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1.
A two-dimensional steady-sate analysis of semi-infinite brittlecrack growth at a constant subcritical rate in an unboundedfully-coupled thermoelastic solid under mixed-mode thermomechanicalloading is made. The loading consists of normal and shear tractionsand heat fluxes applied as point sources (line loads in theout-of-plane direction). A related problem is solved exactly in an integral transformspace, and robust asymptotic forms used to reduce the originalproblem to a set of integral equations. The equations are partiallycoupled and exhibit operators of both Cauchy and Abel types,yet can be solved analytically. The temperature change field at a distance from the moving crackedge is then constructed, and its dominant term is found tobe controlled by the imposed heat fluxes. The role of this termis, indeed, enhanced if the heat fluxes serve to render thecrack as a net heat source/sink for the solid, as opposed tobeing a transmitter of heat across its plane. More generally,the influence of the thermoelastic coupling on this field, aswell as other functions, is found to increase with crack speed. 相似文献
2.
Poluektov OG Paschenko SV Utschig LM Lakshmi KV Thurnauer MC 《Journal of the American Chemical Society》2005,127(34):11910-11911
Efficient charge separation occurring within membrane-bound reaction center proteins is the most important step of photosynthetic solar energy conversion. All reaction centers are classified into two types, I and II. X-ray crystal structures reveal that both types bind two symmetric membrane-spanning branches of potential electron-transfer cofactors. Determination of the functional roles of these pairs of branches is of fundamental importance. While it is established that in type II reaction centers only one branch functions in electron transfer, we present the first direct spectroscopic evidence that both cofactor branches are active in the type I reaction center, photosystem I. 相似文献
3.
Amita Gupta Alexei Yu Ganin Parmanand Sharma Vikrant Agnihotri LM Belova KV Rao Mikhail E Kozlov AA Zakhidov RH Baughman 《Pramana》2002,58(5-6):1051-1059
We present studies of novel nanocomposites of BiNi impregnated into the structure of opals as well as inverse opals. Atomic force microscopy and high resolution elemental analyses show
a highly ordered structure and uniform distribution of the BiNi filler in the matrix. These BiNi-based nanocomposites are
found to exhibit distinct ferromagnetic-like ordering with transition temperature of about 675 K. As far as we know there
exists no report in literature on any BiNi compound which is magnetic. 相似文献
4.
5.
Lisa M. Utschig Udita Brahmachari Karen L. Mulfort Jens Niklas Oleg G. Poluektov 《Chemical science》2022,13(22):6502
Flavin chemistry is ubiquitous in biological systems with flavoproteins engaged in important redox reactions. In photosynthesis, flavin cofactors are used as electron donors/acceptors to facilitate charge transfer and accumulation for ultimate use in carbon fixation. Following light-induced charge separation in the photosynthetic transmembrane reaction center photosystem I (PSI), an electron is transferred to one of two small soluble shuttle proteins, a ferredoxin (Fd) or a flavodoxin (Fld) (the latter in the condition of Fe-deficiency), followed by electron transfer to the ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR) enzyme. FNR accepts two of these sequential one electron transfers, with its flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor becoming doubly reduced, forming a hydride which is then passed onto the substrate NADP+ to form NADPH. The two one-electron potentials (oxidized/semiquinone and semiquinone/hydroquinone) are similar to each other with the FNR protein stabilizing the hydroquinone, making spectroscopic detection of the intermediate semiquinone state difficult. We employed a new biohybrid-based strategy that involved truncating the native three-protein electron transfer cascade PSI → Fd → FNR to a two-protein cascade by replacing PSI with a molecular Ru(ii) photosensitizer (RuPS) which is covalently bound to Fd and Fld to form biohybrid complexes that successfully mimic PSI in light-driven NADPH formation. RuFd → FNR and RuFld → FNR electron transfer experiments revealed a notable distinction in photosynthetic charge accumulation that we attribute to the different protein cofactors [2Fe2S] and flavin. After freeze quenching the two-protein systems under illumination, an intermediate semiquinone state of FNR was readily observed with cw X-band EPR spectroscopy. The increased spectral resolution from selective deuteration allowed EPR detection of inter-flavoprotein electron transfer. This work establishes a biohybrid experimental approach for further studies of photosynthetic light-driven electron transfer chain that culminates at FNR and highlights nature''s mechanisms that couple single electron transfer chemistry to charge accumulation, providing important insight for the development of photon-to-fuel schemes.One electron at a time, photosynthetic biohybrids enable charge accumulation via the flavin semiquinone of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. 相似文献
6.
