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2021-06-07T00:00:00 | A generative model for molecule generation based on chemical reaction trees | Dai Hai Nguyen, Koji Tsuda | Deep generative models have been shown powerful in generating novel molecules
with desired chemical properties via their representations such as strings,
trees or graphs. However, these models are limited in recommending synthetic
routes for the generated molecules in practice. We propose a generative model
to generate molecules via multi-step chemical reaction trees. Specifically, our
model first propose a chemical reaction tree with predicted reaction templates
and commercially available molecules (starting molecules), and then perform
forward synthetic steps to obtain product molecules. Experiments show that our
model can generate chemical reactions whose product molecules are with desired
chemical properties. Also, the complete synthetic routes for these product
molecules are provided. | 10.1063/5.0076749 |
|
2003-11-25T00:00:00 | Dissociation and Decay of Ultra-cold Sodium Molecules | T. Mukaiyama, J. R. Abo-Shaeer, K. Xu, J. K. Chin, W. Ketterle | The dissociation of ultracold molecules is studied by ramping an external
magnetic field through a Feshbach resonance. The observed dissociation energy
shows non-linear dependence on the ramp speed and directly yields the strength
of the atom-molecule coupling. In addition, inelastic molecule-molecule and
molecule-atom collisions are characterized. | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.92.180402 |
|
2021-09-03T00:00:00 | IMG2SMI: Translating Molecular Structure Images to Simplified Molecular-input Line-entry System | Daniel Campos, Heng Ji | Like many scientific fields, new chemistry literature has grown at a
staggering pace, with thousands of papers released every month. A large portion
of chemistry literature focuses on new molecules and reactions between
molecules. Most vital information is conveyed through 2-D images of molecules,
representing the underlying molecules or reactions described. In order to
ensure reproducible and machine-readable molecule representations, text-based
molecule descriptors like SMILES and SELFIES were created. These text-based
molecule representations provide molecule generation but are unfortunately
rarely present in published literature. In the absence of molecule descriptors,
the generation of molecule descriptors from the 2-D images present in the
literature is necessary to understand chemistry literature at scale. Successful
methods such as Optical Structure Recognition Application (OSRA), and
ChemSchematicResolver are able to extract the locations of molecules structures
in chemistry papers and infer molecular descriptions and reactions. While
effective, existing systems expect chemists to correct outputs, making them
unsuitable for unsupervised large-scale data mining. Leveraging the task
formulation of image captioning introduced by DECIMER, we introduce IMG2SMI, a
model which leverages Deep Residual Networks for image feature extraction and
an encoder-decoder Transformer layers for molecule description generation.
Unlike previous Neural Network-based systems, IMG2SMI builds around the task of
molecule description generation, which enables IMG2SMI to outperform OSRA-based
systems by 163% in molecule similarity prediction as measured by the molecular
MACCS Fingerprint Tanimoto Similarity. Additionally, to facilitate further
research on this task, we release a new molecule prediction dataset. including
81 million molecules for molecule description generation | null |
|
2003-06-27T00:00:00 | Orientational orders in binary mixtures of hard HGO molecules | Xin Zhou, Hu Chen, Mitsumasa Iwamoto | studied liquid crystal phases of binary mixtures of non-spherical molecules.
The components of the mixtures are two kinds of hard Gaussian overlap (HGO)
molecules, one kind of molecules with a small molecular-elongation parameter
(small HGO molecules) cannot form stable liquid crystal phase in bulk, and
other with a large elongation parameter (large HGO molecules) can form liquid
crystal phase easily. In the mixtures, like the large HGO molecules, the small
HGO molecules can also form an orientation-ordered phase, which is because that
the large HGO molecules can form complex confining surfaces to induce the
alignment of the small molecules and generate an isotropic-anisotropic phase
transition in the whole binary mixtures. We also study the transition on
different mixtures composed of small and large HGO molecules with different
elongations and different concentrations of the large molecules. The obtained
result implies that small anisotropic molecules might show liquid crystal
behavior in confinement. | 10.1063/1.1634954 |
|
2015-09-28T00:00:00 | Pulling short DNA molecules having defects on different locations | Amar Singh, Navin Singh | We present a study on the role of defects on the stability of short DNA
molecules. We consider short DNA molecules (16 base pairs) and investigate the
thermal as well as mechanical denaturation of these molecules in the presence
of defects that occurs anywhere in the molecule. For the investigation, we
consider four different kinds of chains. Not only the ratio of AT to GC
different in these molecules but also the distributions of AT and GC along the
molecule are different. With suitable modifications in the statistical model to
show the defect in a pair, we investigate the denaturation of short DNA
molecules in thermal as well as constant force ensemble. In the force ensemble,
we pulled the DNA molecule from each end (keeping other end free) and observed
some interesting features of opening of the molecule in the presence of defects
in the molecule. We calculate the probability of opening of the DNA molecule in
the constant force ensemble to explain the opening of base pairs and hence the
denaturation of molecules in the presence of defects. | Phys. Rev. E, v92, p03270, 2015 | 10.1103/PhysRevE.92.032703 |
2017-02-27T00:00:00 | On the molecules of numerical semigroups, Puiseux monoids, and Puiseux algebras | Felix Gotti, Marly Gotti | A molecule is a nonzero non-unit element of an integral domain (resp.,
commutative cancellative monoid) having a unique factorization into
irreducibles (resp., atoms). Here we study the molecules of Puiseux monoids as
well as the molecules of their corresponding semigroup algebras, which we call
Puiseux algebras. We begin by presenting, in the context of numerical
semigroups, some results on the possible cardinalities of the sets of molecules
and the sets of reducible molecules (i.e., molecules that are not
irreducibles/atoms). Then we study the molecules in the more general context of
Puiseux monoids. We construct infinitely many non-isomorphic atomic Puiseux
monoids all whose molecules are atoms. In addition, we characterize the
molecules of Puiseux monoids generated by rationals with prime denominators.
