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  • Willard Head heeft een update geplaatst 1 dag, 8 uren geleden

    Many of the ZEKE spectra are consistent with the largely Rydberg nature of the S1 state near the Franck-Condon region; however, there is also some activity that is less straightforward to explain. Comments are made regarding the photodynamics of the S1 state.We demonstrate that two amorphous solid states can exist in 4He consisting of distinguishable Boltzmann atoms under compressed conditions. The isothermal compression of normal or supercritical fluid 4He was conducted at 3-25 K using the isobaric-isothermal path integral centroid molecular dynamics simulation. The compression of fluid first produced the low-dispersion amorphous (LDA) state possessing modest extension of atomic necklaces. Further isothermal compression up to the order of 10 kbar to 1 Mbar or an isobaric cooling of LDA induced the transition to the high-dispersion amorphous (HDA) state. The HDA was characterized by long quantum wavelengths of atoms extended over several Angstroms and the promotion of atomic residual diffusion. They were related to the quantum tunneling of atoms bestriding the potential saddle points in this glass. The change in pressure or temperature induced the LDA-HDA transition reversibly with hysteresis, while it resembled the coil-globule transition of classical polymers. The HDA had lower kinetic and higher Gibbs free energies than the LDA at close temperature. The HDA was absent at T ≥ 13 K, while the LDA-HDA transition pressure significantly decreased with lowering temperature. The LDA and HDA correspond to the trapped and tunneling regimes proposed by Markland et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 136, 074511 (2012)], respectively. The same reentrant behavior as they found was observed for the expansion factor of the quantum wavelength as well as for atomic diffusivity.We present LayerPCM, an extension of the polarizable-continuum model coupled to real-time time-dependent density-functional theory, for an efficient and accurate description of the electrostatic interactions between molecules and multilayered dielectric substrates on which they are physisorbed. The former are modeled quantum-mechanically, while the latter are treated as polarizable continua characterized by their dielectric constants. The proposed approach is purposely designed to simulate complex hybrid heterostructures with nano-engineered substrates including a stack of anisotropic layers. LayerPCM is suitable for describing the polarization-induced renormalization of frontier energy levels of the adsorbates in the static regime. Moreover, it can be reliably applied to simulating laser-induced ultrafast dynamics of molecules through the inclusion of electric fields generated by Fresnel-reflection at the substrate. Depending on the complexity of the underlying layer structure, such reflected fields can assume non-trivial shapes and profoundly affect the dynamics of the photo-excited charge carriers in the molecule. In particular, the interaction with the substrate can give rise to strong delayed fields, which lead to interference effects resembling those of multi-pulse-based spectroscopy. The robustness of the implementation and the above-mentioned features are demonstrated with a number of examples, ranging from intuitive models to realistic systems.We implement and benchmark the frozen core approximation, a technique commonly adopted in electronic structure theory to reduce the computational cost by means of mathematically fixing the chemically inactive core electron states. The accuracy and efficiency of this approach are well controlled by a single parameter, the number of frozen orbitals. Explicit corrections for the frozen core orbitals and the unfrozen valence orbitals are introduced, safeguarding against seemingly minor numerical deviations from the assumed orthonormality conditions of the basis functions. Nanvuranlat mw A speedup of over twofold can be achieved for the diagonalization step in all-electron density-functional theory simulations containing heavy elements, without any accuracy degradation in terms of the electron density, total energy, and atomic forces. This is demonstrated in a benchmark study covering 103 materials across the Periodic Table and a large-scale simulation of CsPbBr3 with 2560 atoms. Our study provides a rigorous benchmark of the precision of the frozen core approximation (sub-meV per atom for frozen core orbitals below -200 eV) for a wide range of test cases and for chemical elements ranging from Li to Po. The algorithms discussed here are implemented in the open-source Electronic Structure Infrastructure software package.The crowded cellular environment can affect biomolecular binding energetics, with specific effects depending on the properties of the binding partners and the local environment. Often, crowding effects on binding are studied on particular complexes, which provide system-specific insights but may not provide comprehensive trends or a generalized framework to better understand how crowding affects energetics involved in molecular recognition. Here, we use theoretical, idealized molecules whose physical properties can be systematically varied along with samplings of crowder placements to understand how electrostatic binding energetics are altered through crowding and how these effects depend on the charge distribution, shape, and size of the binding partners or crowders. We focus on electrostatic binding energetics using a continuum electrostatic framework to understand effects due to depletion of a polar, aqueous solvent in a crowded environment. We find that crowding effects can depend predictably on a system’s charge distribution, with coupling between the crowder size and the geometry of the partners’ binding interface in determining crowder effects. We also explore the effect of crowder charge on binding interactions as a function of the monopoles of the system components. Finally, we find that modeling crowding via a lowered solvent dielectric constant cannot account for certain electrostatic crowding effects due to the finite size, shape, or placement of system components. This study, which comprehensively examines solvent depletion effects due to crowding, complements work focusing on other crowding aspects to help build a holistic understanding of environmental impacts on molecular recognition.

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