, NMR spectroscopy). Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is operated by Battelle for DOE.« less
Silaghi-Dumitrescu, Radu; Cooper, Chris E
2005-11-07
Interaction of hemoproteins with peroxide leads in several cases to transient formation of ferric peroxo, ferric hydroperoxo, and "high-valent", formally Fev, oxo or hydroxo Compound species. Here, density functional calculations on ferric peroxo, ferric hydroperoxo, Compound and protonated Compound heme active site models are reported. The theoretical results, including calculated isotropic Fermi contact couplings and anisotropic spin dipole couplings, are found to generally correlate well with experimental EPR/ENDOR data. Hydrogen bonding and solvation affect the ferric-peroxo/ferrous-superoxo electromerism. The transition between the two electromers appears smooth, but neither hydrogen bonding to up to two water molecules, nor solvation appear able to dramatically alter the redox state of the superoxo ligand or of the iron. The presence of almost one full unpaired electron on the iron and of one full unpaired electron on the dioxygenic ligand in the "ferric-peroxo" state suggests a possible description of non-protonated "ferric-peroxo" as {ferric-superoxo+porphyrin radical}. Emerging from the DFT data is the possibility that a protonated Compound has already been detected in ENDOR experiments on cytochrome P450. The general feasibility of a protonated Compound in P450 monooxygenases is probed in light of these findings. To encompass the multiple mechanisms available in P450 for substrate oxidation, we define "mechanistic promiscuity" as the feature allowing an enzyme to perform the same reaction, with the same product, using more than one mechanism.
High-field EPR on membrane proteins - crossing the gap to NMR.
Möbius, Klaus; Lubitz, Wolfgang; Savitsky, Anton
2013-11-01
In this review on advanced EPR spectroscopy, which addresses both the EPR and NMR communities, considerable emphasis is put on delineating the complementarity of NMR and EPR concerning the measurement of molecular interactions in large biomolecules. From these interactions, detailed information can be revealed on structure and dynamics of macromolecules embedded in solution- or solid-state environments. New developments in pulsed microwave and sweepable cryomagnet technology as well as ultrafast electronics for signal data handling and processing have pushed to new horizons the limits of EPR spectroscopy and its multifrequency extensions concerning the sensitivity of detection, the selectivity with respect to interactions, and the resolution in frequency and time domains. One of the most important advances has been the extension of EPR to high magnetic fields and microwave frequencies, very much in analogy to what happens in NMR. This is exemplified by referring to ongoing efforts for signal enhancement in both NMR and EPR double-resonance techniques by exploiting dynamic nuclear or electron spin polarization via unpaired electron spins and their electron-nuclear or electron-electron interactions. Signal and resolution enhancements are particularly spectacular for double-resonance techniques such as ENDOR and PELDOR at high magnetic fields. They provide greatly improved orientational selection for disordered samples that approaches single-crystal resolution at canonical g-tensor orientations - even for molecules with small g-anisotropies. Exchange of experience between the EPR and NMR communities allows for handling polarization and resolution improvement strategies in an optimal manner. Consequently, a dramatic improvement of EPR detection sensitivity could be achieved, even for short-lived paramagnetic reaction intermediates. Unique structural and dynamic information is thus revealed that can hardly be obtained by any other analytical techniques. Micromolar quantities of sample molecules have become sufficient to characterize stable and transient reaction intermediates of complex molecular systems - offering highly interesting applications for chemists, biochemists and molecular biologists. In three case studies, representative examples of advanced EPR spectroscopy are reviewed: (I) High-field PELDOR and ENDOR structure determination of cation-anion radical pairs in reaction centers from photosynthetic purple bacteria and cyanobacteria (Photosystem I); (II) High-field ENDOR and ELDOR-detected NMR spectroscopy on the oxygen-evolving complex of Photosystem II; and (III) High-field electron dipolar spectroscopy on nitroxide spin-labelled bacteriorhodopsin for structure-function studies. An extended conclusion with an outlook to further developments and applications is also presented. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Krewald, Vera; Retegan, Marius; Cox, Nicholas; Messinger, Johannes; Lubitz, Wolfgang; DeBeer, Serena; Neese, Frank
2015-01-01
A central question in biological water splitting concerns the oxidation states of the manganese ions that comprise the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II. Understanding the nature and order of oxidation events that occur during the catalytic cycle of five Si states (i = 0–4) is of fundamental importance both for the natural system and for artificial water oxidation catalysts. Despite the widespread adoption of the so-called “high-valent scheme”—where, for example, the Mn oxidation states in the S2 state are assigned as III, IV, IV, IV—the competing “low-valent scheme” that differs by a total of two metal unpaired electrons (i.e. III, III, III, IV in the S2 state) is favored by several recent studies for the biological catalyst. The question of the correct oxidation state assignment is addressed here by a detailed computational comparison of the two schemes using a common structural platform and theoretical approach. Models based on crystallographic constraints were constructed for all conceivable oxidation state assignments in the four (semi)stable S states of the oxygen evolving complex, sampling various protonation levels and patterns to ensure comprehensive coverage. The models are evaluated with respect to their geometric, energetic, electronic, and spectroscopic properties against available experimental EXAFS, XFEL-XRD, EPR, ENDOR and Mn K pre-edge XANES data. New 2.5 K 55Mn ENDOR data of the S2 state are also reported. Our results conclusively show that the entire S state phenomenology can only be accommodated within the high-valent scheme by adopting a single motif and protonation pattern that progresses smoothly from S0 (III, III, III, IV) to S3 (IV, IV, IV, IV), satisfying all experimental constraints and reproducing all observables. By contrast, it was impossible to construct a consistent cycle based on the low-valent scheme for all S states. Instead, the low-valent models developed here may provide new insight into the over-reduced S states and the states involved in the assembly of the catalytically active water oxidizing cluster. PMID:29308133
Shao, Chen; Lv, Zhao; Pan, Ying; Al-Rasheid, Khaled A S; Yi, Zhenzhen
2014-09-01
The morphology and infraciliature of two hypotrichous ciliates, Oxytricha paragranulifera n. sp. and Oxytricha granulifera Foissner and Adam, 1983, collected respectively from the surface of a sandy soil in the Huguang mangrove forest, Zhanjiang, China, and the surface of soil in a forest beside Ziwu Road, Xian, north-west China, were examined. O. paragranulifera n. sp. is characterized by an elongate body with slightly tapered anterior end, two macronuclear nodules and two micronuclei, paroral and endoral in Stylonychia-pattern, colourless cortical granules distributed in clusters or irregular short rows, adoral zone occupying 37 % of the body length, marginal rows almost confluent posteriorly, six dorsal kineties and three caudal cirri, caudal cirri and dorsal bristles almost indistinguishable when viewed in vivo. The well-known O. granulifera Foissner and Adam, 1983 was also redescribed and can be separated from the novel species by having cortical granules arranged along dorsal kineties and marginal rows on both sides (vs grouped in clusters as well as in short irregular rows), paroral and endoral in Oxytricha-pattern (vs in Stylonychia-pattern), macronuclear nodules obviously detached (vs adjacent) and a non-saline terrestrial habitat (vs saline terrestrial). The separation of these two taxa is also firmly supported by the molecular data, which show a significant difference between the two in their SSU rRNA gene sequences (similarity 97.1 %). Phylogenetic analyses based on SSU rRNA gene sequence data suggest a close relationship within the Oxytrichidae assemblage between O. paragranulifera n. sp. and O. granulifera. © 2014 IUMS.
The Pattern of Soviet Conduct in the Third World, Review and Preview. Part 2
1983-03-07
be quoted or copied without approval from OSD/Net Assessment. Aooession For DTIC TAB El Dit I-’I t Y " c•doi ;Avi.- ± end/or L i :itst I pc l 4•al IA...successcors have stooc, y that cecision. (Moscow odes riot recconioze tnis action.) Alth•cuph revolutionary Iran has i nioroved or estaolisned relations...far nesw tne world rar.et ievel and oepat, repotiaiions for a orice increase of roucniv t0w oercenz. ? y marc- I5d. witm the Soviets’ best otfer stiil
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Collauto, A.; Feintuch, A.; Qi, M.; Godt, A.; Meade, T.; Goldfarb, D.
2016-02-01
Complexes of the Gd(III) ion are currently being established as spin labels for distance determination in biomolecules by pulse dipolar spectroscopy. Because Gd(III) is an f ion, one expects electron spin density to be localized on the Gd(III) ion - an important feature for the mentioned application. Most of the complex ligands have nitrogens as Gd(III) coordinating atoms. Therefore, measurement of the 14N hyperfine coupling gives access to information on the localization of the electron spin on the Gd(III) ion. We carried out W-band, 1D and 2D 14N and 1H ENDOR measurements on the Gd(III) complexes Gd-DOTA, Gd-538, Gd-595, and Gd-PyMTA that serve as spin labels for Gd-Gd distance measurements. The obtained 14N spectra are particularly well resolved, revealing both the hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole splittings, which were assigned using 2D Mims ENDOR experiments. Additionally, the spectral contributions of the two different types of nitrogen atoms of Gd-PyMTA, the aliphatic N atom and the pyridine N atom, were distinguishable. The 14N hyperfine interaction was found to have a very small isotropic hyperfine component of -0.25 to -0.37 MHz. Furthermore, the anisotropic hyperfine interactions with the 14N nuclei and with the non-exchangeable protons of the ligands are well described by the point-dipole approximation using distances derived from the crystal structures. We therefore conclude that the spin density is fully localized on the Gd(III) ion and that the spin density distribution over the nuclei of the ligands is rightfully ignored when analyzing distance measurements.
Schinzel, Sandra; Schraut, Johannes; Arbuznikov, Alexei V; Siegbahn, Per E M; Kaupp, Martin
2010-09-10
Metal and ligand hyperfine couplings of a previously suggested, energetically feasible Mn(4)Ca model cluster (SG2009(-1)) for the S(2) state of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII) have been studied by broken-symmetry density functional methods and compared with other suggested structural and spectroscopic models. This was carried out explicitly for different spin-coupling patterns of the S=1/2 ground state of the Mn(III)(Mn(IV))(3) cluster. By applying spin-projection techniques and a scaling of the manganese hyperfine couplings, computation of the hyperfine and nuclear quadrupole coupling parameters allows a direct evaluation of the proposed models in comparison with data obtained from the simulation of EPR, ENDOR, and ESEEM spectra. The computation of (55)Mn hyperfine couplings (HFCs) for SG2009(-1) gives excellent agreement with experiment. However, at the current level of spin projection, the (55)Mn HFCs do not appear sufficiently accurate to distinguish between different structural models. Yet, of all the models studied, SG2009(-1) is the only one with the Mn(III) site at the Mn(C) center, which is coordinated by histidine (D1-His332). The computed histidine (14)N HFC anisotropy for SG2009(-1) gives much better agreement with ESEEM data than the other models, in which Mn(C) is an Mn(IV) site, thus supporting the validity of the model. The (13)C HFCs of various carboxylates have been compared with (13)C ENDOR data for PSII preparations with (13)C-labelled alanine.
Taguchi, Alexander T; O'Malley, Patrick J; Wraight, Colin A; Dikanov, Sergei A
2015-05-07
By utilizing a combined pulsed EPR and DFT approach, the high-resolution structure of the QB site semiquinone (SQB) was determined. The development of such a technique is crucial toward an understanding of protein-bound semiquinones on the structural level, as (i) membrane protein crystallography typically results in low resolution structures, and (ii) obtaining protein crystals in the semiquinone form is rarely feasible. The SQB hydrogen bond network was investigated with Q- (∼34 GHz) and X-band (∼9.7 GHz) pulsed EPR spectroscopy on fully deuterated reactions centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides. Simulations in the SQB g-tensor reference frame provided the principal values and directions of the H-bond proton hyperfine tensors. Three protons were detected, one with an anisotropic tensor component, T = 4.6 MHz, assigned to the histidine NδH of His-L190, and two others with similar anisotropic constants T = 3.2 and 3.0 MHz assigned to the peptide NpH of Gly-L225 and Ile-L224, respectively. Despite the strong similarity in the peptide couplings, all hyperfine tensors were resolved in the Q-band ENDOR spectra. The Euler angles describing the series of rotations that bring the hyperfine tensors into the SQB g-tensor reference frame were obtained by least-squares fitting of the spectral simulations to the ENDOR data. These Euler angles show the locations of the hydrogen bonded protons with respect to the semiquinone. Our geometry optimized model of SQB used in previous DFT work is in strong agreement with the angular constraints from the spectral simulations, providing the foundation for future joint pulsed EPR and DFT semiquinone structural determinations in other proteins.
Carbonate Complexation of Mn2+ in Aqueous Phase
Dasgupta, Jyotishman; Tyryshkin, Alexei M.; Kozlov, Yuri N.; Klimov, Vyacheslav V.; Dismukes, G. Charles
2008-01-01
The chemical speciation of Mn2+ within cells is critical for its transport, availability and redox properties. Herein we investigate the redox behavior and complexation equilibria of Mn2+ in aqueous solutions of bicarbonate by voltametry and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, and discuss the implications for the uptake of Mn2+ by mangano-cluster enzymes like photosystem II (PSII). Both the electrochemical reduction of Mn2+ to Mn0 at an Hg electrode and EPR (in the absence of a polarizing electrode), revealed formation of 1:1 and 1:2 Mn-(bi)carbonate complexes as a function of Mn2+ and bicarbonate concentrations. Pulsed EPR spectroscopy, including ENDOR, ESEEM and 2D-HYSCORE, were used to probe the hyperfine couplings to 1H and 13C nuclei of the ligand(s) bound to Mn2+. For the 1:2 complex the complete 13C hyperfine tensor for one of the (bi)carbonate ligands was determined and it was established that this ligand coordinates to Mn2+ in bidentate mode with 13C-Mn distance of 2.85 ± 0.1 Å. The second (bi)carbonate ligand in the 1:2 complex coordinates possibly in monodentate mode, which is structurally less defined, and its 13C signal is broad and unobservable. 1H ENDOR reveals that 1-2 water ligands are lost upon binding of one bicarbonate ion in the 1:1 complex while 3-4 water ligands are lost upon forming the 1:2 complex. Thus, we deduce that the dominant species above 0.1 M bicarbonate concentration is the 1:2 complex, [Mn(CO3)(HCO3)(OH2)3]-. PMID:16526753
Group III Acceptors with Shallow and Deep Levels in Silicon Carbide: ESR and ENDOR Studies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Il'in, I. V.; Uspenskaya, Yu. A.; Kramushchenko, D. D.; Muzafarova, M. V.; Soltamov, V. A.; Mokhov, E. N.; Baranov, P. G.
2018-04-01
Results of investigations of Group III acceptors (B, Al, and Ga) in crystals of silicon carbide using the most informative electron spin resonance and electron nuclear double resonance methods are presented. Structural models of the acceptors with shallow and deep levels are considered. In addition to the data obtained earlier, studies using high-frequency magnetic resonance were obtained, which allowed revealing orthorhombic deviations from the axial symmetry for the deep acceptors; theoretical analysis explains experimentally found shifts of g factors for the deep acceptors arising due to the orthorhombic deviations, which appear probably due to the Jahn-Teller effect.