Finally, we turn to investigate the molecules of Puiseux algebras. We provide a
characterization of the molecules of the Puiseux algebras corresponding to
root-closed Puiseux monoids. Then we use such a characterization to find an
infinite class of Puiseux algebras with infinitely many non-associated
reducible molecules. | Numerical Semigroups (Editors: V. Barucci, S. T. Chapman, M.
D'Anna, and R. Froberg), Springer INdAM Series, Vol. 40, Switzerland, 2020 | null |
2017-10-03T00:00:00 | Electronic structure of ultralong-range Rydberg pentaatomic molecules with two polar diatomic molecules | Javier Aguilera-Fernández, H. R. Sadeghpour, Peter Schmelcher, Rosario González-Férez | We explore the electronic structure of ultralong-range pentaatomic Rydberg
molecules from a merger of a Rydberg atom and two ground state heteronuclear
diatomic molecules. Our focus is on the interaction of Rb($23s$) and Rb($n=20$,
$l\ge 3$) Rydberg states with ground and rotationally excited KRb diatomic
polar molecules. For symmetric and asymmetric configurations of the pentaatomic
Rydberg molecule, we investigate the metamorphosis of the Born-Oppenheimer
potential curves, essential for the binding of the molecule, with varying
distance from the Rydberg core and analyze the alignment and orientation of the
polar diatomic molecules. | Phys. Rev. A 96, 052509 (2017) | 10.1103/PhysRevA.96.052509 |
2019-12-26T00:00:00 | Soliton molecules in Sharma-Tasso-Olver-Burgers equation | Zhaowen Yan, Senyue Lou | Soliton molecules have been experimentally discovered in optics and
theoretically investigated for coupled systems. This paper is concerned with
the formation of soliton molecules by the resonant mechanism for a noncoupled
system, the Sharma-Tasso-Olver-Burgers (STOB) equation. In terms of introducing
velocity resonance conditions, we derive the soliton (kink) molecules, half
periodic kink (HPK) molecules and breathing soliton molecule of STOB equation.
Meanwhile, the fission and fusion phenomena among kinks, kink molecules, HPKs
and HPK molecules have been revealed. Moreover, we also discuss the central
periodic kink solutions from the multiple solitary wave solutions. | null |
|
2020-05-16T00:00:00 | Probabilistic Optically-Selective Single-molecule Imaging Based Localization Encoded (POSSIBLE) Microscopy for Ultra-superresolution Imaging | Partha Pratim Mondal | To be able to resolve molecular-clusters it is crucial to access vital
informations (such as, molecule density and cluster-size) that are key to
understand disease progression and the underlying mechanism. Traditional
single-molecule localization microscopy (SMLM) techniques use molecules of
variable sizes (as determined by its localization precisions (LPs)) to
reconstruct super-resolution map. This results in an image with overlapping and
superimposing PSFs (due to a wide size-spectrum of single molecules) that
degrade image resolution. Ideally it should be possible to identify the
brightest molecules (also termed as, fortunate molecules) to reconstruct
ultra-superresolution map, provided sufficient statistics is available from the
recorded data. POSSIBLE microscopy explores this possibility by introducing
narrow probability size-distribution of single molecules (narrow size-spectrum
about a predefined mean-size). The reconstruction begins by presetting the mean
and variance of the narrow distribution function (Gaussian function).
Subsequently, the dataset is processed and single molecule filtering is carried
out by the Gaussian distribution function to filter out unfortunate molecules.
The fortunate molecules thus retained are then mapped to reconstruct
ultra-superresolution map. In-principle, the POSSIBLE microscopy technique is
capable of infinite resolution (resolution of the order of actual single
molecule size) provided enough fortunate molecules are experimentally detected.
