Search results for " shell"

showing 10 items of 307 documents

Hydration dependent dynamics in sol-gel encapsulated myoglobin.

2008

In this work we study the effect of hydration on the dynamics of a protein in confined geometry, i.e. encapsulated in a porous silica matrix. Using elastic neutron scattering we investigate the temperature dependence of the mean square displacements of non-exchangeable hydrogen atoms of sol-gel encapsulated met-myoglobin. The study is extended to samples at 0.2, 0.3 and 0.5 g water/g protein fractions and comparison is made with met-myoglobin powders at the same average hydration and with a dry powder sample. Elastic data are analysed using a model of dynamical heterogeneity to take into account deviations of elastic intensity from gaussian behaviour in a large momentum transfer range and r…

HydrogenBiophysicsHydrationchemistry.chemical_elementSol–gelNeutron scatteringELASTIC NEUTRON-SCATTERINGPROTEIN HYDRATIONAnimalsDynamical heterogeneityPorositySol-gelSPECTROSCOPYMyoglobinProtein dynamicsSolvent dynamicMomentum transferTemperatureWaterGeneral MedicineElasticityCrystallographyNeutron DiffractionSolvation shellchemistryChemical physicsProtein dynamicSilica hydrogelsGelsTRANSITIONHydrogenEuropean biophysics journal : EBJ
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Ultrastructure of the Interlamellar Membranes of the Nacre of the Bivalve Pteria hirundo, Determined by Immunolabelling.

2015

The current model for the ultrastructure of the interlamellar membranes of molluscan nacre imply that they consist of a core of aligned chitin fibers surrounded on both sides by acidic proteins. This model was based on observations taken on previously demineralized shells, where the original structure had disappeared. Despite other earlier claims, no direct observations exist in which the different components can be unequivocally discriminated. We have applied different labeling protocols on non-demineralized nacreous shells of the bivalve Pteria. With this method, we have revealed the disposition and nature of the different fibers of the interlamellar membranes that can be observed on the …

In situPlateletsBivalvesScanning electron microscopeShell (structure)Mineralogylcsh:MedicineChitinMatrix (biology)chemistry.chemical_compoundChitinAnimal ShellsMembrane proteinsAnimalsFiberlcsh:ScienceNacreFluorescence microscopyMultidisciplinaryMicroscopy Confocallcsh:RfungiProteasesMolluscs[ SDV.IB.BIO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Bioengineering/BiomaterialsBivalviaMembraneAragonitechemistryBiophysicsUltrastructureMicroscopy Electron Scanninglcsh:QResearch ArticlePloS one
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The Al 50 Cp* 12 Cluster – A 138‐Electron Closed Shell ( L = 6) Superatom

2011

Metal clusters stabilized by a surface ligand shell represent an interesting intermediate state of matter between molecular metal-ligand complexes and bulk metal. Such "metalloid" clusters are characterized by the balance between metal-metal bonds in the core and metal-ligand bonds at the exterior of the cluster. In previous studies, the electronic stability for the Al50Cp*(12) cluster was not fully understood. We show here that the known cluster Al50Cp*(12) can be considered as an analogue to a giant atom ("superatom") with 138 sp electrons organized in concentric angular momentum shells up to L = 6 symmetry.

Inorganic ChemistryAngular momentumAb initio quantum chemistry methodsChemical physicsComputational chemistryChemistrySuperatomAtomShell (structure)Cluster (physics)Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated ElectronsElectronic structureOpen shellEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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Nature of Bonding in Group 13 Dimetallenes: a Delicate Balance between Singlet Diradical Character and Closed Shell Interactions

2010

The nature of metal-metal bonding in group 13 dimetallenes REER (E = Al, Ga, In, Tl; R = H, Me, (t)Bu, Ph) was investigated by use of quantum chemical methods that include HF, second order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2), coupled cluster (CCSD(T)), complete active space with (CASPT2) and without (CAS) second order perturbation theory, and two density functionals, namely, B3LYP and M06-2X. The results show that the metal-metal interaction in group 13 dimetallenes stems almost exclusively from static and dynamic electron correlation effects: both dialuminenes and digallenes have an important singlet diradical component in their wave function, whereas the bonding in the heavier diinde…

Inorganic ChemistryCoupled clusterElectronic correlationDiradicalChemical physicsChemistrySinglet stateComplete active spacePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPerturbation theoryAtomic physicsWave functionOpen shellInorganic Chemistry
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Quaternary Heusler Compounds without Inversion Symmetry: CoFe 1+ x Ti 1– x Al and CoMn 1+ x V 1– x Al