Jayatilaka, Nayana; Nelson, William H.
2008-01-01
In sodium guanosine dihydrate single crystals, the guanine moiety is deprotonated at N1 due to growth from high-pH (>12) solutions. EPR and ENDOR study of crystals x-irradiated at 10 K detected evidence for three radical forms. Radical R1,characterized by two proton and two nitrogen hyperfine interactions, was identified as the product of net hydrogenation at N7 of the N1-deprotonated guanine unit. R1 exhibited an unusually distorted structure leading to net positive isotropic components of the hydrogen couplings. Radical R2, characterized by one proton and one nitrogen hyperfine coupling was identified as the primary electron loss product. This product is equivalent to that of deprotonation at N1 by the guanine cation and represents the first ENDOR characterization of that product. Radical R3, characterized by a single hydrogen hyperfine coupling, was identified as the product of net dehydrogenation at C1 of the ribose moiety. The identification of radicals R1-R3 was supported by DFT calculations on several possible structures using the B3LYP/6-311G(2df,p)//6-31G(d,p) approach. Radical R4, detected after warming the crystals to room temperature, was identified as the well-known product of net hydrogenation of C8 of the (N1-deprotonated) guanine component. Radical R1, evidently formed by protonation of the primary electron addition product, was present as roughly 60% of the total radicals detected at 10 K. Radical R2 was present as roughly 27% of the total yield, and the concentration of R3 contributed the remaining 13%. R3 is evidently the product of oneelectron oxidation followed by deprotonation; thus, the balance of oxidation and reduction products is approximately equal within experimental uncertainty. PMID:17249824
Kulik, Leonid V; Epel, Boris; Lubitz, Wolfgang; Messinger, Johannes
2007-11-07
The heart of the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II is a Mn4OxCa cluster that cycles through five different oxidation states (S0 to S4) during the light-driven water-splitting reaction cycle. In this study we interpret the recently obtained 55Mn hyperfine coupling constants of the S0 and S2 states of the OEC [Kulik et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 2392-2393] on the basis of Y-shaped spin-coupling schemes with up to four nonzero exchange coupling constants, J. This analysis rules out the presence of one or more Mn(II) ions in S0 in methanol (3%) containing samples and thereby establishes that the oxidation states of the manganese ions in S0 and S2 are, at 4 K, Mn4(III, III, III, IV) and Mn4(III, IV, IV, IV), respectively. By applying a "structure filter" that is based on the recently reported single-crystal EXAFS data on the Mn4OxCa cluster [Yano et al. Science 2006, 314, 821-825] we (i) show that this new structural model is fully consistent with EPR and 55Mn-ENDOR data, (ii) assign the Mn oxidation states to the individual Mn ions, and (iii) propose that the known shortening of one 2.85 A Mn-Mn distance in S0 to 2.75 A in S1 [Robblee et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 7459-7471] corresponds to a deprotonation of a mu-hydroxo bridge between MnA and MnB, i.e., between the outer Mn and its neighboring Mn of the mu3-oxo bridged moiety of the cluster. We summarize our results in a molecular model for the S0 --> S1 and S1 --> S2 transitions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mustafi, Devkumar; Hofer, Jennifer E.; Huang, Wanzhi; Palzkill, Timothy; Makinen, Marvin W.
2004-05-01
The chromophoric spin-label substrate 6- N-[3-(2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-oxypyrrolin-3-yl)-propen-2-oyl]penicillanic acid (SLPPEN) was synthesized by acylation of 6-aminopenicillanic acid with the acid chloride of 3-(2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-oxypyrrolinyl)-2-propenoic acid and characterized by physical methods. By application of angle-selected electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), we have determined the molecular structure of SLPPEN in solution. SLPPEN exhibited UV absorption properties that allowed accurate monitoring of the kinetics of its enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis. The maximum value of the (substrate-product) difference extinction coefficient was 2824 M -1 cm -1 at 275 nm compared to 670 M -1 cm -1 at 232 nm for SLPEN [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 117 (1995) 6739]. For SLPPEN, the steady-state kinetic parameters kcat and kcat/ KM, determined under initial velocity conditions, were 637±36 s -1 and 13.8±1.4×10 6 M -1 s -1, respectively, for hydrolysis catalyzed by TEM-1 β-lactamase of E. coli, and 0.5±0.04 s -1 and 3.9±0.4×10 4 M -1 s -1 for hydrolysis catalyzed by the β-lactamase of Enterobacter cloacae P99. We have also observed "burst kinetics" for the hydrolysis of SLPPEN with P99 β-lactamase, indicative of formation of an acylenzyme reaction intermediate. In DMSO:H 2O (30:70, v:v) cryosolvent mixtures buffered to pH ∗ 7.0, the half-life of the acylenzyme intermediate formed with the P99 enzyme at -5 °C was ≥3 min, suitable for optical characterization. The observation of burst kinetics in the hydrolysis of SLPPEN catalyzed by P99 β-lactamase suggests that this chromophoric spin-labeled substrate is differentially sensitive to active site interactions underlying the cephalosporinase and penicillinase reactivity of this class C enzyme.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Carracedo, Juan-Carlos; Meco, Joaquín.; Lomoschitz, Alejandro; Antonia Perera, María.; Ballester, Javier; Betancort, Juan-Francisco
2004-10-01
In a recent paper Zöller et al. (2003) present their results of the stratigraphic, sedimentologic, soil mineralogy and IRSL dating of several soil beds filling a basin located near the village of Guatiza, at the eastern flank of the Famara shield, in the island of Lanzarote (Canary Islands). According to these authors, the soils correspond to a desert loess-palaeosol sequence with many coarse alluvial fan deposits, accumulated as scoria cones encircled the open ancient valley extending from SW to NE near Guatiza and their lava flowed to form the Vega de Guatiza endoreic basin. According to these authors, this depression served as a sediment trap from its formation.
A Field-Sweep/Field-Lock System for Superconducting Magnets-Application to High-Field EPR
Maly, Thorsten; Bryant, Jeff; Ruben, David; Griffin, Robert G.
2007-01-01
We describe a field-lock/field-sweep system for the use in superconducting magnets. The system is based on a commercially available field mapping unit and a custom designed broad-band 1H-NMR probe. The NMR signal of a small water sample is used in a feedback loop to set and control the magnetic field to high accuracy. The current instrumental configuration allows field sweeps of ± 0.4 T and a resolution of up to 10-5 T (0.1 G) and the performance of the system is demonstrated in a high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) application. The system should also be of utility in other experiments requiring precise and reproducible sweeps of the magnetic field such as DNP, ENDOR or PELDOR. PMID:17027306
A field-sweep/field-lock system for superconducting magnets--Application to high-field EPR.
Maly, Thorsten; Bryant, Jeff; Ruben, David; Griffin, Robert G
2006-12-01
We describe a field-lock/field-sweep system for the use in superconducting magnets. The system is based on a commercially available field mapping unit and a custom designed broad-band 1H NMR probe. The NMR signal of a small water sample is used in a feedback loop to set and control the magnetic field to high accuracy. The current instrumental configuration allows field sweeps of +/-0.4 T and a resolution of up to 10(-5) T (0.1 G) and the performance of the system is demonstrated in a high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) application. The system should also be of utility in other experiments requiring precise and reproducible sweeps of the magnetic field such as DNP, ENDOR or PELDOR.
Structure and nature of manganese(II) imidazole complexes in frozen aqueous solutions.
Un, Sun
2013-04-01
A common feature of a large majority of the manganese metalloenzymes, as well as many synthetic biomimetic complexes, is the bonding between the manganese ion and imidazoles. This interaction was studied by examining the nature and structure of manganese(II) imidazole complexes in frozen aqueous solutions using 285 GHz high magnet-field continuous-wave electron paramagnetic resonance (cw-HFEPR) and 95 GHz pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and pulsed electron-double resonance detected nuclear magnetic resonance (PELDOR-NMR). The (55)Mn hyperfine coupling and isotropic g values of Mn(II) in frozen imidazole solutions continuously decreased with increasing imidazole concentration. ENDOR and PELDOR-NMR measurements demonstrated that the structural basis for this behavior arose from the imidazole concentration-dependent distribution of three six-coordinate and two four-coordinate species: [Mn(H2O)6](2+), [Mn(imidazole)(H2O)5](2+), [Mn(imidazole)2(H2O)4](2+), [Mn(imidazole)3(H2O)](2+), and [Mn(imidazole)4](2+). The hyperfine and g values of manganese proteins were also fully consistent with this imidazole effect. Density functional theory methods were used to calculate the structures, spin and charge densities, and hyperfine couplings of a number of different manganese imidazole complexes. The use of density functional theory with large exact-exchange admixture calculations gave isotropic (55)Mn hyperfine couplings that were semiquantitative and of predictive value. The results show that the covalency of the Mn-N bonds play an important role in determining not only magnetic spin parameters but also the structure of the metal binding site. The relationship between the isotropic (55)Mn hyperfine value and the number of imidazole ligands provides a quick and easy test for determining whether a protein binds an Mn(II) ion using histidine residues and, if so, how many are involved. Application of this method shows that as much as 40% of the Mn(II) ions in Deinococcus radiodurans are ligated to two histidines (Tabares, L. C.; Un, S. J. Biol. Chem 2013, in press).
Metal oxidation states in biological water splitting.
Krewald, Vera; Retegan, Marius; Cox, Nicholas; Messinger, Johannes; Lubitz, Wolfgang; DeBeer, Serena; Neese, Frank; Pantazis, Dimitrios A
2015-03-01
A central question in biological water splitting concerns the oxidation states of the manganese ions that comprise the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II. Understanding the nature and order of oxidation events that occur during the catalytic cycle of five S i states ( i = 0-4) is of fundamental importance both for the natural system and for artificial water oxidation catalysts. Despite the widespread adoption of the so-called "high-valent scheme"-where, for example, the Mn oxidation states in the S 2 state are assigned as III, IV, IV, IV-the competing "low-valent scheme" that differs by a total of two metal unpaired electrons ( i.e. III, III, III, IV in the S 2 state) is favored by several recent studies for the biological catalyst. The question of the correct oxidation state assignment is addressed here by a detailed computational comparison of the two schemes using a common structural platform and theoretical approach. Models based on crystallographic constraints were constructed for all conceivable oxidation state assignments in the four (semi)stable S states of the oxygen evolving complex, sampling various protonation levels and patterns to ensure comprehensive coverage. The models are evaluated with respect to their geometric, energetic, electronic, and spectroscopic properties against available experimental EXAFS, XFEL-XRD, EPR, ENDOR and Mn K pre-edge XANES data. New 2.5 K 55 Mn ENDOR data of the S 2 state are also reported. Our results conclusively show that the entire S state phenomenology can only be accommodated within the high-valent scheme by adopting a single motif and protonation pattern that progresses smoothly from S 0 (III, III, III, IV) to S 3 (IV, IV, IV, IV), satisfying all experimental constraints and reproducing all observables. By contrast, it was impossible to construct a consistent cycle based on the low-valent scheme for all S states. Instead, the low-valent models developed here may provide new insight into the over-reduced S states and the states involved in the assembly of the catalytically active water oxidizing cluster.
Delocalization of Coherent Triplet Excitons in Linear Rigid Rod Conjugated Oligomers.
Hintze, Christian; Korf, Patrick; Degen, Frank; Schütze, Friederike; Mecking, Stefan; Steiner, Ulrich E; Drescher, Malte
2017-02-02
In this work, the triplet state delocalization in a series of monodisperse oligo(p-phenyleneethynylene)s (OPEs) is studied by pulsed electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) determining zero-field splitting, optical spin polarization, and proton hyperfine couplings. Neither the zero-field splitting parameters nor the optical spin polarization change significantly with OPE chain length, in contrast to the hyperfine coupling constants, which showed a systematic decrease with chain length n according to a 2/(1 + n) decay law. The results provide striking evidence for the Frenkel-type nature of the triplet excitons exhibiting full coherent delocalization in the OPEs under investigation with up to five OPE repeat units and with a spin density distribution described by a nodeless particle in the box wave function. The same model is successfully applied to recently published data on π-conjugated porphyrin oligomers.
Moons, Hans; Łapok, Łukasz; Loas, Andrei; Van Doorslaer, Sabine; Gorun, Sergiu M
2010-10-04
The synthesis, crystal structure, and electronic properties of perfluoro-isopropyl-substituted perfluorophthalocyanine bearing a copper atom in the central cavity (F(64)PcCu) are reported. While most halogenated phthalocyanines do not exhibit long-term order sufficient to form large single crystals, this is not the case for F(64)PcCu. Its crystal structure was determined by X-ray analysis and linked to the electronic properties determined by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). The findings are corroborated by density functional theory (DFT) computations, which agree well with the experiment. X-band continuous-wave EPR spectra of undiluted F(64)PcCu powder, indicate the existence of isolated metal centers. The electron-withdrawing effect of the perfluoroalkyl (R(f)) groups significantly enhances the complexes solubility in organic solvents like alcohols, including via their axial coordination. This coordination is confirmed by X-band (1)H HYSCORE experiments and is also seen in the solid state via the X-ray structure. Detailed X-band CW-EPR, X-band Davies and Mims ENDOR, and W-band electron spin-echo-detected EPR studies of F(64)PcCu in ethanol allow the determination of the principal g values and the hyperfine couplings of the metal, nitrogen, and fluorine nuclei. Comparison of the g and metal hyperfine values of F(64)PcCu and other PcCu complexes in different matrices reveals a dominant effect of the matrix on these EPR parameters, while variations in the ring substituents have only a secondary effect. The relatively strong axial coordination occurs despite the diminished covalency of the C-N bonds and potentially weakening Jahn-Teller effects. Surprisingly, natural abundance (13)C HYSCORE signals could be observed for a frozen ethanol solution of F(64)PcCu. The (13)C nuclei contributing to the HYSCORE spectra could be identified as the pyrrole carbons by means of DFT. Finally, (19)F ENDOR and easily observable paramagnetic NMR were found to relate well to the DFT computations, revealing negligible isotropic hyperfine (Fermi contact) contributions. The single-site isolation in solution and solid state and the relatively strong coordination of axial ligands, both attributed to the introduction of R(f) groups, are features important for materials and catalyst design.