In short, bright molecules (with large emissivity) holds the key. Here, we
demonstrate the POSSIBLE microscopy technique and reconstruct single molecule
images with an average PSF sizes of 15 nm, 30 nm and 50 nm. Results show
better-resolved Dendra2-HA clusters with large cluster-density in transfected
NIH3T3 fibroblast cells as compared to the traditional SMLM techniques. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0242452 |
|
2021-04-23T00:00:00 | Evidence for association of triatomic molecule in ultracold $^{23}$Na$^{40}$K and $^{40}$K mixture | Huan Yang, Xin-Yao Wang, Zhen Su, Jin Cao, De-Chao Zhang, Jun Rui, Bo Zhao, Chun-Li Bai, Jian-Wei Pan | Ultracold assembly of diatomic molecules has enabled great advances in
controlled chemistry, ultracold chemical physics, and quantum simulation with
molecules. Extending the ultracold association to triatomic molecules will
offer many new research opportunities and challenges in these fields. A
possible approach is to form triatomic molecules in the ultracold atom and
diatomic molecule mixture by employing the Feshbach resonance between them.
Although the ultracold atom-diatomic-molecule Feshbach resonances have been
observed recently, utilizing these resonances to form triatomic molecules
remains challenging. Here we report on the evidence of the association of
triatomic molecules near the Feshbach resonances between $^{23}$Na$^{40}$K
molecules in the rovibrational ground state and $^{40}$K atoms. We apply a
radio-frequency pulse to drive the free-bound transition and monitor the loss
of $^{23}$Na$^{40}$K molecules. The association of triatomic molecules
manifests itself as an additional loss feature in the radio-frequency spectra,
which can be distinguished from the atomic loss feature.The binding energy of
triatomic molecule is estimated from the measurement. Our work is helpful to
understand the complex ultracold atom-molecule Feshbach resonance and may open
up an avenue towards the preparation and control of ultracold triatomic
molecules. | Nature 602, 229 (2022) | 10.1038/s41586-021-04297-2 |
2012-08-20T00:00:00 | Exciton Binding Energy in small organic conjugated molecule | Pabitra K. Nayak | For small organic conjugated molecules the exciton binding energy can be
calculated treating molecules as conductor, and is given by a simple relation
BE \approx e2/(4{\pi}{\epsilon}0{\epsilon}R), where {\epsilon} is the
dielectric constant and R is the equivalent radius of the molecule. However, if
the molecule deviates from spherical shape, a minor correction factor should be
added. | null |
|
2012-11-08T00:00:00 | Arrangement of DOBAMBC molecules inside the capsule on change of the molecule's inclination on the border of the capsule investigated by the molecular dynamics method | M. A. Korshunov | The method of molecular dynamics is used to investigate the distribution of
DOBAMBC molecules in a capsule with the fixed border layer. Change of an
arrangement of molecules in smectic layers depending on an inclination of
molecules on border is considered. | null |
|
2004-07-08T00:00:00 | Microwave traps for cold polar molecules | D. DeMille, D. R. Glenn, J. Petricka | We discuss the possibility of trapping polar molecules in the standing-wave
electromagnetic field of a microwave resonant cavity. Such a trap has several
novel features that make it very attractive for the development of ultracold
molecule sources. Using commonly available technologies, microwave traps can be
built with large depth (up to several Kelvin) and acceptance volume (up to
several cm^3), suitable for efficient loading with currently available sources
of cold polar molecules. Unlike most previous traps for molecules, this
technology can be used to confine the strong-field seeking absolute ground
state of the molecule, in a free-space maximum of the microwave electric field.
Such ground state molecules should be immune to inelastic collisional losses.