Poluektov OG Utschig LM Dubinskij AA Thurnauer MC 《Journal of the American Chemical Society》2005,127(11):4049-4059
Recently we reported the first observation of time-resolved (TR) high-frequency (HF) electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) of the transient charge separated state P865(+)Q(-)A in purple photosynthetic bacterial reaction centers (RC) (Poluektov, O. G., et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 1644-1645). The high resolution and orientational selectivity of HF ENDOR allows us to directly probe protein environments by spectrally selecting specific nuclei in isotopically labeled samples. A new phenomenon associated with the spin correlated radical pair (SCRP) nature of P865(+)Q(-)A was observed. The TR-HF ENDOR spectra of protein nuclei (protons) surrounding deuterated QA(-) exhibit a derivative-like, complicated line shape, which differs considerably from the HF ENDOR spectrum of the protein nuclei surrounding thermally equilibrated QA(-). Here, a theoretical analysis of these observations is presented that shows that the positions and amplitudes of ENDOR lines contain information on hyperfine interactions (HFI) of a particular nucleus (a proton of the protein) with both correlated electron spins. Thus, spin density delocalization in the protein environment between the SCRP donor and acceptor molecules can be revealed via HF ENDOR. Novel approaches for acquiring and analyzing SCRP ENDOR that simplify interpretation of the spectra are discussed. Furthermore, we report here that the positions of the ENDOR lines of the SCRP shift with an increase in the time after laser flash, which initiates electron transfer. These shifts provide direct spectroscopic evidence of reorganization of the protein environment to accommodate the donor-acceptor charge-separated state P865(+)QA(-). 相似文献
7.
L. M. Utschig S. D. Dalosto M. C. Thurnauer Oleg G. Poluektov 《Applied magnetic resonance》2010,38(1):1-17
Metal ion binding to a surface site on photosynthetic reaction centers (RCs) modulates light-induced electron and proton transfer
events in the RC. Whereas many studies have elucidated aspects of metal ion modulation events in Rhodobacter sphaeroides RCs, much less is understood about the surface site in Blastochloris viridis (Blc. viridis) RCs. Interestingly, electron paramagnetic resonance studies revealed two spectroscopically distinct Cu2+ surface site environments in Blc. viridis RCs. Herein, Cu2+ has been used to spectroscopically probe the structure of these Cu2+ site(s) in response to freezing conditions, temperature, and charge separation. One Cu2+ environment in Blc. viridis RCs, termed CuA, exhibits temperature-dependent conformational flexibility. Different conformation states of the CuA2+ site are trapped when the RC is frozen in the dark either by fast-freeze or slow-freeze procedure. The second Cu2+ environment, termed CuB, is structurally invariant to different freezing conditions and shows resolved hyperfine coupling to three nitrogen atoms.
Cu2+ is most likely binding at the same location on the RC, but in different coordination environments which may reflect two distinct
conformational states of the isolated Blc. viridis RC protein. 相似文献
8.