Manikandan, P; Choi, E Y; Hille, R; Hoffman, B M
2001-03-21
Xanthine oxidase is a molybdenum-containing enzyme that catalyzes the hydroxylation of xanthine and a wide variety of other aromatic heterocycles. In the course of the reaction with xanthine and substrates such as 2-hydroxy-6-methylpurine (HMP), the enzyme gives rise to a Mo(V) EPR signal, denoted "very rapid", that arises from an authentic catalytic intermediate. The two alternative catalytic mechanisms proposed for this enzyme differ critically in whether the distance between Mo and C8 of the purine nucleus in this intermediate is short enough to admit a direct bonding interaction. To examine this distance, we have performed 13C ENDOR measurements of the "very rapid" EPR signal generated by xanthine oxidase during reaction with 13C8-HMP. The resulting (13)C8 hyperfine tensor, A = [10.2(1), 7.0(1), 6.5(1)] MHz, is discussed in the framework of a detailed consideration of factors involved in extracting metrical parameters from an anisotropic hyperfine interaction composed of contributions from multiple sources, in particular, the effect of the local contributions from spin density on (13)C8. The analysis presented here gives a Mo...C distance whose value is expected to be ca. 2.7-2.9 A in the "very rapid" intermediates formed with both xanthine and HMP, consistent with plausible bond lengths for a Mo-O-C8 fragment where C8 is a trigonal-planar aromatic carbon. The difference from earlier conclusions is explained. The data thus do not support the existence of a direct Mo-C bond in the signal-giving species. This conclusion supports a mechanism that does not involve such an interaction and which begins with base-assisted nucleophilic attack of the Mo(VI)-OH group on the C-8 of substrate, with concomitant hydride transfer to the Mo=S group to give Mo(IV)-SH; the EPR-active "very rapid" species then forms by one-electron oxidation and deprotonation to yield the EPR-detectable Mo(V)OS(OR) species. We further discuss the complexities and limitations of the semiempirical method used to arrive at these conclusions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Varberg, Thomas D.; Field, Robert W.; Merer, Anthony J.
1990-06-01
Sub-Doppler spectra of the A 7Π-X 7Σ+ (0,0) band of gas phase MnH near 5680 Å were recorded by intermodulated fluorescence spectroscopy. The spectra reveal hyperfine splittings arising from both the 55Mn and 1H nuclear spins. Internal hyperfine perturbations have been observed between the different spin components of the ground state at low N`. From a preliminary analysis of several rotational lines originating from the isolated and unperturbed F1(J`=3) spin component of the X 7Σ+(N`=0) level, the 55Mn Fermi contact interaction in the ground state has been measured as bF=Aiso =276(1) MHz. This value is 11% smaller than the value obtained by Weltner et al. from an electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) study of MnH in an argon matrix at 4 K. This unprecedented gas-to-matrix shift in the Fermi contact parameter is discussed.
Maida, Marcello; Camilleri, Salvatore; Manganaro, Michele; Garufi, Serena; Scarpulla, Giuseppe
2017-10-15
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer in males and second in females, and globally the fourth cause for cancer death worldwide. Oncological screening of CRC has a major role in the management of the disease and it is mostly performed by colonoscopy. Anyway, effectiveness of endoscopic screening for CRC strictly depends on adequate detection and removal of potentially precancerous lesions, and accuracy of colonoscopy in detection of adenomas is still suboptimal. For this reason, several technological advances have been implemented in order to improve the diagnostic sensitivity of colonoscopy in adenoma detection. Among these: (1) Visual technologies such as chromoendoscopy and narrow band imaging; (2) optical innovation as high definition endoscopy, full-spectrum endoscopy or Third Eye Retroscope; and (3) mechanical advances as Cap assisted colonoscopy, Endocuff, Endoring and G-Eye endoscope. All these technologies advances have been tested over time by clinical studies with mixed results. Which of them is more likely to be successful in the next future?
Niobium hyperfine structure in crystal calcium tungstate
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Tseng, D. L.; Kikuchi, C.
1972-01-01
A study of the niobium hyperfine structure in single crystal calcium tungstate was made by the combination of the technique of electron paramagnetic resonance and electron nuclear double resonance (EPR/ENDOR). The microwave frequency was about 9.4 GHz and the radio frequency from 20MHz to 70 MHz. The rare earth ions Nd(3+), U(3+), or Tm(3+) were added as the charge compensator for Nb(5+). To create niobium paramagnetic centers, the sample was irradiated at 77 deg K with a 10 thousand curie Co-60 gamma source for 1 to 2 hours at a dose rate of 200 K rads per hour and then transferred quickly into the cavity. In a general direction of magnetic field, the spectra showed 4 sets of 10 main lines corresponding to 4 nonequivalent sites of niobium with I = 9/2. These 4 sets of lines coalesced into 2 sets of 10 in the ab-plane and into a single set of 10 along the c-axis. This symmetry suggested that the tungsten ions are substituted by the niobium ions in the crystal.
Periapical cemento-osseous dysplasia: clinicopathological features.
Roghi, Marco; Scapparone, Chiara; Crippa, Rolando; Silvestrini-Biavati, Armando; Angiero, Francesca
2014-05-01
Periapical cemento-osseous dysplasia (PCOD) is a rare benign lesion, often asymptomatic, in which fibrous tissue replaces the normal bone tissue, with metaplasic bone and neo-formed cement. We present a rare case of mandibular PCOD in a woman of 55 years, who presented with moderate swelling and mobility of teeth 32-33-34. Endoral radiography showed that these teeth had been devitalized; they had deep periodontal pockets and marked radicular radiotransparency; the root apices exhibited mixed radiotransparency and radio-opacity. Clinical and radiographical findings led to a diagnosis of periapical rarefying osteitis, and the three teeth were thus extracted. Due to the persistence of swelling and slight pain post-extraction, a cone-beam computed tomographic scan was taken; this showed a mixed radiotransparent and radio-opaque lesion in the area of the extracted teeth. A bone biopsy of the affected area was taken for histopathological evaluation; a diagnosis of PCOD was rendered. This case demonstrates the importance of a full investigation when a patient presents after tooth extraction with non-healing socket, pain, and swelling. A multidisciplinary approach is required to manage these rare cases.
Explicit expressions of quantum mechanical rotation operators for spins 1 to 2
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kocakoç, Mehpeyker, E-mail: mkocakoc@cu.edu.tr; Tapramaz, Recep, E-mail: recept@omu.edu.tr
2016-03-25
Quantum mechanical rotation operators are the subject of quantum mechanics, mathematics and pulsed magnetic resonance spectroscopies, namely NMR, EPR and ENDOR. They are also necessary for spin based quantum information systems. The rotation operators of spin 1/2 are well known and can be found in related textbooks. But rotation operators of other spins greater than 1/2 can be found numerically by evaluating the series expansions of exponential operator obtained from Schrödinger equation, or by evaluating Wigner-d formula or by evaluating recently established expressions in polynomial forms discussed in the text. In this work, explicit symbolic expressions of x, y andmore » z components of rotation operators for spins 1 to 2 are worked out by evaluating series expansion of exponential operator for each element of operators and utilizing linear curve fitting process. The procedures gave out exact expressions of each element of the rotation operators. The operators of spins greater than 2 are under study and will be published in a separate paper.« less
Pulsed-High Field/High-Frequency EPR Spectroscopy
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Fuhs, Michael; Moebius, Klaus
Pulsed high-field/high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is used to disentangle many kinds of different effects often obscured in continuous wave (cw) EPR spectra at lower magnetic fields/microwave frequencies. While the high magnetic field increases the resolution of G tensors and of nuclear Larmor frequencies, the high frequencies allow for higher time resolution for molecular dynamics as well as for transient paramagnetic intermediates studied with time-resolved EPR. Pulsed EPR methods are used for example for relaxation-time studies, and pulsed Electron Nuclear DOuble Resonance (ENDOR) is used to resolve unresolved hyperfine structure hidden in inhomogeneous linewidths. In the present article we introduce the basic concepts and selected applications to structure and mobility studies on electron transfer systems, reaction centers of photosynthesis as well as biomimetic models. The article concludes with an introduction to stochastic EPR which makes use of an other concept for investigating resonance systems in order to increase the excitation bandwidth of pulsed EPR. The limited excitation bandwidth of pulses at high frequency is one of the main limitations which, so far, made Fourier transform methods hardly feasible.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Bennati, Marina; Prisner, Thomas F.
2005-02-01
Recent developments in microwave technologies have led to a renaissance of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) due to the implementation of new spectrometers operating at frequencies >=90 GHz. EPR at high fields and high frequencies (HF-EPR) has been established up to THz (very high frequency (VHF) EPR) in continuous wave (cw) operation and up to about 300 GHz in pulsed operation. To date, its most prominent application field is structural biology. This review article first gives an overview of the theoretical basics and the technical aspects of HF-EPR methodologies, such as cw and pulsed HF-EPR, as well as electron nuclear double resonance at high fields (HF-ENDOR). In the second part, the article illustrates different application areas of HF-EPR in studies of protein structure and function. In particular, HF-EPR has delivered essential contributions to disentangling complex spectra of radical cofactors or reaction intermediates in photosynthetic reaction centres, radical enzymes (such as ribonucleotide reductase) and in metalloproteins. Furthermore, HF-EPR combined with site-directed spin labelling in membranes and soluble proteins provides new methods of investigating complex molecular dynamics and intermolecular distances.
Direct Spectroscopic Detection of ATP Turnover Reveals Mechanistic Divergence of ABC Exporters.
Collauto, Alberto; Mishra, Smriti; Litvinov, Aleksei; Mchaourab, Hassane S; Goldfarb, Daniella
2017-08-01
We have applied high-field (W-band) pulse electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) and electron-electron double resonance (ELDOR)-detected nuclear magnetic resonance (EDNMR) to characterize the coordination sphere of the Mn 2+ co-factor in the nucleotide binding sites (NBSs) of ABC transporters. MsbA and BmrCD are two efflux transporters hypothesized to represent divergent catalytic mechanisms. Our results reveal distinct coordination of Mn 2+ to ATP and transporter residues in the consensus and degenerate NBSs of BmrCD. In contrast, the coordination of Mn 2+ at the two NBSs of MsbA is similar, which provides a mechanistic rationale for its higher rate constant of ATP hydrolysis relative to BmrCD. Direct detection of vanadate ion, trapped in a high-energy post-hydrolysis intermediate, further supports the notion of asymmetric hydrolysis by the two NBSs of BmrCD. The integrated spectroscopic approach presented here, which link energy input to conformational dynamics, can be applied to a variety of systems powered by ATP turnover. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Fluorescein angiography and retinal vascular development in premature infants.
Purcaro, Velia; Velia, Purcaro; Baldascino, Antonio; Antonio, Baldascino; Papacci, Patrizia; Patrizia, Papacci; Giannantonio, Carmen; Carmen, Giannantonio; Molisso, Anna; Anna, Molisso; Molle, Fernando; Fernando, Molle; Lepore, Domenico; Domenico, Lepore; Romagnoli, Costantino; Costantino, Romagnoli
2012-10-01
To investigate the role of fluorescein angiography (FA) in the management of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) in preterm newborns. An observational case series of 13 extremely low birth weight infants. From September 2009 to March 2010, 13 newborn infants with a gestational age <29 weeks end/or birth weight <1000 g underwent serial fluorescein angiography with RetCam (Clarity, Pleasanton, CA) every 2 weeks. The fluorescein angiograms were examined to optimize the timing of diagnosis of ROP and to investigate development of retinal and choroidal vascularization. There were no side effects related to FA. Variable features of retinal and choroidal circulation in preterm infants with a high risk of developing ROP were noted. FA allows vessels branching at the junction between vascular and avascular retina (V-Av junction) to be viewed easily and shows the ROP findings that sometimes cannot be seen by indirect ophthalmoscopy. Dye leakage is the most significant sign of progression to severe ROP or the need for surgery in newborn babies with ROP. RetCam-assisted intravenous FA is safe and allows a more objective assessment of the ROP stage and zone.
Dental radiography: tooth enamel EPR dose assessment from Rando phantom measurements
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aragno, D.; Fattibene, P.; Onori, S.; Aragno, D.; Fattibene, P.
2000-09-01
Electron paramagnetic resonance dosimetry of tooth enamel is now established as a suitable method for individual dose reconstruction following radiation accidents. The accuracy of the method is limited by some confounding factors, among which is the dose received due to medical x-ray irradiation. In the present paper the EPR response of tooth enamel to endoral examination was experimentally evaluated using an anthropomorphic phantom. The dose to enamel for a single exposure of a typical dental examination performed with a new x-ray generation unit working at 65 kVp gave rise to a CO2- signal of intensity similar to that induced by a dose of about 2 mGy of 60Co. EPR measurements were performed on the entire tooth with no attempt to separate buccal and lingual components. Also the dose to enamel for an orthopantomography exam was estimated. It was derived from TLD measurements as equivalent to 0.2 mGy of 60Co. In view of application to risk assessment analysis, in the present work the value for the ratio of the reference dose at the phantom surface measured with TLD to the dose at the tooth measured with EPR was determined.
High-field/ high-frequency EPR study on stable free radicals formed in sucrose by gamma-irradiation.
Georgieva, Elka R; Pardi, Luca; Jeschke, Gunnar; Gatteschi, Dante; Sorace, Lorenzo; Yordanov, Nicola D
2006-06-01
The EPR spectrum of sucrose irradiated by high-energy radiation is complex due to the presence of more than one radical species. In order to decompose the spectrum and elucidate the radical magnetic parameters a high-field (HF(-)EPR) study on stable free radicals in gamma-irradiated polycrystalline sucrose (table sugar) was performed at three different high frequencies--94, 190 and 285 GHz as well as at the conventional X-band. We suggest a presence of three stable radicals R1, R2 and R3 as the main radical species. Due to the increase of g-factor resolution at high fields the g-tensors of these radicals could be extracted by accurate simulations. The moderate g-anisotropy suggests that all three radicals are carbon-centred. Results from an earlier ENDOR study on X-irradiated sucrose single crystals (Vanhaelewyn et al., Appl Radiat Isot, 52, 1221 (2000)) were used for analyzing of the spectra in more details. It was confirmed that the strongest hyperfine interaction has a relatively small anisotropy, which indicates either the absence of alpha-protons or a strongly distorted geometry of the radicals.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Kochem, Amélie; O'Hagan, Molly; Wiedner, Eric S.