We calculate elastic collision cross-sections for the trapped molecules, due to
the electrical polarization of the molecules at the trap center, and find that
they are extraordinarily large. Thus, molecules in a microwave trap should be
very amenable to sympathetic and/or evaporative cooling. The combination of
these properties seems to open a clear path to producing large samples of polar
molecules at temperatures much lower than has been possible previously. | 10.1140/epjd/e2004-00163-6 |
|
2017-12-29T00:00:00 | Competition of Chiroptical Effect Caused by Nanostructure and Chiral Molecules | Tong Wu, Jun Ren, Rongyao Wang, Xiangdong Zhang | The theory to calculate circular dichroism (CD) of chiral molecules in a
finite cluster with arbitrarily disposed objects has been developed by means of
T-matrix method. The interactions between chiral molecules and nanostructures
have been investigated. Our studies focus on the case of chiral molecules
inserted into plasmonic hot spots of nanostructures. Our results show that the
total CD of the system with two chiral molecules is not sum for two cases when
two chiral molecules inserted respectively into the hot spots of nanoparticle
clusters as the distances among nanoparticles are small, although the
relationship is established at the case of large interparticle distances. The
plasmonic CD arising from structure chirality of nanocomposites depends
strongly on the relative positions and orientations of nanospheroids, and are
much greater than that from molecule-induced chirality. However, the
molecule-induced plasmonic CD effect from the molecule-NP nanocomposites with
special chiral structures can be spectrally distinguishable from the structure
chirality-based optical activity. Our results provide a new theoretical
framework for understanding the two different aspects of plasmonic CD effect in
molecule-NP nanocomposites, which would be helpful for the experimental design
of novel biosensors to realize ultrasensitive probe of chiral information of
molecules by plasmon-based nanotechnology. | J. Phys. Chem. C 2014 | null |
2020-07-01T00:00:00 | Photoassociation of ultracold long-range polyatomic molecules | Marko Gacesa, Jason N. Byrd, Jonathan Smucker, John A. Montgomery, Jr., Robin Côté | We explore the feasibility of optically forming long-range tetratomic and
larger polyatomic molecules in their ground electronic state from ultracold
pairs of polar molecules aligned by external fields. Depending on the relative
orientation of the interacting diatomic molecules, we find that a tetratomic
can be formed either as a weakly bound complex in a very extended halo state or
as a pure long-range molecule composed of collinear or nearly-collinear
diatomic molecules. The latter is a novel type of tetratomic molecule comprised
of two diatomic molecules bound at long intermolecular range and predicted to
be stable in cold and ultracold regimes. Our numerical studies were conducted
for ultracold KRb and RbCs, resulting in production of (KRb)$_2$ and (RbCs)$_2$
complexes, respectively. Based on universal properties of long-range
interactions between polar molecules, we identify triatomic and tetratomic
linear polar molecules with favorable ratio of dipole and quadrupole moments
for which the apporach could be generalized to form polyatomic molecules. | Phys. Rev. Research 3, 023163 (2021) | 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.023163 |
2022-11-05T00:00:00 | Chaotic internal dynamics of dissipative optical soliton molecules | Youjian Song, Defeng Zou, Omri Gat, Minglie Hu, Philippe Grelu | When a laser cavity supports the propagation of several ultrashort pulses,
these pulses interact and can form compact bound states called soliton
molecules. Soliton molecules are fascinating objects of nonlinear science,
which present striking analogies with their matter molecules counterparts. The
soliton pair, composed of two identical pulses, constitutes the chief soliton
molecule of fundamental interest. The relative timing and phase between the two
propagating pulses are the most salient internal degrees of freedom of the
soliton molecule. These two internal degrees of freedom allow self-oscillating
soliton molecules, which have indeed been repeatedly observed, whereas the
lowdimensional chaotic dynamics of a soliton-pair molecule remains elusive,
noting that it would require at least three degrees of freedom. We here report
the observation of chaotic soliton-pair molecules within an ultrafast fiber
laser, by means of a direct measurement of the relative optical pulse
separation with sub-femtosecond precision in real time. Moreover, we
demonstrate an all-optical control of the chaotic dynamics followed by the
soliton molecule, by injecting a modulated optical signal that resynchronizes
the internal periodic vibration of soliton molecule. | null |
|
2001-06-12T00:00:00 | Driving current through single organic molecules | J. Reichert, R. Ochs, D. Beckmann, H. B. Weber, M. Mayor, H. v. Loehneysen | We investigate electronic transport through two types of conjugated
molecules. Mechanically controlled break-junctions are used to couple thiol
endgroups of single molecules to two gold electrodes. Current-voltage
characteristics (IVs) of the metal-molecule-metal system are observed. These
IVs reproduce the spatial symmetry of the molecules with respect to the
direction of current flow. We hereby unambigously detect an intrinsic property
of the molecule, and are able to distinguish the influence of both the molecule
and the contact to the metal electrodes on the transport properties of the
compound system. | Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 176804 (2002) | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.88.176804 |
2006-11-02T00:00:00 | Collisional decay of 87Rb Feshbach molecules at 1005.8 G | N. Syassen, T. Volz, S. Teichmann, S. Dürr, G. Rempe | We present measurements of the loss-rate coefficients K_am and K_mm caused by
inelastic atom-molecule and molecule-molecule collisions. A thermal cloud of
atomic 87Rb is prepared in an optical dipole trap. A magnetic field is ramped
across the Feshbach resonance at 1007.4 G. This associates atom pairs to
molecules. A measurement of the molecule loss at 1005.8 G yields K_am=2 10^-10
cm^3/s. Additionally, the atoms can be removed with blast light. In this case,
the measured molecule loss yields K_mm=3 10^-10 cm^3/s. | Phys. Rev. A 74, 062706 (2006) | 10.1103/PhysRevA.74.062706 |
2008-09-23T00:00:00 | Ultracold Feshbach Molecules | Francesca Ferlaino, Steven Knoop, Rudolf Grimm | In this Chapter, we give an introduction into experiments with Feshbach
molecules and their applications. In particular, we discuss the various
creation and detection methods, and the internal-state manipulation of such
molecules. We highlight two topics, namely Feshbach molecules in the halo
regime and the application of Feshbach molecule to achieve ultracold gases of
molecules in the rovibrational ground state. Our illustrative examples are
mainly based on work performed at Innsbruck University. | null |
|
2009-03-18T00:00:00 | Collisions of bosonic ultracold polar molecules in microwave traps | Alexander V. Avdeenkov | The collisions between linear polar molecules, trapped in a microwave field
with circular polarization, are theoretically analyzed. The microwave trap
suggested by DeMille \cite{DeMille} seems to be rather advantageous in
comparison with other traps. Here we have demonstrated that the microwave trap
can provide a successful evaporative cooling for polar molecules in a rather
broad range of frequencies of the AC-field. We suggested that not only ground
state polar molecules but also molecules in some other states can be safely
trapped.
