452 research outputs found
Exploring the Oxygen Order in Hg-1223 and Hg-1201 by 199Hg MAS NMR
We demonstrate the use of a high-resolution solid-state fast (45 kHz) magic
angle spinning (MAS) NMR for mapping the oxygen distribution in Hg-based
cuprate superconductors. We identify observed three peaks in 199Hg spectrum as
belonging to the different chemical environments in the HgO? layer with no
oxygen neighbors, single oxygen neighbor, and two oxygen neighbors. We discuss
observed differences between Hg-1201 and Hg-1223 materials.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures included. Submitted to NATO Advanced Research
Workshop Proceedings (Miami January 2004
A multinuclear solid state NMR, density functional theory and X-Ray diffraction study of hydrogen bonding in Group I hydrogen dibenzoates
An NMR crystallographic approach incorporating multinuclear solid state NMR (SSNMR), X-ray structure determinations and density functional theory (DFT) are used to characterise the H bonding arrangements in benzoic acid (BZA) and the corresponding Group I alkali metal hydrogen dibenzoates (HD) systems. Since the XRD data often cannot precisely confirm the proton position within the hydrogen bond, the relationship between the experimental SSNMR parameters and the ability of gauge included plane augmented wave (GIPAW) DFT to predict them becomes a powerful constraint that can assist with further structure refinement. Both the 1H and 13C MAS NMR methods provide primary descriptions of the H bonding via accurate measurements of the 1H and 13C isotropic chemical shifts, and the individual 13C chemical shift tensor elements; these are unequivocally corroborated by DFT calculations, which together accurately describe the trend of the H bonding strength as the size of the monovalent cation changes. In addition, 17O MAS and DOR NMR form a powerful combination to characterise the O environments, with the DOR technique providing highly resolved 17O NMR data which helps verify unequivocally the number of inequivalent O positions for the conventional 17O MAS NMR to process. Further multinuclear MAS and static NMR studies involving the quadrupolar 7Li, 39K, 87Rb and 133Cs nuclei, and the associated DFT calculations, provide trends and a corroboration of the H bond geometry which assist in the understanding of these arrangements. Even though the crystallographic H positions in each H bonding arrangement reported from the single crystal X-ray studies are prone to uncertainty, the good corroboration between the measured and DFT calculated chemical shift and quadrupole tensor parameters for the Group I alkali species suggest that these reported H positions are reliable
Історична наука в УРСР як предмет дослідження в англо-американській історіографії
У статті відтворено образ історичної науки в УРСР у працях англо-американських учених другої половини ХХ – початку ХХІ ст. Вивчено еволюцію ролі та функцій трьох основних акторів історіографічного процесу в Радянському Союзі – влади, істориків та пересічних громадян. Визначено сталі та змінні компоненти у загальній схемі їх взаємодії.In the article the image of historical science in the Ukrainian SSR in the works of the Anglo-American researchers published during the second half of the twentieth and the beginning of the twenty-first centuries is reconstructed. The modification of roles and functions of three main actors in Soviet historiographical process – power, historians and average citizens – is examined. The invariable and change components in the general pattern of its interaction are defined
Characterization of protein–protein interfaces in large complexes by solid-state NMR solvent paramagnetic relaxation enhancements
Solid-state NMR is becoming a viable alternative for obtaining information about structures and dynamics of large biomolecular complexes, including ones that are not accessible to other high-resolution biophysical techniques. In this context, methods for probing protein−protein interfaces at atomic resolution are highly desirable. Solvent paramagnetic relaxation enhancements (sPREs) proved to be a powerful method for probing protein−protein interfaces in large complexes in solution but have not been employed toward this goal in the solid state. We demonstrate that 1H and 15N relaxation-based sPREs provide a powerful tool for characterizing intermolecular interactions in large assemblies in the solid state. We present approaches for measuring sPREs in practically the entire range of magic angle spinning frequencies used for biomolecular studies and discuss their benefits and limitations. We validate the approach on crystalline GB1, with our experimental results in good agreement with theoretical predictions. Finally, we use sPREs to characterize protein−protein interfaces in the GB1 complex with immunoglobulin G (IgG). Our results suggest the potential existence of an additional binding site and provide new insights into GB1:IgG complex structure that amend and revise the current model available from studies with IgG fragments. We demonstrate sPREs as a practical, widely applicable, robust, and very sensitive technique for determining intermolecular interaction interfaces in large biomolecular complexes in the solid state