2015-06-03
The [Ni(P R 2N R' 2) 2] 2+ family of complexes are exceptionally active catalysts for proton reduction to H 2. In this manuscript, we explore the first protonation step of the proposed catalytic cycle by using a catalytically inactive Ni I complex possessing a sterically demanding variation of the ligand. Due to the paramagnetic nature of the Ni I oxidation state, the protonated Ni I intermediate has been characterized through a combination of cyclic voltammetry, electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy, and hyperfine sublevel correlation (HYSCORE) spectroscopy. Both the electrochemical and spectroscopic studies indicate that the NiI complex ismore » protonated at a pendant amine that is endo to Ni, which suggests the presence of an intramolecular Ni I---HN bonding interaction. Using density functional theory, the hydrogen bond was found to involve three doubly-occupied, localized molecular orbitals: the 3d xz, 3d z2, and 3d yz orbitals of nickel. These studies provide the first direct experimental evidence for this critical catalytic intermediate, and implications for catalytic H 2 production are discussed.« less
Charge Transfer Processes in OPV Materials as Revealed by EPR Spectroscopy
Niklas, Jens; Poluektov, Oleg
2017-03-03
Understanding charge separation and charge transport at a molecular level is crucial for improving the efficiency of organic photovoltaic (OPV) cells. Under illumination of Bulk Heterojunction (BHJ) blends of polymers and fullerenes, various paramagnetic species are formed including polymer and fullerene radicals, radical pairs, and photoexcited triplet states. Light-induced Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is ideally suited to study these states in BHJ due to its selectivity in probing the paramagnetic intermediates. Some advanced EPR techniques like light-induced ENDOR spectroscopy and pulsed techniques allow the determination of hyperfine coupling tensors, while high-frequency EPR allows the EPR signals of the individualmore » species to be resolved and their g-tensors to be determined. In these magnetic resonance parameters reveal details about the delocalization of the positive polaron on the various polymer donors which is important for the efficient charge separation in BHJ systems. Time-resolved EPR can contribute to the study of the dynamics of charge separation, charge transfer and recombination in BHJ by probing the unique spectral signatures of charge transfer and triplet states. Furthermore, the potential of the EPR also allows characterization of the intermediates and products of BHJ degradation.« less
Climbing Nitrogenase: Towards a Mechanism of Enzymatic Nitrogen Fixation
Dean, Dennis R.; Seefeldt, Lance C.
2009-01-01
Conspectus “Nitrogen fixation”—the reduction of dinitrogen (N2) to two ammonia (NH3) molecules—by the Mo-dependent nitrogenase is essential for all life. Despite four decades of research, a daunting number of unanswered questions about the mechanism of nitrogenase make it the ‘Everest of enzymes’. This Account describes our efforts to climb one “face” of this mountain by meeting two interdependent challenges central to determining the mechanism of biological N2 reduction. The first challenge is to determine the reaction pathway: the composition and structure of each of the substrate-derived moieties bound to the catalytic FeMocofactor (FeMo-co) of the molybdenum-iron (MoFe) protein of nitrogenase. To overcome this challenge, we need to discriminate between the two classes of potential reaction pathways: 1) a “distal” (D) pathway, in which H atoms add sequentially at a single N or 2) an “alternating” (A) pathway, in which H atoms add alternately to the two N atoms of N2. Secondly, we need to characterize the dynamics of conversion among intermediates within the accepted Lowe-Thorneley kinetic scheme for N2 reduction. That goal requires us to experimentally determine both the number of electrons/protons delivered to the MoFe protein and their “inventory”—a partition into those residing on each of the reaction components and released as H2 or NH3. The principal obstacle to this “climb” has been the inability to generate N2 reduction intermediates for characterization. A combination of genetic, biochemical, and spectroscopic approaches recently overcame this obstacle. These experiments identified one of the four-iron Fe-S faces of the active-site FeMo-cofactor as the specific site of reactivity, indicated that the sidechain of residue α70V controls access to this face, and supported the involvement of the sidechain of residue α195H in proton delivery. We can now freeze-quench trap N2 reduction pathway intermediates and use ENDOR/ESEEM spectroscopies to characterize them. However, even successful trapping of a N2 reduction intermediate occurs without synchronous electron delivery to the MoFe protein. As a result, the number of electrons and protons, n, delivered to MoFe during its formation is unknown. To determine n and the electron inventory, we initially employed ENDOR spectroscopy to analyze the substrate moiety bound to the FeMo-co and 57Fe within the cofactor. Difficulties in using that approach led us to devise a robust kinetic protocol for determining n of a trapped intermediate. This Account describes strategies that we have formulated to bring this “face” of the nitrogenase mechanism into view and afford approaches to its climb. Although the summit remains distant, we look forward to continued progress in the ascent. PMID:19267458
Electrically Driving Donor Spin Qubits in Silicon Using Photonic Bandgap Resonators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Sigillito, A. J.; Tyryshkin, A. M.; Lyon, S. A.
In conventional experiments, donor nuclear spin qubits in silicon are driven using radiofrequency (RF) magnetic fields. However, magnetic fields are difficult to confine at the nanoscale, which poses major issues for individually addressable qubits and device scalability. Ideally one could drive spin qubits using RF electric fields, which are easy to confine, but spins do not naturally have electric dipole transitions. In this talk, we present a new method for electrically controlling nuclear spin qubits in silicon by modulating the hyperfine interaction between the nuclear spin qubit and the donor-bound electron. By fabricating planar superconducting photonic bandgap resonators, we are able to use pulsed electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) techniques to selectively probe both electrically and magnetically driven transitions for 31P and 75As nuclear spin qubits. The electrically driven spin resonance mechanism allows qubits to be driven at either their transition frequency, or at one-half their transition frequency, thus reducing bandwidth requirements for future quantum devices. Moreover, this form of control allows for higher qubit densities and lower power requirements compared to magnetically driven schemes. In our proof-of-principle experiments we demonstrate electrically driven Rabi frequencies of approximately 50 kHz for widely spaced (10 μm) gates which should be extendable to MHz for nanoscale devices.
A 140 GHz pulsed EPR/212 MHz NMR spectrometer for DNP studies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Smith, Albert A.; Corzilius, Björn; Bryant, Jeffrey A.; DeRocher, Ronald; Woskov, Paul P.; Temkin, Richard J.; Griffin, Robert G.
2012-10-01
We described a versatile spectrometer designed for the study of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) at low temperatures and high fields. The instrument functions both as an NMR spectrometer operating at 212 MHz (1H frequency) with DNP capabilities, and as a pulsed-EPR operating at 140 GHz. A coiled TE011 resonator acts as both an NMR coil and microwave resonator, and a double balanced (1H, 13C) radio frequency circuit greatly stabilizes the NMR performance. A new 140 GHz microwave bridge has also been developed, which utilizes a four-phase network and ELDOR channel at 8.75 GHz, that is then multiplied and mixed to obtain 140 GHz microwave pulses with an output power of 120 mW. Nutation frequencies obtained are as follows: 6 MHz on S = 1/2 electron spins, 100 kHz on 1H, and 50 kHz on 13C. We demonstrate basic EPR, ELDOR, ENDOR, and DNP experiments here. Our solid effect DNP results demonstrate an enhancement of 144 and sensitivity gain of 310 using OX063 trityl at 80 K and an enhancement of 157 and maximum sensitivity gain of 234 using Gd-DOTA at 20 K, which is significantly better performance than previously reported at high fields (⩾3 T).
A 140 GHz Pulsed EPR/212 MHz NMR Spectrometer for DNP Studies
Smith, Albert A.; Corzilius, Björn; Bryant, Jeffrey A.; DeRocher, Ronald; Woskov, Paul P.; Temkin, Richard J.; Griffin, Robert G.
2012-01-01
We described a versatile spectrometer designed for the study of dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) at low temperatures and high fields. The instrument functions both as an NMR spectrometer operating at 212 MHz (1H frequency) with DNP capabilities, and as a pulsed-EPR operating at 140 GHz. A coiled TE011 resonator acts as both an NMR coil and microwave resonator, and a double balanced (1H, 13C) radio frequency circuit greatly stabilizes the NMR performance. A new 140 GHz microwave bridge has also been developed, which utilizes a four-phase network and ELDOR channel at 8.75 GHz, that is then multiplied and mixed to obtain 140 GHz microwave pulses with an output power of 120 mW. Nutation frequencies obtained are as follows: 6 MHz on S = ½ electron spins, 100 kHz on 1H, and 50 kHz on 13C. We demonstrate basic EPR, ELDOR, ENDOR, and DNP experiments here. Our solid effect DNP results demonstrate an enhancement of 144 and sensitivity gain of 310 using OX063 trityl at 80 K and an enhancement of 157 and maximum sensitivity gain of 234 using Gd-DOTA at 20 K, which is significantly better performance than previously reported at high fields (>3 T). PMID:22975246
Spin-mapping of Coal Structures with ESE and ENDOR
DOE R&D Accomplishments Database
Belford, R. L.; Clarkson, R. B.
1989-12-01
The broad goals of this project are to determine by nondestructive magnetic resonance methods chemical and physical structural characteristics of organic parts of native and treated coals. In this project period, we have begun to explore a technique which promises to enable us to follow to course of coal cleaning processes with microscopic spatial resolution. For the past five years, our laboratory has worked on extensions of the EPR technique as applied to coal to address these analytical problems. In this report we (1) describe the world's first nuclear magnetic resonance imaging results from an Illinois {number sign}6 coal and (2) transmit a manuscript describing how organic sulfur affect the very-high-frequency EPR spectra of coals. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a non-destructive technique that has found wide medical application as a means of visualizing the interior of human bodies. We have used MRI techniques to study the diffusion of an organic solvent (DMSO) into the pores of Illinois {number sign}6 coal. Proton MRI images reveal that this solvent at room temperature does not penetrate approximately 30% of the coal volume. Regions of the coal that exclude solvent could be related to inertinite and mineral components. A multi-technique imaging program is contemplated.
Küppers, Gabriela Cristina
2014-08-01
The present work describes the morphology and infraciliature of a new hypotrichous ciliate, Clapsiella magnifica gen. n., sp. n., found in rewetted soil from a temporal pond in Argentina. It was studied by means of live observation and protargol impregnation. Its main diagnostic features are: Flexible hypotrich measuring 250-320 μm × 70-140 μm in vivo; two macronuclear nodules and 4-6 micronuclei. Single contractile vacuole. Cytoplasm transparent, cortical granules absent. Somatic ciliature composed of a tricorona of cirri, three buccal(?) cirri, 6-9 ventral rows, 3-5 right marginal(?) rows, one left marginal row, and 12-17 transverse cirri. Dorsal pattern rather complicated, with about 14 kineties and kinety fragments, with scattered kinetids among them; 17-28 caudal cirri arranged in three rows on dorsal kineties 1, 3, and 7. Remarkably, dorsal kinetids have two or four basal bodies, bearing a stiff bristle arising from left anterior basal body. Adoral zone composed of 70-92 membranelles, occupying about 40% of body length in protargol preparations; paroral and endoral curved, resembling a cyrtohymenid pattern. The peculiar dorsal ciliary arrangement and the unique combination of other characters require the establishment of a new genus for this new species, which is considered incertae sedis in the Hypotricha but possibly related to the oxytrichids. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Eachus, R. S.; Pawlik, Th D.; Baetzold, R. C.
2000-10-01
By using a combination of multifrequency EPR spectroscopy, ENDOR spectroscopy and calculations of structure and energy, the reactivities of photo-generated holes in microcrystalline AgBr and AgCl dispersions (photographic emulsions) have been followed in detail. Progress has been facilitated by the use of both gelatin and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) as peptizers. The initial trapped hole centres produced by band-gap excitation have been identified. In AgBr, this species is [(Br4)3-.V], a neutral complex formed from hole trapping by the four nearest neighbours of a surface Ag+ vacancy (=V). [(Br4)3-.V] reacts with gelatin to produce a transient organic radical at the grain's surface. It does not, however, react with PVA. The formation of the oxidized gelatin radical might involve atomic bromine as an intermediate. In AgCl, the well-known self-trapped hole centre (AgCl6)4- is the initial hole species. The hole diffuses by an electron exchange process until it is trapped by a silver ion on the grain's surface or within its penultimate layer of lattice ions. It is subsequently released from this Ag2+ site to be retrapped at a centre containing four equivalent Cl- ions. The precise identity of this defect has yet to be determined, but its decay also results in the oxidation of gelatin.
Tocotrienols: A Family of Molecules with Specific Biological Activities
Comitato, Raffaella; Ambra, Roberto
2017-01-01
Vitamin E is a generic term frequently used to group together eight different molecules, namely: α-, β-, γ- and δ-tocopherol and the corresponding tocotrienols. The term tocopherol and eventually Vitamin E and its related activity was originally based on the capacity of countering foetal re-absorption in deficient rodents or the development of encephalomalacia in chickens. In humans, Vitamin E activity is generally considered to be solely related to the antioxidant properties of the tocolic chemical structure. In recent years, several reports have shown that specific activities exist for each different tocotrienol form. In this short review, tocotrienol ability to inhibit cancer cell growth and induce apoptosis thanks to specific mechanisms, not shared by tocopherols, such as the binding to Estrogen Receptor-β (ERβ) and the triggering of endoplasmic reticulum (EndoR) stress will be described. The neuroprotective activity will also be presented and discussed. We propose that available studies strongly indicate that specific forms of tocotrienols have a distinct mechanism and biological activity, significantly different from tocopherol and more specifically from α-tocopherol. We therefore suggest not pooling them together within the broad term “Vitamin E” on solely the basis of their putative antioxidant properties. This option implies obvious consequences in the assessment of dietary Vitamin E adequacy and, probably more importantly, on the possibility of evaluating a separate biological variable, determinant in the relationship between diet and health. PMID:29156559
Characterization of an Fe≡N–NH 2 intermediate relevant to catalytic N 2 reduction to NH 3
Anderson, John S.; Cutsail, III, George E.; Rittle, Jonathan; ...
2015-05-22
The ability of certain transition metals to mediate the reduction of N 2 to NH 3 has attracted broad interest in the biological and inorganic chemistry communities. Early transition metals such as Mo and W readily bind N 2 and mediate its protonation at one or more N atoms to furnish M(N xH y) species that can be characterized and, in turn, extrude NH 3. By contrast, the direct protonation of Fe–N 2 species to Fe(N xH y) products that can be characterized has been elusive. In this paper, we show that addition of acid at low temperature to [(TPB)Fe(Nmore » 2)][Na(12-crown-4)] results in a new S = 1/2 Fe species. EPR, ENDOR, Mössbauer, and EXAFS analysis, coupled with a DFT study, unequivocally assign this new species as [(TPB)Fe≡N–NH 2] +, a doubly protonated hydrazido(2–) complex featuring an Fe-to-N triple bond. This unstable species offers strong evidence that the first steps in Fe-mediated nitrogen reduction by [(TPB)Fe(N 2)][Na(12-crown-4)] can proceed along a distal or “Chatt-type” pathway. Finally, a brief discussion of whether subsequent catalytic steps may involve early or late stage cleavage of the N–N bond, as would be found in limiting distal or alternating mechanisms, respectively, is also provided.« less
Jåstad, Eirik O; Torheim, Turid; Villeneuve, Kathleen M; Kvaal, Knut; Hole, Eli O; Sagstuen, Einar; Malinen, Eirik; Futsaether, Cecilia M
2017-09-28
The amino acid l-α-alanine is the most commonly used material for solid-state electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) dosimetry, due to the formation of highly stable radicals upon irradiation, with yields proportional to the radiation dose. Two major alanine radical components designated R1 and R2 have previously been uniquely characterized from EPR and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) studies as well as from quantum chemical calculations. There is also convincing experimental evidence of a third minor radical component R3, and a tentative radical structure has been suggested, even though no well-defined spectral signature has been observed experimentally. In the present study, temperature dependent EPR spectra of X-ray irradiated polycrystalline alanine were analyzed using five multivariate methods in further attempts to understand the composite nature of the alanine dosimeter EPR spectrum. Principal component analysis (PCA), maximum likelihood common factor analysis (MLCFA), independent component analysis (ICA), self-modeling mixture analysis (SMA), and multivariate curve resolution (MCR) were used to extract pure radical spectra and their fractional contributions from the experimental EPR spectra. All methods yielded spectral estimates resembling the established R1 spectrum. Furthermore, SMA and MCR consistently predicted both the established R2 spectrum and the shape of the R3 spectrum. The predicted shape of the R3 spectrum corresponded well with the proposed tentative spectrum derived from spectrum simulations. Thus, results from two independent multivariate data analysis techniques strongly support the previous evidence that three radicals are indeed present in irradiated alanine samples.