But the state in which molecules can be safely loaded and trapped depends on
the frequency of the AC-field. | 10.1088/1367-2630/11/5/055016 |
|
2009-04-25T00:00:00 | Formation and interactions of cold and ultracold molecules: new challenges for interdisciplinary physics | Olivier Dulieu, Carlo Gabbanini | Progress on researches in the field of molecules at cold and ultracold
temperatures is reported in this review. It covers extensively the experimental
methods to produce, detect and characterize cold and ultracold molecules
including association of ultracold atoms, deceleration by external fields and
kinematic cooling. Confinement of molecules in different kinds of traps is also
discussed. The basic theoretical issues related to the knowledge of the
molecular structure, the atom-molecule and molecule-molecule mutual
interactions, and to their possible manipulation and control with external
fields, are reviewed. A short discussion on the broad area of applications
completes the review. | 10.1088/0034-4885/72/8/086401 |
|
2011-03-15T00:00:00 | Infrared Spectra of Dehydrogenated Carbon Molecules | S. Kuzmin, W. W. Duley | The detection of fullerene molecules in a variety of astrophysical
environments suggests that smaller dehydrogenated carbon molecules may also be
present in these sources. One of these is planar C24 which has been shown to be
more stable than the cage fullerene with the same number of carbon atoms. To
facilitate searches for C24 and some simple derivatives we have calculated
infrared spectra for these molecules using first principles density functional
techniques (DFT). Infrared spectra are also presented for several novel carbon
cage molecules formed from dehydrogenated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
molecules. Infrared spectra of a number of these molecules are quite
distinctive and we discuss the possibility of detecting these species in the
presence of C60 and other fullerenes. | null |
|
2011-12-02T00:00:00 | Dipole Interaction Mediated Laser Cooling of Polar Molecules to Ultra-cold Temperatures | Sebastian D. Huber, Hans Peter Büchler | We present a method to design a finite decay rate for excited rotational
states in polar molecules. The setup is based on a hybrid system of polar
molecules with atoms driven into a Rydberg state. The atoms and molecules are
coupled via the strong dipolar exchange interaction between two rotation levels
of the polar molecule and two Rydberg states. Such a controllable decay rate
opens the way to optically pump the hyperfine levels of polar molecules and it
enables the application of conventional laser cooling techniques for cooling
polar molecules into quantum degeneracy. | Phys. Rev. Lett, 108 193006 (2012) | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.193006 |
2019-02-01T00:00:00 | An Optical Tweezer Array of Ultracold Molecules | Loïc Anderegg, Lawrence W. Cheuk, Yicheng Bao, Sean Burchesky, Wolfgang Ketterle, Kang-Kuen Ni, John M. Doyle | Arrays of single ultracold molecules promise to be a powerful platform for
many applications ranging from quantum simulation to precision measurement.
Here we report on the creation of an optical tweezer array of single ultracold
CaF molecules. By utilizing light-induced collisions during the laser cooling
process, we trap single molecules. The high densities attained inside the
tweezer traps have also enabled us to observe in the absence of light
molecule-molecule collisions of laser cooled molecules for the first time. | 10.1126/science.aax1265 |
|
2014-11-13T00:00:00 | The Behavior of Benzene Confined in Single Wall Carbon Nanotube | Yu. D. Fomin, E. N. Tsiok, V. N. Ryzhov | We present the molecular dynamics study of benzene molecules confined into
the single wall carbon nanotube. The local structure and orientational ordering
of benzene molecules are investigated. It is found that the molecules mostly
group in the middle distance from the axe of the tube to the wall. The
molecules located in the vicinity of the wall demonstrate some deviation from
planar shape. There is a tilted orientational ordering of the molecules which
depends on the location of the molecule. It is shown that the diffusion
coefficient of the benzene molecules is very small at the conditions we report
here. | null |
|
2021-05-07T00:00:00 | Contribution of internal degree of freedom of soft molecules to Soret effect | Takeaki Araki, Chikakiyo Natsumi | We studied the Soret effect in binary dimer-monomer mixtures using
non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations and investigated the pure
contribution of the internal degree of freedom of flexible molecules to the
Soret effect. We observed that the thermal diffusion factor tends to decrease
and change its sign as the molecules become softer. We proposed two possible
mechanisms of our observations: change of the molecule structures with the
temperature, causing bulkier molecules to migrate to the hotter region;
asymmetry of the restitution between rigid and flexible molecules, due to which
flexible molecules show larger restitution when placed at the hotter region. | Phys. Rev. E 103, 042611 (2021) | 10.1103/PhysRevE.103.042611 |
2013-03-29T00:00:00 | Modeling pre-biotic self-organization: The chemical dynamics of autocatalytic networks | Varun Giri | In this thesis we present a mathematical model describing the population
dynamics of molecules in an artificial chemistry where large molecules can be
produced by successive ligation of pairs of smaller molecules. The chemistry
contains a large number of spontaneous reactions of which a small subset could
be catalyzed by molecules produced in the chemistry with varying catalytic
strengths. We show ACSs, if present in the catalytic network, can focus the
resources of the system into a sparse set of molecules. ACSs can produce a
bistability in the population dynamics and, in particular, steady states
wherein the ACS molecules dominate the population, i.e., have higher
concentrations compared to the rest of molecules in the chemistry (background).
