1,379 research outputs found
Evidence of two viscous relaxation processes in the collective dynamics of liquid lithium
New inelastic X-ray scattering experiments have been performed on liquid
lithium in a wide wavevector range. With respect to the previous measurements,
the instrumental resolution, improved up to 1.5 meV, allows to accurately
investigate the dynamical processes determining the observed shape of the the
dynamic structure factor, . A detailed analysis of the lineshapes
shows the co-existence of relaxation processes with both a slow and a fast
characteristic timescales, and therefore that pictures of the relaxation
mechanisms based on a simple viscoelastic model must be abandoned.Comment: 5 pages, 4 .PS figure
A theoretical investigation of the reaction between the amidogen, NH, and the ethyl, C2H5, radicals: a possible gas-phase formation route of interstellar and planetary ethanimine
The reaction between the amidogen, NH, radical and the ethyl, C2H5, radical
has been investigated by performing electronic structure calculations of the
underlying doublet potential energy surface. Rate coefficients and product
branching ratios have also been estimated by combining capture and RRKM
calculations. According to our results, the reaction is very fast, close to the
gas-kinetics limit. However, the main product channel, with a yield of ca.
86-88% in the range of temperatures investigated, is the one leading to
methanimine and the methyl radical. The channels leading to the two E-, Z-
stereoisomers of ethanimine account only for ca. 5-7% each. The resulting ratio
[E-CH3CHNH]/[Z-CH3CHNH] is ca. 1.2, that is a value rather lower than that
determined in the Green Bank Telescope PRIMOS radio astronomy survey spectra of
Sagittarius B2 North (ca. 3). Considering that ice chemistry would produce
essentially only the most stable isomer, a possible conclusion is that the
observed [E-CH3CHNH]/[Z-CH3CHNH] ratio is compatible with a combination of
gas-phase and grain chemistry. More observational and laboratory data are
needed to definitely address this issue
Dose influence on the PMMA e-resist for the development of high-aspect ratio and reproducible sub-micrometric structures by electron beam lithography
In this work, a statistical process control method is presented showing the accuracy and the reliability obtained with of PMMA E-resist AR-P 672, using an Elphy Quantum Electron Beam Lithography module integrated on a FE-SEM Zeiss Auriga instrument. Reproducible nanostructures with an high aspect ratio between e-resist thickness and width of written geometric structure are shown. Detailed investigation of geometry features are investigated with dimension in the range of 200nm to 1-m. The adopted method will show how tuning the Area Dose factor and the PMMA thickness it was possible to determine the correct and reproducible parameters that allows to obtain well defined electron-beam features with a 4:1 aspect ratio. Such high aspect ratio opens the possibility to realize an electron-beam lithography lift-off process by using a standard e-beam resist. © 2016 Author(s)
The (impossible?) formation of acetaldehyde on the grain surfaces: insights from quantum chemical calculations
Complex Organic Molecules (COMs) have been detected in the interstellar
medium (ISM). However, it is not clear whether their synthesis occurs on the
icy surfaces of interstellar grains or via a series of gas-phase reactions. As
a test case of the COMs synthesis in the ISM, we present new quantum chemical
calculations on the formation of acetaldehyde (CH3CHO) from the coupling of the
HCO and CH3 radicals, both in gas phase and on water ice surfaces. The binding
energies of HCO and CH3 on the amorphous water ice were also computed (2333 and
734 K, respectively). Results indicate that, in gas phase, the products could
be either CH3CHO, CH4 + CO, or CH3OCH, depending on the relative orientation of
the two radicals. However, on the amorphous water ice, only the CH4 + CO
product is possible due to the geometrical constraints imposed by the water ice
surface. Therefore, acetaldehyde cannot be synthesized by the CH3 + HCO
coupling on the icy grains. We discuss the implications of these results and
other cases, such as ethylene glycol and dimethyl ether, in which similar
situations can occur, suggesting that formation of these molecules on the grain
surfaces might be unlikely
Investigating the Efficiency of Explosion Chemistry as a Source of Complex Organic Molecules in TMC-1
Many species of complex organic molecules (COMs) have been observed in
several astrophysical environments but it is not clear how they are produced,
particularly in cold, quiescent regions. One process that has been proposed as
a means to enhance the chemical complexity of the gas phase in such regions is
the explosion of the ice mantles of dust grains. In this process, a build up of
chemical energy in the ice is released, sublimating the ices and producing a
short lived phase of high density, high temperature gas. The gas-grain chemical
code UCLCHEM has been modified to treat these explosions in order to model the
observed abundances of COMs towards the TMC-1 region. It is found that, based
on our current understanding of the explosion mechanism and chemical pathways,
the inclusion of explosions in chemical models is not warranted at this time.
Explosions are not shown to improve the model's match to the observed
abundances of simple species in TMC-1. Further, neither the inclusion of
surface diffusion chemistry, nor explosions, results in the production of COMs
with observationally inferred abundances.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Structural and Dynamical Anomalies of a Gaussian Core Fluid: a Mode Coupling Theory Study
We present a theoretical study of transport properties of a liquid comprised
of particles uist1:/home/sokrates/egorov/oldhome/Pap41/Submit > m abs.tex We
present a theoretical study of transport properties of a liquid comprised of
particles interacting via Gaussian Core pair potential. Shear viscosity and
self-diffusion coefficient are computed on the basis of the mode-coupling
theory, with required structural input obtained from integral equation theory.
Both self-diffusion coefficient and viscosity display anomalous density
dependence, with diffusivity increasing and viscosity decreasing with density
within a particular density range along several isotherms below a certain
temperature. Our theoretical results for both transport coefficients are in
good agreement with the simulation data
Gas phase formation of the prebiotic molecule formamide: insights from new quantum computations
New insights into the formation of interstellar formamide, a species of great
relevance in prebiotic chemistry, are provided by electronic structure and
kinetic calculations for the reaction NH2 + H2CO -> NH2CHO + H. Contrarily to
what previously suggested, this reaction is essentially barrierless and can,
therefore, occur under the low temperature conditions of interstellar objects
thus providing a facile formation route of formamide. The rate coefficient
parameters for the reaction channel leading to NH2CHO + H have been calculated
to be A = 2.6x10^{-12} cm^3 s^{-1}, beta = -2.1 and gamma = 26.9 K in the range
of temperatures 10-300 K. Including these new kinetic data in a refined
astrochemical model, we show that the proposed mechanism can well reproduce the
abundances of formamide observed in two very different interstellar objects:
the cold envelope of the Sun-like protostar IRAS16293-2422 and the molecular
shock L1157-B2. Therefore, the major conclusion of this Letter is that there is
no need to invoke grain-surface chemistry to explain the presence of formamide
provided that its precursors, NH2 and H2CO, are available in the gas-phase.Comment: MNRAS Letters, in pres
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