Spinning faster: protein NMR at MAS frequencies up to 126 kHz
International audienceWe report linewidth and proton T 1 , T 1ρ and T 2 ′ relaxation data of the model protein ubiquitin acquired at MAS frequencies up to 126 kHz. We find a predominantly linear improvement in linewidths and coherence decay times of protons with increasing spinning frequency in the range from 93 to 126 kHz. We further attempt to gain insight into the different contributions to the linewidth at fast MAS using site-specific analysis of proton relaxation parameters and present bulk relaxation times as a function of the MAS frequency. For microcrystalline fully-protonated ubiquitin, inhomogeneous contributions are only a minor part of the proton linewidth, and at 126 kHz MAS coherent effects are still dominating. We furthermore present site-specific proton relaxation rate constants during a spinlock at 126 kHz MAS, as well as MAS-dependent bulk T 1ρ (1 H N)
Quantifying proton NMR coherent linewidth in proteins under fast MAS conditions: a second moment approach
International audienceProton detected solid-state NMR under fast magic-angle-spinning (MAS) conditions is currently redefining the applications of solid-state NMR, in particular in structural biology. Understanding the contributions to the spectral linewidth is thereby of paramount importance. When disregarding the sample-dependent inhomogeneous contributions, the NMR proton linewidth is defined by homogeneous broadening, which has incoherent and coherent contributions. Understanding and disentangling these different contributions in multi-spin systems like proteins is still an open issue. The coherent contribution is mainly caused by the dipolar interaction under MAS and is determined by the molecular structure and the proton chemical shifts. Numerical simulation approaches based on numerically exact direct integration of the Liouville-von Neumann equation can give valuable information about the lineshape, but are limited to small spin systems (o12 spins). We present an alternative simulation method for the coherent contributions based on the rapid and partially analytic calculation of the second moments of large spin systems. We first validate the method on a simple system by predicting the 19 F linewidth in CaF 2 under MAS. We compare simulation results to experimental data for microcrystalline ubiquitin (deuterated 100% back-exchanged at 110 kHz and fully-protonated at 125 kHz). Our results quantitatively explain the observed linewidth per-residue basis for the vast majority of residues
Enhanced Sensitivity in RIACT/MQ-MAS NMR Experiments Using Rotor Assisted Population Transfer
Multiscale Investigation of Sodium‐Ion Battery Anodes: Analytical Techniques and Applications
The anode/electrolyte interface behavior, and by extension, the overall cell
performance of sodium-ion batteries is determined by a complex interaction
of processes that occur at all components of the electrochemical cell across a
wide range of size- and timescales. Single-scale studies may provide
incomplete insights, as they cannot capture the full picture of this complex
and intertwined behavior. Broad, multiscale studies are essential to elucidate
these processes. Within this perspectives article, several analytical and
theoretical techniques are introduced, and described how they can be
combined to provide a more complete and comprehensive understanding of
sodium-ion battery (SIB) performance throughout its lifetime, with a special
focus on the interfaces of hard carbon anodes. These methods target various
length- and time scales, ranging from micro to nano, from cell level to
atomistic structures, and account for a broad spectrum of physical and
(electro)chemical characteristics. Specifically, how mass spectrometric,
microscopic, spectroscopic, electrochemical, thermodynamic, and physical
methods can be employed to obtain the various types of information required
to understand battery behavior will be explored. Ways are then discussed how
these methods can be coupled together in order to elucidate the multiscale
phenomena at the anode interface and develop a holistic understanding of
their relationship to overall sodium-ion battery function
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