G Link T Berthold M Bechtold J U Weidner E Ohmes J Tang O Poluektov L Utschig S L Schlesselman M C Thurnauer G Kothe 《Journal of the American Chemical Society》2001,123(18):4211-4222
The geometry of the secondary radical pair P700(+)A1(-), in photosystem I (PSI) from the deuterated and 15N-substituted cyanobacterium Synechococcus lividus, has been determined by high time resolution electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), performed at three different microwave frequencies. Structural information is extracted from light-induced quantum beats observed in the transverse magnetization of P700(+)A1(-) at early times after laser excitation. A computer analysis of the two-dimensional Q-band experiment provides the orientation of the various magnetic tensors of with respect to a magnetic reference frame. The orientation of the cofactors of the primary donor in the g-tensor system of is then evaluated by analyzing time-dependent X-band EPR spectra, extracted from a two-dimensional data set. Finally, the cofactor arrangement of P700(+)A1(-) in the photosynthetic membrane is deduced from angular-dependent W-band spectra, observed for a magnetically aligned sample. Thus, the orientation of the g-tensor of P700(+) with respect to a chlorophyll based reference system could be determined. The angle between the g1(z) axis and the chlorophyll plane normal is found to be 29 +/- 7 degrees, while the g1(y) axis lies in the chlorophyll plane. In addition, a complete structural model for the reduced quinone acceptor, A1(-), is evaluated. In this model, the quinone plane of is found to be inclined by 68 +/- 7 degrees relative to the membrane plane, while the P700(+)-A1(-) axis makes an angle of 35 +/- 6 degrees with the membrane normal. All of these values refer to the charge separated state, observed at low temperatures, where forward electron transfer to the iron-sulfur centers is partially blocked. Preliminary room temperature studies of P700(+)A1(-), employing X-band quantum beat oscillations, indicate a different orientation of A1(-) in its binding pocket. A comparison with crystallographic data provides information on the electron-transfer pathway in PSI. It appears that quantum beats represent excellent structural probes for the short-lived intermediates in the primary energy conversion steps of photosynthesis. 相似文献
9.
O. G. Poluektov L. M. Utschig J. Tang A. A. Dubinski S. Schlesselman M. C. Thurnauer 《Applied magnetic resonance》2001,21(3-4):311-323
Time-resolved high-frequency electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy was applied to study the structure and dynamics of the electron transfer pathways in the photosynthetic RC proteins. When the spin-polarized EPR spectra are recorded at the high field, the singlet-triplet mixing in the radical pairs becomes faster due to the increase of Zeeman interaction, and a sequential electron transfer polarization model, which includes both the primary and secondary radical pairs, should be considered. Application of the sequential electron transfer polarization model for the interpretation of the bacterial RC proteins with a “slow” electron transfer rate reveals the importance of the protein dynamics. It was shown that the reorganization energy for the electron transfer process between P 865 + H?QA and P 865 + HQ A ? , but not the change in the structure of the donor-acceptor complex, is a dominant factor that alters the electron transfer rate. The relaxation data, obtained in the delay after laser flash experiment, have been used to estimate the magnetic interaction in the weakly coupled radical pair. High-frequency spin-polarized EPR spectra allow the quantitative characterization of isotopically labeled quinone exchange in the PS I reaction center proteins. 相似文献
10.
Utschig LM Silver SC Mulfort KL Tiede DM 《Journal of the American Chemical Society》2011,133(41):16334-16337
Solar energy conversion of water into the environmentally clean fuel hydrogen offers one of the best long-term solutions for meeting future energy demands. Nature provides highly evolved, finely tuned molecular machinery for solar energy conversion that exquisitely manages photon capture and conversion processes to drive oxygenic water-splitting and carbon fixation. Herein, we use one of Nature's specialized energy-converters, the Photosystem I (PSI) protein, to drive hydrogen production from a synthetic molecular catalyst comprised of inexpensive, earth-abundant materials. PSI and a cobaloxime catalyst self-assemble, and the resultant complex rapidly produces hydrogen in aqueous solution upon exposure to visible light. This work establishes a strategy for enhancing photosynthetic efficiency for solar fuel production by augmenting natural photosynthetic systems with synthetically tunable abiotic catalysts. 相似文献