COMPARATIVE ASSESSMENT OF THE COMPOSITION AND CHARGE STATE OF NITROGENASE FeMo-COFACTOR
Harris, Travis V.; Szilagyi, Robert K.
2011-01-01
A significant limitation in our understanding of the molecular mechanism of biological nitrogen fixation is the uncertain composition of the FeMo-cofactor (FeMo-co) of nitrogenase. In this study we present a systematic, density functional theory-based evaluation of spin coupling schemes, iron oxidation states, ligand protonation states, and interstitial ligand composition using a wide range of experimental criteria. The employed functionals and basis sets were validated with molecular orbital information from X-ray absorption spectroscopic data of relevant iron-sulfur clusters. Independently from the employed level of theory, the electronic structure with the greatest number of antiferromagnetic interactions corresponds to the lowest energy state for a given charge and oxidation state distribution of the iron ions. The relative spin state energies of resting and oxidized FeMo-co already allowed the exclusion of certain iron oxidation state distributions and interstitial ligand compositions. Geometry optimized FeMo-co structures of several models further eliminated additional states and compositions, while reduction potentials indicated a strong preference for the most likely charge state of FeMo-co. Mössbauer and ENDOR parameter calculations were found to be remarkably dependent on the employed training set, density functional and basis set. Overall, we found that a more oxidized [MoIV-2FeII-5FeIII-9S2−-C4−] composition with a hydroxyl-protonated homocitrate ligand satisfies all of the available experimental criteria, and is thus favored over the currently preferred composition of [MoIV-4FeII-3FeIII-9S2−-N3−] from the literature. PMID:21545160
Increasing sensitivity of pulse EPR experiments using echo train detection schemes.
Mentink-Vigier, F; Collauto, A; Feintuch, A; Kaminker, I; Tarle, V; Goldfarb, D
2013-11-01
Modern pulse EPR experiments are routinely used to study the structural features of paramagnetic centers. They are usually performed at low temperatures, where relaxation times are long and polarization is high, to achieve a sufficient Signal/Noise Ratio (SNR). However, when working with samples whose amount and/or concentration are limited, sensitivity becomes an issue and therefore measurements may require a significant accumulation time, up to 12h or more. As the detection scheme of practically all pulse EPR sequences is based on the integration of a spin echo--either primary, stimulated or refocused--a considerable increase in SNR can be obtained by replacing the single echo detection scheme by a train of echoes. All these echoes, generated by Carr-Purcell type sequences, are integrated and summed together to improve the SNR. This scheme is commonly used in NMR and here we demonstrate its applicability to a number of frequently used pulse EPR experiments: Echo-Detected EPR, Davies and Mims ENDOR (Electron-Nuclear Double Resonance), DEER (Electron-Electron Double Resonance|) and EDNMR (Electron-Electron Double Resonance (ELDOR)-Detected NMR), which were combined with a Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill (CPMG) type detection scheme at W-band. By collecting the transient signal and integrating a number of refocused echoes, this detection scheme yielded a 1.6-5 folds SNR improvement, depending on the paramagnetic center and the pulse sequence applied. This improvement is achieved while keeping the experimental time constant and it does not introduce signal distortion. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Rodriguez-Pascua, M. A.; Bischoff, J.; Garduno-Monroy, Victor H.; Pérez-López, R.; Giner-Robles, J.L.; Israde-Alcántara, I.; Calvo, J.P.; Williams, Ross W.
2009-01-01
The Quaternary lacustrine basin of Cordovilla (CB) represents one of the most active tectonic areas of the Prebetic Zone (Albacete, SE of Spain). The Quaternary sedimentary deposits of this basin are mainly endoreic lacustrine carbonate and alluvial deposits, developed in a semi-arid climate (Pleistocene-present). The basin is a NW-SE-elongated graben bounded by a major right-lateral oblique-fault, the Pozohondo Fault. This fault trends NW-SE, with an approximate trace of 55 km, and is composed of various segments which are identified by fault scarps. In order to establish the slip-rate of the most active segment of the Pozohondo Fault, called the Cordovilla segment, we carried out a detailed study of the affected Quaternary lacustrine deposits. We found that the lacustrine facies could be related to episodic moderate paleoearthquakes. The slip-rate is calculated to be 0.05 and 0.09 mm/yr, using radiometric dating for the vertical offsets of the lacustrine facies. A trenching study at the northern part of the Cordovilla segment revealed two events caused by paleoearthquakes, with the most recent expressed as an oblique-fault off-setting a poorly-developed soil. The magnitude of the last event was greater than 6, using various empirical relationships for the fault displacement and the surface-length rupture. We estimate episodic activity across the Cordovilla segment, to be characterized by moderate-sized paleoearthquakes (M6), which is in agreement with the tectonic context of an intraplate zone of the Iberian plate. ?? 2009 Elsevier B.V.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Schneider, Glenn; Gaspar, Andras; Grady, Carol A.
We present new Hubble Space Telescope observations of three a priori known starlight-scattering circumstellar debris systems (CDSs) viewed at intermediate inclinations around nearby close-solar analog stars: HD 207129, HD 202628, and HD 202917. Each of these CDSs possesses ring-like components that are more massive analogs of our solar system's Edgeworth–Kuiper Belt. These systems were chosen for follow-up observations to provide imaging with higher fidelity and better sensitivity for the sparse sample of solar-analog CDSs that range over two decades in systemic ages, with HD 202628 and HD 207129 (both ∼2.3 Gyr) currently the oldest CDSs imaged in visible or near-IRmore » light. These deep (10–14 ks) observations, made with six-roll point-spread-function template visible-light coronagraphy using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, were designed to better reveal their angularly large debris rings of diffuse/low surface brightness, and for all targets probe their exo-ring environments for starlight-scattering materials that present observational challenges for current ground-based facilities and instruments. Contemporaneously also observing with a narrower occulter position, these observations additionally probe the CDS endo-ring environments that are seen to be relatively devoid of scatterers. We discuss the morphological, geometrical, and photometric properties of these CDSs also in the context of other CDSs hosted by FGK stars that we have previously imaged as a homogeneously observed ensemble. From this combined sample we report a general decay in quiescent-disk F {sub disk}/ F {sub star} optical brightness ∼ t {sup −0.8}, similar to what is seen at thermal IR wavelengths, and CDSs with a significant diversity in scattering phase asymmetries, and spatial distributions of their starlight-scattering grains.« less
Deep HST/STIS Visible-Light Imaging of Debris Systems Around Solar Analog Hosts
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Schneider, Glenn; Grady, Carol A.; Stark, Christopher C.; Gaspar, Andras; Carson, Joseph; Debes, John H.; Henning, Thomas; Hines, Dean C.; Jang-Condell, Hannah; Kuchner, Marc J.
2016-01-01
We present new Hubble Space Telescope observations of three a priori known starlight-scattering circumstellar debris systems (CDSs) viewed at intermediate inclinations around nearby close-solar analog stars: HD 207129, HD202628, and HD 202917. Each of these CDSs possesses ring-like components that are more massive analogs of our solar systems Edgeworth Kuiper Belt. These systems were chosen for follow-up observations to provide imaging with higher fidelity and better sensitivity for the sparse sample of solar-analog CDSs that range over two decades in systemic ages, with HD 202628 and HD 207129 (both approx. 2.3 Gyr) currently the oldest CDSs imaged in visible or near-IR light. These deep (10-14 ks) observations, made with six-roll point-spread-function template visible-light coronagraphy using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, were designed to better reveal their angularly large debris rings of diffuse low surface brightness, and for all targets probe their exo-ring environments for starlight-scattering materials that present observational challenges for current ground-based facilities and instruments. Contemporaneously also observing with a narrower occulter position, these observations additionally probe the CDS endo-ring environments that are seen to be relatively devoid of scatterers. We discuss the morphological, geometrical, and photometric properties of these CDSs also in the context of other CDSs hosted by FGK stars that we have previously imaged as a homogeneously observed ensemble. From this combined sample we report a general decay in quiescent-disk F disk /F star optical brightness approx. t( exp.-0.8), similar to what is seen at thermal IR wavelengths, and CDSs with a significant diversity in scattering phase asymmetries, and spatial distributions of their starlight-scattering grains.
Lukoyanov, Dmitriy; Khadka, Nimesh; Yang, Zhi-Yong; Dean, Dennis R; Seefeldt, Lance C; Hoffman, Brian M
2016-02-03
We recently demonstrated that N2 reduction by nitrogenase involves the obligatory release of one H2 per N2 reduced. These studies focus on the E4(4H) "Janus intermediate", which has accumulated four reducing equivalents as two [Fe-H-Fe] bridging hydrides. E4(4H) is poised to bind and reduce N2 through reductive elimination (re) of the two hydrides as H2, coupled to the binding/reduction of N2. To obtain atomic-level details of the re activation process, we carried out in situ 450 nm photolysis of E4(4H) in an EPR cavity at temperatures below 20 K. ENDOR and EPR measurements show that photolysis generates a new FeMo-co state, denoted E4(2H)*, through the photoinduced re of the two bridging hydrides of E4(4H) as H2. During cryoannealing at temperatures above 175 K, E4(2H)* reverts to E4(4H) through the oxidative addition (oa) of the H2. The photolysis quantum yield is temperature invariant at liquid helium temperatures and shows a rather large kinetic isotope effect, KIE = 10. These observations imply that photoinduced release of H2 involves a barrier to the combination of the two nascent H atoms, in contrast to a barrierless process for monometallic inorganic complexes, and further suggest that H2 formation involves nuclear tunneling through that barrier. The oa recombination of E4(2H)* with the liberated H2 offers compelling evidence for the Janus intermediate as the point at which H2 is necessarily lost during N2 reduction; this mechanistically coupled loss must be gated by N2 addition that drives the re/oa equilibrium toward reductive elimination of H2 with N2 binding/reduction.
EPR/ENDOR and Theoretical Study of the Jahn-Teller-Active [HIPTN3N]MoVL Complexes (L = N-, NH).
Sharma, Ajay; Roemelt, Michael; Reithofer, Michael; Schrock, Richard R; Hoffman, Brian M; Neese, Frank
2017-06-19
The molybdenum trisamidoamine (TAA) complex [Mo] {[3,5-(2,4,6-i-Pr 3 C 6 H 2 ) 2 C 6 H 3 NCH 2 CH 2 N]Mo} carries out catalytic reduction of N 2 to ammonia (NH 3 ) by protons and electrons at room temperature. A key intermediate in the proposed [Mo] nitrogen reduction cycle is nitridomolybdenum(VI), [Mo(VI)]N. The addition of [e - /H + ] to [Mo(VI)]N to generate [Mo(V)]NH might, in principle, follow one of three possible pathways: direct proton-coupled electron transfer; H + first and then e - ; e - and then H + . In this study, the paramagnetic Mo(V) intermediate {[Mo]N} - and the [Mo]NH transfer product were generated by irradiating the diamagnetic [Mo]N and {[Mo]NH} + Mo(VI) complexes, respectively, with γ-rays at 77 K, and their electronic and geometric structures were characterized by electron paramagnetic resonance and electron nuclear double resonance spectroscopies, combined with quantum-chemical computations. In combination with previous X-ray studies, this creates the rare situation in which each one of the four possible states of [e - /H + ] delivery has been characterized. Because of the degeneracy of the electronic ground states of both {[Mo(V)]N} - and [Mo(V)]NH, only multireference-based methods such as the complete active-space self-consistent field (CASSCF) and related methods provide a qualitatively correct description of the electronic ground state and vibronic coupling. The molecular g values of {[Mo]N} - and [Mo]NH exhibit large deviations from the free-electron value g e . Their actual values reflect the relative strengths of vibronic and spin-orbit coupling. In the course of the computational treatment, the utility and limitations of a formal two-state model that describes this competition between couplings are illustrated, and the implications of our results for the chemical reactivity of these states are discussed.
Shaw, Sudipta; Lukoyanov, Dmitriy; Danyal, Karamatullah; Dean, Dennis R; Hoffman, Brian M; Seefeldt, Lance C
2014-09-10
Investigations of reduction of nitrite (NO2(-)) to ammonia (NH3) by nitrogenase indicate a limiting stoichiometry, NO2(-) + 6e(-) + 12ATP + 7H(+) → NH3 + 2H2O + 12ADP + 12Pi. Two intermediates freeze-trapped during NO2(-) turnover by nitrogenase variants and investigated by Q-band ENDOR/ESEEM are identical to states, denoted H and I, formed on the pathway of N2 reduction. The proposed NO2(-) reduction intermediate hydroxylamine (NH2OH) is a nitrogenase substrate for which the H and I reduction intermediates also can be trapped. Viewing N2 and NO2(-) reductions in light of their common reduction intermediates and of NO2(-) reduction by multiheme cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNIR) leads us to propose that NO2(-) reduction by nitrogenase begins with the generation of NO2H bound to a state in which the active-site FeMo-co (M) has accumulated two [e(-)/H(+)] (E2), stored as a (bridging) hydride and proton. Proton transfer to NO2H and H2O loss leaves M-[NO(+)]; transfer of the E2 hydride to the [NO(+)] directly to form HNO bound to FeMo-co is one of two alternative means for avoiding formation of a terminal M-[NO] thermodynamic "sink". The N2 and NO2(-) reduction pathways converge upon reduction of NH2NH2 and NH2OH bound states to form state H with [-NH2] bound to M. Final reduction converts H to I, with NH3 bound to M. The results presented here, combined with the parallels with ccNIR, support a N2 fixation mechanism in which liberation of the first NH3 occurs upon delivery of five [e(-)/H(+)] to N2, but a total of seven [e(-)/H(+)] to FeMo-co when obligate H2 evolution is considered, and not earlier in the reduction process.