In this thesis we attempt to address two main questions: First, under what
circumstances do molecules belonging to the ACSs dominate over the background,
and second, starting from an initial condition that does not contain good
catalysts, can a sparse set of large molecules (containing several tens or a
few hundred monomers) that are good catalysts arise and be maintained in the
system at concentrations significantly above the background? We show that if an
ACS catalyzed by large molecules contains within it (or partially overlaps
with) a smaller ACS catalyzed by smaller molecules (referred to as a `nested
ACS' structure), the catalytic strength required for the large ACS to dominate
comes down significantly. We show that when the network contains a cascade of
nested ACSs with the catalytic strengths of molecules increasing gradually with
their size, a sparse subset of molecules including some very large molecules
can come to dominate the system. | null |
|
2021-09-16T00:00:00 | Molecule-molecule and atom-molecule collisions with ultracold RbCs molecules | Philip D. Gregory, Jacob A. Blackmore, Matthew D. Frye, Luke M. Fernley, Sarah L. Bromley, Jeremy M. Hutson, Simon L. Cornish | Understanding ultracold collisions involving molecules is of fundamental
importance for current experiments, where inelastic collisions typically limit
the lifetime of molecular ensembles in optical traps. Here we present a broad
study of optically trapped ultracold RbCs molecules in collisions with one
another, in reactive collisions with Rb atoms, and in nonreactive collisions
with Cs atoms. For experiments with RbCs alone, we show that by modulating the
intensity of the optical trap, such that the molecules spend 75% of each
modulation cycle in the dark, we partially suppress collisional loss of the
molecules. This is evidence for optical excitation of molecule pairs mediated
via sticky collisions. We find that the suppression is less effective for
molecules not prepared in the spin-stretched hyperfine ground state. This may
be due either to longer lifetimes for complexes or to laser-free decay
pathways. For atom-molecule mixtures, RbCs+Rb and RbCs+Cs, we demonstrate that
the rate of collisional loss of molecules scales linearly with the density of
atoms. This indicates that, in both cases, the loss of molecules is
rate-limited by two-body atom-molecule processes. For both mixtures, we measure
loss rates that are below the thermally averaged universal limit. | 10.1088/1367-2630/ac3c63 |
|
2022-05-25T00:00:00 | Orbital hybridization and electrostatic interaction in a double molecule transistor | Xiao Guo, Qing Yang, Wei Yu, Qiuhao Zhu, Yuwen Cai, Wengang Lu, Sheng Meng, Wenjie Liang | Understanding the intermolecular interactions and utilize these interactions
to effectively control the transport behavior of single molecule is the key
step from single molecule device to molecular circuits1-6. Although many single
molecule detection techniques are used to detect the molecular interaction at
single-molecule level1,4,5,7,8, probing and tuning the intermolecular
interaction all by electrical approaches has not been demonstrated. In this
work, we successful assemble a double molecule transistor incorporating two
manganese phthalocyanine molecules, on which we probe and tune the interaction
in situ by implementing electrical manipulation on molecular orbitals using
gate voltage. Orbital levels of the two molecules couple to each other and
couple to the universal gate differently. Electrostatic interaction is observed
when single electron changing in one molecule alters the transport behavior of
the other, providing the information about the dynamic process of electron
sequent tunneling through a molecule. Orbital hybridization is found when two
orbital levels are put into degeneracy under non-equilibrium condition, making
the tunneling electrons no longer localized to a specific molecule but shared
by two molecules, offering a new mechanism to control charge transfer between
non-covalent molecules. Current work offer a forelook into working principles
of functional electrical unit based on single molecules. | null |
|
2011-11-21T00:00:00 | Cold collisions of complex polyatomic molecules | Zhiying Li, Eric J. Heller | We introduce a method for classical trajectory calculations to simulate
collisions between atoms and large rigid asymmetric-top molecules. Using this
method, we investigate the formation of molecule-helium complexes in buffer-gas
cooling experiments at a temperature of 6.5 K for molecules as large as
naphthalene. Our calculations show that the mean lifetime of the
naphthalene-helium quasi-bound collision complex is not long enough for the
formation of stable clusters under the experimental conditions. Our results
suggest that it may be possible to improve the efficiency of the production of
cold molecules in buffer-gas cooling experiments by increasing the density of
helium. In addition, we find that the shape of molecules is important for the
collision dynamics when the vibrational motion of molecules is frozen. For some