2011

We report the quaternary Heusler compound derivatives CoFe1+xTi1–xAl and CoMn1+xV1–xAl, which do not have centers of inversion. Classical T2T′M (T, T′ = transition metal, M = main group element) Heusler compounds (prototype: Cu2MnAl) crystallize in the L21 structure, space group Fmm (225) that exhibits a center of inversion. Replacing one of the T2 atoms by another transition element (T″) results in a quaternary TT′T″M compound with F3m symmetry (Y; structure type LiMgPdSn) without center of inversion. In the case of “quasi closed shell” compounds with 24 valence electrons in the primitive cell, one expects the absence of ferromagnetism according to the Slater–Pauling rule. Increasing the n…

Inorganic ChemistryCrystallographyFerromagnetismChemistryengineeringPrimitive cellElectronic structureCrystal structureengineering.materialGround stateHeusler compoundValence electronOpen shellEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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Front Cover: Redox‐Controlled Stabilization of an Open‐Shell Intermediate in a Bioinspired Enzyme Model (Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 31/2018)

2018

Inorganic ChemistryFront coverChemical engineeringChemistryEnzyme modelOpen shellRedoxEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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Redox‐Controlled Stabilization of an Open‐Shell Intermediate in a Bioinspired Enzyme Model

2018

Inorganic Chemistrychemistry010405 organic chemistryMolybdenumEnzyme modelchemistry.chemical_element010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciencesRedoxOpen shell0104 chemical sciencesEuropean Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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Self-consistent continuum solvation (SCCS): the case of charged systems.

2013

The recently developed self-consistent continuum solvation model (SCCS) [O. Andreussi, I. Dabo, and N. Marzari, J. Chem. Phys. 136, 064102 (2012)] is applied here to charged species in aqueous solutions. Describing ions in solution represents a great challenge because of the large electrostatic interactions between the solute and the solvent. The SCCS model is tested over 106 monocharged species, both cations and anions, and we demonstrate its flexibility, notwithstanding its much reduced set of parameters, to describe charged species in solution. Remarkably low mean absolute errors are obtained with values of 2.27 and 5.54 kcal/mol for cations and anions, respectively. These results are co…

IonsModels MolecularAqueous solutionChemistryMetal ions in aqueous solutionImplicit solvationStatic ElectricitySolvationGeneral Physics and AstronomyWaterElectrostaticsIonSolventSolvation shellChemical physicsComputational chemistryQuantum TheoryThermodynamicsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryThe Journal of chemical physics
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History of bioavailable lead and iron in the Greater North Sea and Iceland during the last millennium – A bivalve sclerochronological reconstruction

2014

We present the first annually resolved record of biologically available Pb and Fe in the Greater North Sea and Iceland during 1040-2004 AD based on shells of the long-lived marine bivalve Arctica islandica. The iron content in pre-industrial shells from the North Sea largely remained below the detection limit. Only since 1830, shell Fe levels rose gradually reflecting the combined effect of increased terrestrial runoff of iron-bearing sediments and eutrophication. Although the lead gasoline peak of the 20th century was well recorded by the shells, bivalves that lived during the medieval heyday of metallurgy showed four-fold higher shell Pb levels than modern specimens. Presumably, pre-indus…

IronIcelandAquatic ScienceHistory 18th CenturyOceanographyHistory 21st CenturyHistory 17th CenturyAnthropogenic pollutionAnimal ShellsPhytoplanktonBiomonitoringAnimalsNorth seaArctica islandicaHistory 15th CenturybiologyLead (sea ice)History 19th CenturyHistory 20th Centurybiology.organism_classificationPollutionHistory MedievalOceanographyLeadHistory 16th CenturyMetalsIron contentEnvironmental scienceNorth SeaEutrophicationWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental MonitoringMarine Pollution Bulletin
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Le conchiglie di Lamarck come beni culturali

2012

Con questo contributo si è voluto ricordare che nella turbolenta Francia nel 1793 per la prima volta i beni naturali vengono ufficialmente riconosciuti anche come beni culturali facenti parte del patrimonio di un popolo, che li deve custodire e tutelare. Il tutto era scaturito dalla necessità di salvare dalla distruzione due acquasantiere costituite da 2 valve di tridacna, una conchiglia esotica, presenti nella Chiesa di S. Sulpice a Parigi. A questo importante evento partecipò attivamente anche Jean Baptiste Lamarck, Professore di Zoologia degli Insetti e dei Vermi presso il Museo Nazionale di Storia Naturale di Parigi. Proprio dallo studio delle conchiglie attuali, comparate con quelle fo…

Lamarck conchiglie evoluzione collezioni malacologiche beni naturaliSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataLamarck shells evolution malacology collection natural heritageSettore BIO/05 - Zoologia
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