2015-01-01
Ribonucleotide reductases (RNRs) catalyze the conversion of ribonucleotides to deoxyribonucleotides in all organisms. In all Class Ia RNRs, initiation of nucleotide diphosphate (NDP) reduction requires a reversible oxidation over 35 Å by a tyrosyl radical (Y122•, Escherichia coli) in subunit β of a cysteine (C439) in the active site of subunit α. This radical transfer (RT) occurs by a specific pathway involving redox active tyrosines (Y122 ⇆ Y356 in β to Y731 ⇆ Y730 ⇆ C439 in α); each oxidation necessitates loss of a proton coupled to loss of an electron (PCET). To study these steps, 3-aminotyrosine was site-specifically incorporated in place of Y356-β, Y731- and Y730-α, and each protein was incubated with the appropriate second subunit β(α), CDP and effector ATP to trap an amino tyrosyl radical (NH2Y•) in the active α2β2 complex. High-frequency (263 GHz) pulse electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) of the NH2Y•s reported the gx values with unprecedented resolution and revealed strong electrostatic effects caused by the protein environment. 2H electron–nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy accompanied by quantum chemical calculations provided spectroscopic evidence for hydrogen bond interactions at the radical sites, i.e., two exchangeable H bonds to NH2Y730•, one to NH2Y731• and none to NH2Y356•. Similar experiments with double mutants α-NH2Y730/C439A and α-NH2Y731/Y730F allowed assignment of the H bonding partner(s) to a pathway residue(s) providing direct evidence for colinear PCET within α. The implications of these observations for the PCET process within α and at the interface are discussed. PMID:25516424
Lohman, Gregory J S; Gerfen, Gary J; Stubbe, Joanne
2010-02-23
Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR, 76 kDa) from Lactobacillus leichmannii is a class II RNR that requires adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl) as a cofactor. It catalyzes the conversion of nucleoside triphosphates to deoxynucleotides and is 100% inactivated by 1 equiv of 2',2'-difluoro-2'-deoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate (F(2)CTP) in <2 min. Sephadex G-50 chromatography of the inactivation reaction mixture for 2 min revealed that 0.47 equiv of a sugar moiety is covalently bound to RNR and 0.25 equiv of a cobalt(III) corrin is tightly associated, likely through a covalent interaction with C(419) (Co-S) in the active site of RNR [Lohman, G. J. S., and Stubbe, J. (2010) Biochemistry 49, DOI: 10.1021/bi902132u ]. After 1 h, a similar experiment revealed 0.45 equiv of the Co-S adduct associated with the protein. Thus, at least two pathways are associated with RNR inactivation: one associated with alkylation by the sugar of F(2)CTP and the second with AdoCbl destruction. To determine the fate of [1'-(3)H]F(2)CTP in the latter pathway, the reaction mixture at 2 min was reduced with NaBH(4) (NaB(2)H(4)) and the protein separated from the small molecules using a centrifugation device. The small molecules were dephosphorylated and analyzed by HPLC to reveal 0.25 equiv of a stereoisomer of cytidine, characterized by mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy, indicating the trapped nucleotide had lost both of its fluorides and gained an oxygen. High-field ENDOR studies with [1'-(2)H]F(2)CTP from the reaction quenched at 30 s revealed a radical that is nucleotide-based. The relationship between this radical and the trapped cytidine analogue provides insight into the nonalkylative pathway for RNR inactivation relative to the alkylative pathway.
Salna, Bridget; Benabbas, Abdelkrim; Russo, Douglas; Champion, Paul M
2017-07-20
A proper description of proton donor-acceptor (D-A) distance fluctuations is crucial for understanding tunneling in proton-coupled electron transport (PCET). The typical harmonic approximation for the D-A potential results in a Gaussian probability distribution, which does not appropriately reflect the electronic repulsion forces that increase the energetic cost of sampling shorter D-A distances. Because these shorter distances are the primary channel for thermally activated tunneling, the analysis of tunneling kinetics depends sensitively on the inherently anharmonic nature of the D-A interaction. Thus, we have used quantum chemical calculations to account for the D-A interaction and developed an improved model for the analysis of experimental tunneling kinetics. Strong internal electric fields are also considered and found to contribute significantly to the compressive forces when the D-A distance distribution is positioned below the van der Waals contact distance. This model is applied to recent experiments on the wild type (WT) and a double mutant (DM) of soybean lipoxygenase-1 (SLO). The compressive force necessary to prepare the tunneling-active distribution in WT SLO is found to fall in the ∼ nN range, which greatly exceeds the measured values of molecular motor and protein unfolding forces. This indicates that ∼60-100 MV/cm electric fields, aligned along the D-A bond axis, must be generated by an enzyme conformational interconversion that facilitates the PCET tunneling reaction. Based on the absolute value of the measured tunneling rate, and using previously calculated values of the electronic matrix element, the population of this tunneling-active conformation is found to lie in the range 10 -5 -10 -7 , indicating this is a rare structural fluctuation that falls well below the detection threshold of recent ENDOR experiments. Additional analysis of the DM tunneling kinetics leads to a proposal that a disordered (high entropy) conformation could be tunneling-active due to its broad range of sampled D-A distances.
Role of the Muon in Semiconductor Research
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mengyan, Rick (P. W.)
Muons are used in semiconductor research as an experimentally accessible analog to the isolated Hydrogen (H) impurity - a complex that is very difficult (or impossible) to study by other means. Hydrogen impurities of any concentration can modify the electrical, optical or magnetic properties of the host. For instance, H can be incorporated to remove electrically active levels from the energy gap (i.e. passivation) while some can form isolated centers that tend to be responsible for the trap and release of charge carriers and participate in site and charge-state dynamics which certainly affect the electrical properties of the host. Therefore, it can be quite useful to characterize these impurities in semiconducting materials that are of interest for use in devices. A muon has the same charge and spin as a proton but a mass that is nine times lighter. When implanted in a target material, a positively charged muon can behave as a light proton or bind with an electron to form a complex known as Muonium (Mu) with properties that are very similar to that of ionic or neutral H, respectively. A result of these similarities and direct non-destructive implantation is that Mu provides a direct measure of local electronic structure, thermal stability and charge-state transitions of these impurity centers. Since any material can be subjected to muon implantation and it is the muons themselves that mimic the H impurity centers, these measurements do not depend (at all) on the host's solubility of hydrogen nor do they require some minimum concentration; unlike many other techniques, such as EPR, ENDOR, NMR, or IR vibrational spectroscopy. Here we summarize major contributions muons have made to the field of semiconductor research followed by a few case studies to demonstrate the technique and detailed knowledge of the physical and electronic structures as well as dynamics (e.g.: charge-state and site transitions; local motion; long-range diffusion) of Mu/H that can be obtained.
Horitani, Masaki; Byer, Amanda S; Shisler, Krista A; Chandra, Tilak; Broderick, Joan B; Hoffman, Brian M
2015-06-10
Lysine 2,3-aminomutase (LAM) is a radical S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) enzyme and, like other members of this superfamily, LAM utilizes radical-generating machinery comprising SAM anchored to the unique Fe of a [4Fe-4S] cluster via a classical five-membered N,O chelate ring. Catalysis is initiated by reductive cleavage of the SAM S-C5' bond, which creates the highly reactive 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical (5'-dAdo•), the same radical generated by homolytic Co-C bond cleavage in B12 radical enzymes. The SAM surrogate S-3',4'-anhydroadenosyl-L-methionine (anSAM) can replace SAM as a cofactor in the isomerization of L-α-lysine to L-β-lysine by LAM, via the stable allylic anhydroadenosyl radical (anAdo•). Here electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy of the anAdo• radical in the presence of (13)C, (2)H, and (15)N-labeled lysine completes the picture of how the active site of LAM from Clostridium subterminale SB4 "tames" the 5'-dAdo• radical, preventing it from carrying out harmful side reactions: this "free radical" in LAM is never free. The low steric demands of the radical-generating [4Fe-4S]/SAM construct allow the substrate target to bind adjacent to the S-C5' bond, thereby enabling the 5'-dAdo• radical created by cleavage of this bond to react with its partners by undergoing small motions, ∼0.6 Å toward the target and ∼1.5 Å overall, that are controlled by tight van der Waals contact with its partners. We suggest that the accessibility to substrate and ready control of the reactive C5' radical, with "van der Waals control" of small motions throughout the catalytic cycle, is common within the radical SAM enzyme superfamily and is a major reason why these enzymes are the preferred means of initiating radical reactions in nature.
Huffman, David L; Huyett, Jennifer; Outten, F Wayne; Doan, Peter E; Finney, Lydia A; Hoffman, Brian M; O'Halloran, Thomas V
2002-08-06
The plasmid-encoded pco copper resistance operon in Escherichia coli consists of seven genes that are expressed from two pco promoters in response to elevated copper; however, little is known about how they mediate resistance to excess environmental copper. Two of the genes encode the soluble periplasmic proteins PcoA and PcoC. We show here that inactivation of PcoC, and PcoA to a lesser extent, causes cells to become more sensitive to copper than wild-type nonresistant strains, consistent with a tightly coupled detoxification pathway. Periplasmic extracts show copper-inducible oxidase activity, attributed to the multicopper oxidase function of PcoA. PcoC, a much smaller protein than PcoA, binds one Cu(II) and exhibits a weak electronic transition characteristic of a type II copper center. ENDOR and ESEEM spectroscopy of Cu(II)-PcoC and the (15)N- and Met-CD(3)-labeled samples are consistent with a tetragonal ligand environment of three nitrogens and one aqua ligand "in the plane". A weakly associated S-Met and aqua are likely axial ligands. At least one N is a histidine and is likely trans to the in-plane aqua ligand. The copper chemistry of PcoC and the oxidase function of PcoA are consistent with the emerging picture of the chromosomally encoded copper homeostasis apparatus in the E. coli cell envelope [Outten, F. W., Huffman, D. L., Hale, J. A., and O'Halloran, T. V. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 30670-30677]. We propose a model for the plasmid system in which Cu(I)-PcoC functions in this copper efflux pathway as a periplasmic copper binding protein that docks with the multiple repeats of Met-rich domains in PcoA to effect oxidation of Cu(I) to the less toxic Cu(II) form. The solvent accessibility of the Cu(II) in PcoC may allow for metal transfer to other plasmid and chromosomal factors and thus facilitate removal of Cu(II) from the cell envelope.
Horitani, Masaki; Byer, Amanda S.; Shisler, Krista A.; Chandra, Tilak; Broderick, Joan B.; Hoffman, Brian M.
2015-01-01
Lysine 2,3-aminomutase (LAM) is a radical S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) enzyme and, like other members of this superfamily, LAM utilizes radical-generating machinery comprising SAM anchored to the unique Fe of a [4Fe-4S] cluster via a classical five-membered N,O chelate ring. Catalysis is initiated by reductive cleavage of the SAM S–C5′ bond, which creates the highly reactive 5′-deoxyadenosyl radical (5′-dAdo•), the same radical generated by homolytic Co–C bond cleavage in B12 radical enzymes. The SAM surrogate S-3′,4′-anhydroadenosyl-L-methionine (anSAM) can replace SAM as a cofactor in the isomerization of L-α-lysine to L-β-lysine by LAM, via the stable allylic anhydroadenosyl radical (anAdo•). Here electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy of the anAdo• radical in the presence of 13C, 2H, and 15N-labeled lysine completes the picture of how the active site of LAM from Clostridium subterminale SB4 “tames” the 5′-dAdo• radical, preventing it from carrying out harmful side reactions: this “free radical” in LAM is never free. The low steric demands of the radical-generating [4Fe-4S]/SAM construct allow the substrate target to bind adjacent to the S–C5′ bond, thereby enabling the 5′-dAdo• radical created by cleavage of this bond to react with its partners by undergoing small motions, ~0.6 Å toward the target and ~1.5 Å overall, that are controlled by tight van der Waals contact with its partners. We suggest that the accessibility to substrate and ready control of the reactive C5′ radical, with “van der Waals control” of small motions throughout the catalytic cycle, is common within the radical SAM enzyme superfamily and is a major reason why these enzymes are the preferred means of initiating radical reactions in nature. PMID:25923449
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Di Valentin, M.; Salvadori, E.; Barone, V.; Carbonera, D.
2013-10-01
Advanced electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques, in combination with Density Functional theory (DFT), have been applied to the comparative study of carotenoid triplet states in two major photosynthetic antenna complexes, the Peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein of dinoflagellates and the light-harvesting complex II of higher plants. Carotenoid triplet states are populated by triplet-triplet energy transfer (TTET) from chlorophyll molecules to photoprotect the system from singlet oxygen formation under light-stress conditions. The TTET process is strongly dependent on the relative arrangement and on the electronic properties of the triplet states involved. The proposed spectroscopic approach exploits the concept of spin conservation during TTET, which leads to recognisable spin polarisation effects in the time-resolved and field-swept echo-detected EPR spectra. The electron spin polarisation produced at the carotenoid acceptor site depends on the initial polarisation of the chlorophyll donor and on the relative geometrical arrangement of the donor-acceptor zero-field splitting axes. We have demonstrated that a proper analysis of the spectra in the framework of spin angular momentum conservation allows to derive the pathways of TTET and to gain insight into the structural requirements of this mechanism for those antenna complexes, whose X-ray structure is available. We have further proved that this method, developed for natural antenna complexes of known X-ray structure, can be extended to systems lacking structural information in order to derive the relative arrangement of the partners in the energy transfer process. The structural requirements for efficient TTET, obtained from time-resolved and pulse EPR, have been complemented by a detailed description of the electronic structure of the carotenoid triplet state, provided by pulse Electron-Nuclear DOuble Resonance (ENDOR) experiments. Triplet-state hyperfine couplings of the α- and β-protons of the carotenoid conjugated chain have been assigned with the aid of quantum chemical calculation. DFT predictions of the electronic structure of the carotenoid triplet state, in terms of spin density distribution, frontier orbital description and orbital excitation represent suitable building blocks toward a deeper understanding of electronic requirements for efficient TTET.
Infrared, Raman and Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Study of SiO2:C Nanopowders.
Savchenko, Dariya; Vorliček, Vladimir; Kalabukhova, Ekaterina; Sitnikov, Aleksandr; Vasin, Andrii; Kysil, Dmytro; Sevostianov, Stanislav; Tertykh, Valentyn; Nazarov, Alexei
2017-12-01
Optical and magnetic properties of SiO 2 :C nanopowders obtained by chemical and thermal modification of fumed silica were studied by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Raman, continuous wave (CW) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), echo-detected EPR and pulsed electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) spectroscopy. Two overlapping signals of Lorentzian lineshape were detected in CW EPR spectra of the initial SiO 2 :C. The EPR signal at g = 2.0055(3) is due to the silicon dangling bonds, which vanishes after thermal annealing, and the second EPR signal at g = 2.0033(3) was attributed to the carbon-related defect (CRD). The annealing of the SiO 2 :C samples gives rise to the increase of the CRD spin density and shift to the higher g-values due to the appearance of the oxygen in the vicinity of the CRD. Based on the temperature-dependent behavior of the CRD EPR signal intensity, linewidth and resonance field position we have attributed it to the spin system with non-localized electrons hopping between neighboring carbon dangling bonds, which undergo a strong exchange interaction with a localized spin system of carbon nanodots. The observed motional narrowing of the CRD EPR signal in the temperature interval from 4 to 20 K indicates that electrons are mobile at 4 K which can be explained by a quantum character of the conductivity in the vicinity of the carbon layer. The electrons trapped in quantum wells move from one carbon nanodot to another by hopping process through the energy barrier. The fact that echo-detected EPR signal at g = 2.0035(3) was observed in SiO 2 :C sample annealed at T ann ≥ 700 °C serves as evidence that non-localized electrons coexist with localized electrons that have the superhyperfine interaction with surrounding 13 C and 29 Si nuclei located at the SiO 2 :C interface. The presence of the superhyperfine interaction of CRD with 1 H nuclei indicates the existence of hydrogenated regions in SiO 2 :C sample.