molecules, it is even more crucial than the number of accessible degrees of
freedom. This indicates that by selecting molecules with suitable shape for
buffer-gas cooling, it may be possible to cool molecules with a very large
number of degrees of freedom. | 10.1063/1.3682982 |
|
2019-06-12T00:00:00 | A Model to Search for Synthesizable Molecules | John Bradshaw, Brooks Paige, Matt J. Kusner, Marwin H. S. Segler, José Miguel Hernández-Lobato | Deep generative models are able to suggest new organic molecules by
generating strings, trees, and graphs representing their structure. While such
models allow one to generate molecules with desirable properties, they give no
guarantees that the molecules can actually be synthesized in practice. We
propose a new molecule generation model, mirroring a more realistic real-world
process, where (a) reactants are selected, and (b) combined to form more
complex molecules. More specifically, our generative model proposes a bag of
initial reactants (selected from a pool of commercially-available molecules)
and uses a reaction model to predict how they react together to generate new
molecules. We first show that the model can generate diverse, valid and unique
molecules due to the useful inductive biases of modeling reactions.
Furthermore, our model allows chemists to interrogate not only the properties
of the generated molecules but also the feasibility of the synthesis routes. We
conclude by using our model to solve retrosynthesis problems, predicting a set
of reactants that can produce a target product. | null |
|
2020-10-30T00:00:00 | Goal directed molecule generation using Monte Carlo Tree Search | Anand A. Rajasekar, Karthik Raman, Balaraman Ravindran | One challenging and essential task in biochemistry is the generation of novel
molecules with desired properties. Novel molecule generation remains a
challenge since the molecule space is difficult to navigate through, and the
generated molecules should obey the rules of chemical valency. Through this
work, we propose a novel method, which we call unitMCTS, to perform molecule
generation by making a unit change to the molecule at every step using Monte
Carlo Tree Search. We show that this method outperforms the recently published
techniques on benchmark molecular optimization tasks such as QED and penalized
logP. We also demonstrate the usefulness of this method in improving molecule
properties while being similar to the starting molecule. Given that there is no
learning involved, our method finds desired molecules within a shorter amount
of time. | null |
|
2022-07-31T00:00:00 | Sampling the proteome by emerging single-molecule and mass-spectrometry methods | Michael J. MacCoss, Javier Alfaro, Meni Wanunu, Danielle A. Faivre, Nikolai Slavov | Mammalian cells have about 30,000-fold more protein molecules than mRNA
molecules. This larger number of molecules and the associated larger dynamic
range have major implications in the development of proteomics technologies. We
examine these implications for both liquid chromatography-tandem mass
spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and single-molecule counting and provide estimates on
how many molecules are routinely measured in proteomics experiments by
LC-MS/MS. We review strategies that have been helpful for counting billions of
protein molecules by LC-MS/MS and suggest that these strategies can benefit
single-molecule methods, especially in mitigating the challenges of the wide
dynamic range of the proteome. We also examine the theoretical possibilities
for scaling up single-molecule and mass spectrometry proteomics approaches to
quantifying the billions of protein molecules that make up the proteomes of our
cells. | Nat Methods 20, 339--346 (2023) | 10.1038/s41592-023-01802-5 |
2006-01-24T00:00:00 | DNA entropic elasticity for short molecules attached to beads | Jinyu Li, Philip C. Nelson, M. D. Betterton | Single-molecule experiments in which force is applied to DNA or RNA molecules
have enabled important discoveries of nucleic acid properties and nucleic
acid-enzyme interactions. These experiments rely on a model of the polymer
force-extension behavior to calibrate the experiments; typically the
experiments use the worm-like chain (WLC) theory for double-stranded DNA and
RNA. This theory agrees well with experiments for long molecules. Recent
single-molecule experiments have used shorter molecules, with contour lengths
in the range of 1-10 persistence lengths. Most WLC theory calculations to date
have assumed infinite molecule lengths, and do not agree well with experiments
on shorter chains. Key physical effects that become important when shorter
molecules are used include (i) boundary conditions which constrain the allowed
fluctuations at the ends of the molecule and (ii) rotational fluctuations of
the bead to which the polymer is attached, which change the apparent extension
of the molecule. We describe the finite worm-like chain (FWLC) theory, which
takes into account these effects. We show the FWLC predictions diverge from the
classic WLC solution for molecules with contour lengths a few times the