Hsieh, Chung-Hung; Erdem, Ozlen F; Harman, Scott D; Singleton, Michael L; Reijerse, Edward; Lubitz, Wolfgang; Popescu, Codrina V; Reibenspies, Joseph H; Brothers, Scott M; Hall, Michael B; Darensbourg, Marcetta Y
2012-08-08
The compounds of this study have yielded to complementary structural, spectroscopic (Mössbauer, EPR/ENDOR, IR), and computational probes that illustrate the fine control of electronic and steric features that are involved in the two structural forms of (μ-SRS)[Fe(CO)2PMe3]2(0,+) complexes. The installation of bridgehead bulk in the -SCH2CR2CH2S- dithiolate (R = Me, Et) model complexes produces 6-membered FeS2C3 cyclohexane-type rings that produce substantial distortions in Fe(I)Fe(I) precursors. Both the innocent (Fc(+)) and the noninnocent or incipient (NO(+)/CO exchange) oxidations result in complexes with inequivalent iron centers in contrast to the Fe(I)Fe(I) derivatives. In the Fe(II)Fe(I) complexes of S = 1/2, there is complete inversion of one square pyramid relative to the other with strong super hyperfine coupling to one PMe3 and weak SHFC to the other. Remarkably, diamagnetic complexes deriving from isoelectronic replacement of CO by NO(+), {(μ-SRS)[Fe(CO)2PMe3] [Fe(CO)(NO)PMe3](+)}, are also rotated and exist in only one isomeric form with the -SCH2CR2CH2S- dithiolates, in contrast to R = H ( Olsen , M. T. ; Bruschi , M. ; De Gioia , L. ; Rauchfuss , T. B. ; Wilson , S. R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008 , 130 , 12021 -12030 ). The results and redox levels determined from the extensive spectroscopic analyses have been corroborated by gas-phase DFT calculations, with the primary spin density either localized on the rotated iron in the case of the S = 1/2 compound, or delocalized over the {Fe(NO)} unit in the S = 0 complex. In the latter case, the nitrosyl has effectively shifted electron density from the Fe(I)Fe(I) bond, repositioning it onto the spin coupled Fe-N-O unit such that steric repulsion is sufficient to induce the rotated structure in the Fe(II)-{Fe(I)((•)NO)}(8) derivatives.
Martin, Erik; Samoilova, Rimma I.; Narasimhulu, Kupala V.; Lin, Tzu-Jen; O’Malley, Patrick J.; Wraight, Colin A.; Dikanov, Sergei A.
2011-01-01
In the photosynthetic reaction center from Rhodobacter sphaeroides, the primary (QA) and secondary (QB) electron acceptors are both ubiquinone-10, but with very different properties and functions. To investigate the protein environment that imparts these functional differences, we have applied X-band HYSCORE, a 2D pulsed EPR technique, to characterize the exchangeable protons around the semiquinone (SQ) in the QA and QB sites, using samples of 15N-labeled reaction centers, with the native high spin Fe2+ exchanged for diamagnetic Zn2+, prepared in 1H2O and 2H2O solvent. The powder HYSCORE method is first validated against the orientation-selected Q-band ENDOR study of the QA SQ by Flores et al. (Biophys. J. 2007, 92, 671–682), with good agreement for two exchangeable protons with anisotropic hyperfine tensor components, T, both in the range 4.6–5.4 MHz. HYSCORE was then applied to the QB SQ where we found proton lines corresponding to T~5.2, 3.7 MHz and T~1.9 MHz. Density functional-based quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations, employing a model of the QB site, were used to assign the observed couplings to specific hydrogen bonding interactions with the QB SQ. These calculations allow us to assign the T=5.2 MHz proton to the His-L190 NδH…O4 (carbonyl) hydrogen bonding interaction. The T =3.7 MHz spectral feature most likely results from hydrogen bonding interactions of O1 (carbonyl) with both Gly-L225 peptide NH and Ser-L223 hydroxyl OH, which possess calculated couplings very close to this value. The smaller 1.9 MHz coupling is assigned to a weakly bound peptide NH proton of Ile-L224. The calculations performed with this structural model of the QB site show less asymmetric distribution of unpaired spin density over the SQ than seen for the QA site, consistent with available experimental data for 13C and 17O carbonyl hyperfine couplings. The implications of these interactions for QB function and comparisons with the QA site are discussed. PMID:21417328
Lukoyanov, Dmitriy; Khadka, Nimesh; Yang, Zhi-Yong; Dean, Dennis R; Seefeldt, Lance C; Hoffman, Brian M
2016-08-24
We proposed a reductive elimination/oxidative addition (re/oa) mechanism for reduction of N2 to 2NH3 by nitrogenase, based on identification of a freeze-trapped intermediate of the α-70(Val→Ile) MoFe protein as the Janus intermediate that stores four reducing equivalents on FeMo-co as two [Fe-H-Fe] bridging hydrides (denoted E4(4H)). The mechanism postulates that obligatory re of the hydrides as H2 drives reduction of N2 to a state (denoted E4(2N2H)) with a moiety at the diazene (HN═NH) reduction level bound to the catalytic FeMo-co. EPR/ENDOR/photophysical measurements on wild type (WT) MoFe protein now establish this mechanism. They show that a state freeze-trapped during N2 reduction by WT MoFe is the same Janus intermediate, thereby establishing the α-70(Val→Ile) intermediate as a reliable guide to mechanism. Monitoring the Janus state in WT MoFe during N2 reduction under mixed-isotope condition, H2O buffer/D2, and the converse, establishes that the bridging hydrides/deuterides do not exchange with solvent during enzymatic turnover, thereby solving longstanding puzzles. Relaxation of E4(2N2H) to the WT resting-state is shown to occur via oa of H2 and release of N2 to form Janus, followed by sequential release of two H2, demonstrating the kinetic reversibility of the re/oa equilibrium. Relative populations of E4(2N2H)/E4(4H) freeze-trapped during WT turnover furthermore show that the reversible re/oa equilibrium between [E4(4H) + N2] and [E4(2N2H) + H2] is ∼ thermoneutral (ΔreG(0) ∼ -2 kcal/mol), whereas, by itself, hydrogenation of N2(g) is highly endergonic. These findings demonstrate that (i) re/oa accounts for the historical Key Constraints on mechanism, (ii) that Janus is central to N2 reduction by WT enzyme, which (iii) indeed occurs via the re/oa mechanism. Thus, emerges a picture of the central mechanistic steps by which nitrogenase carries out one of the most challenging chemical transformations in biology.
Covalent Binding of Flavins to RnfG and RnfD in the Rnf Complex from Vibrio cholerae
Backiel, Julianne; Juárez, Oscar; Zagorevski, Dmitri V.; Wang, Zhenyu; Nilges, Mark J.; Barquera, Blanca
2009-01-01
Enzymes of the Rnf family are believed to be bacterial redox-driven ion pumps, coupling an oxidoreduction process to the translocation of Na+ across the cell membrane. Here we show for the first time that Rnf is a flavoprotein, with FMN covalently bound to threonine-175 in RnfG and a second flavin bound to threonine-187 in RnfD. Rnf subunits D and G are homologous to subunits B and C of Na+-NQR, respectively. Each of these Na+-NQR subunits includes a conserved S(T)GAT motif, with FMN covalently bound to the final threonine. RnfD and RnfG both contain the same motif, suggesting that they bind flavins in a similar way. In order to investigate this, the genes for RnfD and RnfG from Vibrio cholerae were cloned and expressed individually in that organism. In both cases the produced protein fluoresced under UV illumination on an SDS gel, further indicating the presence of flavin. However, analysis of the mutants RnfG-T175L, RnfD-T278L, and RnfD-T187V showed that RnfG-T175 and RnfD-T187 are the likely flavin ligands. This indicates that, in the case of RnfD, the flavin is bound, not to the SGAT sequence but to the final residues of a TMAT sequence, a novel variant of the flavin binding motif. In the case of RnfG, flavin analysis, followed by MALDI-TOF-TOF mass spectrometry, showed that an FMN is covalently attached to threonine-175, the final threonine of the S(T)GAT sequence. Studies by visible, EPR, and ENDOR spectroscopy showed that, upon partial reduction, the isolated RnfG produces a neutral semiquinone intermediate. The semiquinone species disappeared upon full reduction and was not observed in the denatured protein. A topological analysis combining reporter protein fusion and computer predictions indicated that the flavins in RnfG and RnfD are localized in the periplasmic space. In contrast, in NqrC and NqrB the flavins are located in a cytoplasmic loop. This topological analysis suggests that there may be mechanistic differences between the Rnf and Na+-NQR complexes. PMID:18831535
Niklas, Jens; Mardis, Kristy L.; Banks, Brian P.; Grooms, Gregory M.; Sperlich, Andreas; Dyakonov, Vladimir; Beaupré, Serge; Leclerc, Mario; Xu, Tao; Yu, Luping; Poluektov, Oleg G.
2016-01-01
The ongoing depletion of fossil fuels has led to an intensive search for additional renewable energy sources. Solar-based technologies could provide sufficient energy to satisfy the global economic demands in the near future. Photovoltaic (PV) cells are the most promising man-made devices for direct solar energy utilization. Understanding the charge separation and charge transport in PV materials at a molecular level is crucial for improving the efficiency of the solar cells. Here, we use light-induced EPR spectroscopy combined with DFT calculations to study the electronic structure of charge separated states in blends of polymers (P3HT, PCDTBT, and PTB7) and fullerene derivatives (C60-PCBM and C70-PCBM). Solar cells made with the same composites as active layers show power conversion efficiencies of 3.3% (P3HT), 6.1% (PCDTBT), and 7.3% (PTB7), respectively. Under illumination of these composites, two paramagnetic species are formed due to photo-induced electron transfer between the conjugated polymer and the fullerene. They are the positive, P+, and negative, P-, polarons on the polymer backbone and fullerene cage, respectively, and correspond to radical cations and radical anions. Using the high spectral resolution of high-frequency EPR (130 GHz), the EPR spectra of these species were resolved and principal components of the g-tensors were assigned. Light-induced pulsed ENDOR spectroscopy allowed the determination of 1H hyperfine coupling constants of photogenerated positive and negative polarons. The experimental results obtained for the different polymer-fullerene composites have been compared with DFT calculations, revealing that in all three systems the positive polaron is distributed over distances of 40 - 60 Å on the polymer chain. This corresponds to about 15 thiophene units for P3HT, approximately three units PCDTBT, and about three to four units for PTB7. No spin density delocalization between neighboring fullerene molecules was detected by EPR. Strong delocalization of the positive polaron on the polymer donor is an important reason for the efficient charge separation in bulk heterojunction systems as it minimizes the wasteful process of charge recombination. The combination of advanced EPR spectroscopy and DFT is a powerful approach for investigation of light-induced charge dynamics in organic photovoltaic materials. PMID:23670645
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hamann, N.; Mander, G.J.; Shokes, J.E.
Heterodisulfide reductase (HDR) of methanogenic archaea with its active-site [4Fe-4S] cluster catalyzes the reversible reduction of the heterodisulfide (CoM-S-S-CoB) of the methanogenic coenzyme M (CoM-SH) and coenzyme B (CoB-SH). CoM-HDR, a mechanistic-based paramagnetic intermediate generated upon half-reaction of the oxidized enzyme with CoM-SH, is a novel type of [4Fe-4S]{sup 3+} cluster with CoM-SH as a ligand. Subunit HdrB of the Methanothermobacter marburgensis HdrABC holoenzyme contains two cysteine-rich sequence motifs (CX{sub 31-39}CCX{sub 35-36}CXXC), designated as CCG domain in the Pfam database and conserved in many proteins. Here we present experimental evidence that the C-terminal CCG domain of HdrB binds this unusualmore » [4Fe-4S] cluster. HdrB was produced in Escherichia coli, and an iron-sulfur cluster was subsequently inserted by in vitro reconstitution. In the oxidized state the cluster without the substrate exhibited a rhombic EPR signal (g{sub zyx} = 2.015, 1.995, and 1.950) reminiscent of the CoM-HDR signal. {sup 57}Fe ENDOR spectroscopy revealed that this paramagnetic species is a [4Fe-4S] cluster with {sup 57}Fe hyperfine couplings very similar to that of CoM-HDR. CoM-{sup 33}SH resulted in a broadening of the EPR signal, and upon addition of CoM-SH the midpoint potential of the cluster was shifted to values observed for CoM-HDR, both indicating binding of CoM-SH to the cluster. Site-directed mutagenesis of all 12 cysteine residues in HdrB identified four cysteines of the C-terminal CCG domain as cluster ligands. Combined with the previous detection of CoM-HDR-like EPR signals in other CCG domain-containing proteins our data indicate a general role of the C-terminal CCG domain in coordination of this novel [4Fe-4S] cluster. In addition, Zn K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy identified an isolated Zn site with an S{sub 3}(O/N){sub 1} geometry in HdrB and the HDR holoenzyme. The N-terminal CCG domain is suggested to provide ligands to the Zn site.« less
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
van Dam, J.; Aziz, H. Abdul; Hilgen, F. J.; Krijgsman, W.
During the last years, more and more examples of allocyclic, astronomical forced variations in the continental record have been documented. Sedimentary hiatuses, tra- ditionally regarded as the primary reason for the absence of clear patterns of orbital signature in the terrestrial domain, may be absent or short, given the appropriate set- ting. Spanish endoreic basins, for instance, form a ideal setting for the registration of orbital-forced climate change, as has been demonstrated for the Middle Miocene distal-alluvial fan-floodplain to lacustrine deposits of the Calatayud Basin. Astronom- ical forcing of sedimentary cycles has also been demonstrated in the Late Miocene distal alluvial fan to lacustrine sequences of the Teruel Basin. The early Late Miocene Cascante and Cañizar sections South of the town of Teruel show distinct cyclic bed- ding of red and/or green mottled mudstones alternating with white carbonate beds, whereby the alternation is mainly controlled by precession and eccentricity. The car- bonate beds are interpreted as (shallow) lake highstands, which occur in response to submergence of the alluvial fan distal plain. Small mammal teeth have been recov- ered from organic-richer layers at the base of the carbonate cycles in the Cascante and Cañizar sections. The recovery of mammal remains in terrestrial Milankovitch forced settings is crucial for several reasons: 1) it provides a first approximate age estimation for the sequence, thereby constraining other sources of temporal information such as magnetostratigraphy; 2) it infers very accurate ages of the mammal localities after as- tronomical tuning of the cyclic patterns; 3) it formulates hypotheses on the climatic regime and its variability using precise correlations to the insolation curve and in- terpretation of phase relations; and 4) it confronts the astronomically-based climatic reconstruction with the paleoecological reconstructions and faunal changes observed in the mammals themselves. This will lead to a better understanding of the nature of the response terrestrial organisms exhibit to climatic change. Based on the cyclo- and magnetostratigraphy, two age models for the sections (10.1-9.4 Ma; 10.3-9.6 Ma) are possible. However, spectral analysis results and estimated duration of subchrons indicate a preference for the younger age model. Additional sampling for mammals and paleomagnetism is needed to solve the problem of the age models, to date more 1 precisely mammal subzones J1, 2 and 3, and to establish the exact relations between changes in the mammal communities and short- and long-term astronomical cycles. 2
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hector, B.; Genthon, P.; Luxereau, A.; Descloîtres, M.; Moumouni Moussa, A.; Abdou, H.
2012-04-01
The Komadougou Yobe (KY) is a temporary river meandering on nearly 100 km along the Niger/Nigeria border in its lower part, before reaching the endoreic Lake Chad. There, seasonal flow from July to January is related to rainfall amount on the upstream Jos Plateau, Nigeria. In the semi-arid downstream area (350 mm annual rainfall in Diffa, Niger) the KY is the main source of recharge for the sandy quaternary aquifer which is used both for irrigation and for drinking water supply. The borders of the KY in Niger are subjected to an agricultural development involving intensive irrigated cropping of sweet pepper mainly produced for sale in Nigeria. Irrigation waters are mainly extracted from the KY, and therefore irrigation must stop when the River runs dry, but irrigation from wells is now developing with an increased risk of soil salinization. The flow rate of the KY has been impacted both by the 80s and 90s droughts, also underwent by the entire Sahel, and by the building up of a series of dams starting from the 70s in Nigeria. Therefore the KY and its relations with the underlying groundwaters should be carefully monitored to provide guidelines for policy makers in charge of the development of this area. However, in this remote area, data are scarce and often discontinuous : there are for example no continuous groundwater level data from before the drought. As part of the Lake Chad French IRD project, series of campaigns involving water level, exploration geophysics, gravity, soil sampling and social studies have been carried out between 2008 and 2011. They allowed to build a numerical model for groundwater-river interactions which in some instances has been compared with previously recorded data. This model is then forced with theoretical climatic senarii based on humid 60s data and data from the drought period. This allows discussing the relationships between the river and groundwaters in a changing climate. Our results militate for the setting up of a limited network of continuous groundwater monitoring near the river in conjunction with the existing network of gauging stations on the KY. Given the present day high variability of the climate (2010 was equivalent to one of the most humid years of the 60s, while 2005 was dry) this network could provide a validation for future models involving realistic climate senarii.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vogt, Henri; Vogt, Thea; Calmels, Augusto P.
2010-09-01
The genesis of the relief between the Andes and the Pampa Deprimida plain between 36° and 39°S has never been considered. The region is intermediate between two contrasting geomorphic styles, the meridian-oriented highs and depressions of the Sierras Pampeanas to the north and the eastwards sloping northern Patagonian mesetas to the south. From geophysical data, it coincides with an intermediate zone between a flat-slab subduction zone to the north and a normal subduction zone to the south. From west to east (68° to 64°W), four units follow each other: the easternmost portion of the Sub-Andean piedmont, the depression of the Río Chadileuvú, a Plateau, and a high scarp separating it from the Pampa Deprimida lowland. The Plateau is the southernmost portion of the Brazilian shield. Geomorphological and sedimentological analyses led us to the following conclusions: 1. the Andes uplift created a large piedmont reaching the Pampa Deprimida and including the Plateau which between the Pliocene and the Middle Pleistocene was shaped in a series of stepped levels covered by Andean fluvial sediments; 2. the meridian-oriented Rio Chadileuvú depression is of tectonic origin, younger than the Middle Pleistocene, and breaks the continuity between the piedmont and the Plateau: this depression could be an incipient foreland basin; 3. the eastern scarp is a fault scarp, probably Upper Pleistocene in age, due to a faster activity of the fault zone between the craton and the Macachín Trough. This young morphotectonic activity coincides with the change from a west-east Patagonian pattern to a north-south orientation of the relief typical of the Sierras Pampeanas, but younger than them. The river network was affected by this evolution. During the Upper Miocene, a palaeo-Río Negro flowed to the north-east, then shifted southwards. The Río Colorado entered the Pampa region during the Upper Pliocene creating a set of stepped fluvial accumulation terraces, while the piedmont was drained by eastward streams. Following the formation of the Chadileuvú depression, a north-south drainage, largely endoreic, replaced the Sub-Andean flows. A capture of the Río Chadileuvú by the Río Colorado is going on due to the incision of the Río Colorado in the south. The regional landscape is therefore directly related to Late Pleistocene tectonic activity, whereas climate changes explain the different sedimentary characteristics of the surficial deposits.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Djebebe-Ndjiguim, Chantal; Foto, Eric; Backo, Salé; Nguerekossi, Bruno; Zoudamba, Narcisse; Basse-Keke, Eric; Allahdin, Oscar; Huneau, Frédéric; Garel, Emilie; Celle-Jeanton, Hélène; Mabingui, Joseph
2017-04-01
Groundwater is a key factor in the socio-economic development of African societies. This is particularly true for the Lake Chad Basin countries for which groundwater is the main water resource for both drinking water supply for population and agriculture, whether small or large scale. The Central African Republic (CAR) occupies a strategic place in the Lake Chad Basin since most waters feeding the different tributaries of the Chari River, which is the main water source of the Lake Chad, are originating from its territory. Indeed, the Northern CAR and particularly the Ouham Province, at the head of the whole Chad endoreic watershed, benefits from favourable rainfall conditions. Unfortunately, very little hydrological and hydrogeological information is available for this area which has never been investigated in terms of geochemical and isotope characterisation. The only available spares technical and scientific investigations over the area are dating from the 1960's. Unfortunately the Lake Chad basin has undergone strong climatological evolutions since the 1970's and hydrological information needs to be updated. The objectives of this study are to characterise groundwater from the Ouham Province in order to better appreciate the hydrogeological processes taking place in the recharge area of the Southern Lake Chad Basin. Isotope hydrology combined with geochemistry of groundwater has now proven being the best approach in under-documented territories to have a first diagnostic on the dynamics and quality of available resources. In this purpose combined hydrogeochemical and isotopic investigations (18O, 2H and 3H of the water molecule) have been launched to constrain groundwater origin, recharge processes, quality, residence time and anthropogenic fingerprint on aquifers. After two sampling campaigns it was possible to draw a general pattern of the hydrogeological and hydrochemical conditions in the region. The Ouham province is mostly composed of Precambrian substratum rocks. Only the Northern edge, neighbouring the Chad Republic, is made of surface Tertiary formations of the Continental Terminal. This geological duality is clearly reflected in the geochemistry of groundwater, but despite an increase in the population and in the agricultural activity the overall quality is still good apart for a few wells located in the close vicinity of human settling, and already strongly influenced by nitrate contamination. The isotopic signature of groundwater is clearly modern and identical to the one of local rainfall, and very close to the regional water line of Bangui (GNIP-IAEA). Tritium data are mostly similar to the modern rainfall input but a few wells and boreholes tend to indicate the existence in the underground of slow-dynamic groundwater. In the end, and considering the local amount of rainfall (1500mm/year) the quality of the groundwater potential as a good quality water supply resource is confirmed, and indications towards the possibility of a development of the exploitation are provided.
Time series analysis of Mexico City subsidence constrained by radar interferometry
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Doin, Marie-Pierre; Lopez-Quiroz, Penelope; Yan, Yajing; Bascou, Pascale; Pinel, Virginie
2010-05-01
In Mexico City, subsidence rates reach up to 40 cm/yr mainly due to soil compaction led by the over exploitation of the Mexico Basin aquifer. The Mexico Valley, an endoreic basin surrounded by mountains, was in the past covered by large lakes. After the Spanish conquest, the lakes have almost completely disappeared, being progressively replaced by buildings of the current Mexican capital. The simplified hydrogeologic structure includes a superficial 50 to 300 m thick lacustrine aquitard overlying a thicker aquifer made of alluvial deposits. The aquitard layer plays a crucial role in the subsidence process due to the extremely high compressibility of its clay deposits separated by a less compressible sand layer where the biggest buildings of the city are anchored. The aquifer over-exploitation leads to a large scale 30m depression of its piezometric level, inducing water downwards flow in the clays, yielding compaction and subsidence. In order to quantitatively link subsidence to water pumping, the Mexico city subsidence needs to be mapped and analyzed through space and time. We map its spatial and temporal patterns by differential radar interferometry, using 38 ENVISAT images acquired between end of 2002 and beginning of 2007. We employ both a Permanent Scatterer (PS) and a small baseline (SBAS) approach. The main difficulty consists in the severe unwrapping problems mostly due to the high deformation rate. We develop a specific SBAS approach based on 71 differential interferograms with a perpendicular baseline smaller than 500 m and a temporal baseline smaller than 9 months, forming a redundant network linking all images: (1) To help the unwrapping step, we use the fact that the deformation shape is stable for similar time intervals during the studied period. As a result, a stack of the five best interferograms can be used to reduce the number of fringes in wrapped interferograms. (2) Based on the redundancy of the interferometric data base, we quantify the unwrapping errors for each pixel and show that they are strongly decreased by iterations in the unwrapping process. (3) Finally, we present a new algorithm for time series analysis that differs from classical SVD decomposition and is best suited to the present data base. Accurate deformation time series are then derived over the metropolitan area of the city with a spatial resolution of 30 × 30 m. We also use the Gamma-PS software on the same data set. The phase differences are unwrapped within small patches with respect to a reference point chosen in each patch, whose phase is in turn unwrapped relatively to a reference point common for the whole area of interest. After removing the modelled contribution of the linear displacement rate and DEM error, some residual interferograms, presenting unwrapping errors because of strong residual orbital ramp or atmospheric phase screen, are spatially unwrapped by a minimum cost-flow algorithm. The next steps are to estimate and remove the residual orbital ramp and to apply temporal low-pass filter to remove atmospheric contributions. The step by step comparison of the SBAS and PS approaches shows both methods complementarity. The SBAS analysis provide subsidence rates with an accuracy of a mm/yr over the whole basin in a large area, together with the subsidence non linear behavior through time, however at the expense of some spatial regularization. The PS method provides locally accurate and punctual deformation rates, but fails in this case to yield a good large scale map and the non linear temporal behavior of the subsidence. We conclude that the relative contrast in subsidence between individual buildings and infrastructure must be relatively small, on average of the order of 5mm/yr.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mutch, Michael J.
This work utilizes an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-based approach, electrically detected magnetic resonance (EDMR), to study defect chemistry in amorphous semiconductors and dielectrics even when featureless spectra are present. EDMR is the electrically detected analog of EPR in which EPR induced changes in device current are detected. In this study, EDMR is detected via changes in amorphous semiconductor or dielectric tunneling current via spin-dependent trap assisted tunneling (SDTAT) events. Due to the nature of SDTAT, defects detected are directly linked to electronic transport; an additional benefit of EDMR relative to EPR. Unlike EPR, SDTAT/EDMR may also be detected at any field/frequency combination without loss of sensitivity. As will be explained, this field/frequency independence allows for a distinction between EDMR line width contributions from electronic g tensor components or electron-nuclear hyperfine interactions, thus providing insight into defect chemistry when featureless spectra are present. Additionally, performing EDMR measurements at multiple biases and comparing with MIS band diagrams allows for a rudimentary understanding of defect energy levels. Finally, we utilize EDMR to understand near-zero-field magnetoresistance (MR) phenomena. The EDMR techniques utilized in this study are relatively new, and have not been exploited to study a wide range of electronic materials. In Chapter 4, baseline EDMR measurements are provided in relatively simple amorphous systems including a-Si:H and a-C:H. We find that EDMR spectra in a-Si:H and a-C:H systems are due to silicon and carbon dangling bonds, respectively. Additionally, we utilize multiple frequency EDMR to provide additional information regarding contributions of line width due to the breadth of g tensor components in the featureless a-Si:H and a-C:H EDMR spectra. By providing a measurement of g tensor breadth, Deltag, we develop a baseline for distinguishing between silicon and carbon dangling bonds in more complex systems, such as low-dielectric constant (kappa) dielectrics a-SiOC:H and a-SiCN:H, in which silicon and/or carbon dangling bonds may be present. Low-kappa dielectric constant materials are critical for reducing parasitic capacitances due to the scaling of back-end of line interconnects. In Chapter 4, we first utilize conventional EPR measurements to study a variety of porous low-kappa dielectric powders. Via conventional EPR on these low-kappa powders, we are able to analyze the effects of UV radiation and remote hydrogen plasma upon the low-kappa systems. Our results indicate that UV treatments, which are utilized to eliminate sacrificial porogens to introduce pores, significantly increase defect density. Remote hydrogen plasma (RHP) treatments are found to decrease dangling bond concentration. However, due to the featureless EPR spectra, we are unable to provide insight into defect chemistry via conventional EPR. Thus, we utilize multiple field/frequency EDMR in these low-kappa systems, and compare Deltag measurements with previous baseline measurements, to provide insight into defect chemistry which was previously unavailable. We find a multitude of silicon and carbon dangling bonds in a-SiOCH and a-SiCN:H dielectrics. Defect chemistry seems to depend upon precursor chemistry. Additionally, EDMR measurements confirm that UV treatments in low-kappa systems introduce silicon dangling bonds, suggesting that these treatments may be damaging the Si-O-Si network in a-SiOC:H systems. Finally, we perform EDMR measurements at multiple biases to get a general understanding of defect energy levels in these systems. Band gaps are calculated via reflected electron energy loss spectroscopy (REELS), and band offsets are calculated via X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). We find that carbon dangling bonds in a-SiOC:H systems have levels near the middle of the a-SiOC:H band gap, and silicon dangling bonds in a-SiCN:H systems have levels near the upper-middle part of the a-SiCN:H band gap. In Chapter 5, we analyze silicon nitride (a-SiN:H) thin films, which are widely utilized in the electronics industry as gate dielectrics for TFTs. However, defects and electronic transport in these systems are not fully understood. We utilize multiple frequency EDMR and variable bias EDMR to better understand defect chemistry and energy levels in a-SiN:H systems. It is found that K centers, which have been previously observed in a-SiN:H via EPR and electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), are primarily responsible for transport in these systems. Additionally, we find that K centers are about 3.1 eV above the a-SiN:H valence band edge, in agreement with previous theoretical calculations. In Chapter 6, we illustrate that near-zero field MR phenomena are ubiquitous in amorphous semiconductors and dielectrics. We link the MR and EDMR responses by measuring response amplitude for each technique versus bias. The observed EDMR and MR versus bias trends are nearly identical, suggesting that the defects responsible for each technique correspond to similar energy levels. Though circumstantial, our measurements provide strong evidence that the defects whose chemistry is plausibly identified via multiple frequency EDMR are primarily responsible for MR in the amorphous semiconductors and dielectrics in this study. (Abstract shortened by ProQuest.).