persistence length. Thus the FWLC will allow more accurate experimental
calibration for relatively short molecules, facilitating future discoveries in
single-molecule force microscopy. | null |
|
2008-08-26T00:00:00 | Magnetic field modification of ultracold molecule-molecule collisions | T. V. Tscherbul, Yu. V. Suleimanov, V. Aquilanti, R. V. Krems | We present an accurate quantum mechanical study of molecule-molecule
collisions in the presence of a magnetic field. The work focusses on the
analysis of elastic scattering and spin relaxation in collisions of
O2(3Sigma_g) molecules at cold (~0.1 K) and ultracold (~10^{-6} K)
temperatures. Our calculations show that magnetic spin relaxation in
molecule-molecule collisions is extremely efficient except at magnetic fields
below 1 mT. The rate constant for spin relaxation at T=0.1 K and a magnetic
field of 0.1 T is found to be as large as 6.1 x 10^{-11} cm3/s. The magnetic
field dependence of elastic and inelastic scattering cross sections at
ultracold temperatures is dominated by a manifold of Feshbach resonances with
the density of ~100 resonances per Tesla for collisions of molecules in the
absolute ground state. This suggests that the scattering length of ultracold
molecules in the absolute ground state can be effectively tuned in a very wide
range of magnetic fields. Our calculations demonstrate that the number and
properties of the magnetic Feshbach resonances are dramatically different for
molecules in the absolute ground and excited spin states. The density of
Feshbach resonances for molecule-molecule scattering in the low-field-seeking
Zeeman state is reduced by a factor of 10. | New J. Phys. 11, 055021 (2009) | 10.1088/1367-2630/11/5/055021 |
2012-11-28T00:00:00 | Detecting high density ultracold molecules using atom-molecule collision | Jun-Ren Chen, Cheng-Yang Kao, Hung-Bin Chen, Yi-Wei Liu | Utilizing single-photon photoassociation, we have achieved ultracold rubidium
molecules with a high number density that provides a new efficient approach
toward molecular quantum degeneracy. A new detection mechanism for ultracold
molecule utilizing the inelastic atom-molecule collision is demonstrated. The
resonant coupling effect on the formation of the ${\rm X^1\Sigma^+_g}$ ground
state ${\rm ^{85}Rb_2}$ allows for a sufficient number of more deeply bound
ultracold molecules, which induced an additional trap loss and heating of the
co-existing atoms owing to the inelastic atom-molecule collision. Therefore,
after photoassociation process, the ultracold molecules can be investigated
using the absorption image of the ultracold rubidium atoms mixed with the
molecules in a crossed optical dipole trap. The existence of the ultracold
molecules was then verified, and the amount of the accumulated molecules was
measured. This method is to detect the final produced ultracold molecules, and
hence distinct from the conventional trap loss experiments, which is used to
study the association resonance. It is composed of measurements of the time
evolution of atomic cloud and a decay model, by which the number density of the
ultracold ${\rm ^{85}Rb_2}$ molecules in the optical trap was estimated to be
${\rm > 5.2\times10^{11} cm^{-3}}$. | 10.1088/1367-2630/15/4/043035 |
|
1998-02-03T00:00:00 | Comparison of tunneling through molecules with Mott-Hubbard and with dimerization gaps | Julien Favand, Frederic Mila | In order to study the tunneling of electrons through an interacting, 1D,
dimerized molecule connected to leads, we consider the persistent current in a
ring embedding this molecule. We find numerically that, for spinless fermions,
a molecule with a gap mostly due to interactions, i.e. a Mott-Hubbard gap,
gives rise to a larger persistent current than a molecule with the same gap,
but due only to the dimerization. In both cases, the tunneling current
decreases exponentially with the size of the molecule, but more slowly in the
interacting case. Implications for molecular electronic are briefly discussed. | 10.1007/s100510050252 |
|
2004-11-10T00:00:00 | Observation of Feshbach-like resonances in collisions between ultracold molecules | C. Chin, T. Kraemer, M. Mark, J. Herbig, P. Waldburger, H. -C. Naegerl, R. Grimm | We observe magnetically tuned collision resonances for ultracold Cs2
molecules stored in a CO2-laser trap. By magnetically levitating the molecules
against gravity, we precisely measure their magnetic moment. We find an avoided
level crossing which allows us to transfer the molecules into another state. In
the new state, two Feshbach-like collision resonances show up as strong
inelastic loss features. We interpret these resonances as being induced by Cs4
bound states near the molecular scattering continuum. The tunability of the
interactions between molecules opens up novel applications such as controlled
chemical reactions and synthesis of ultracold complex molecules. | Phys.Rev.Lett.94:123201,2005 | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.94.123201 |
2006-07-23T00:00:00 | Ultracold heteronuclear molecules in a 3D optical lattice | C. Ospelkaus, S. Ospelkaus, L. Humbert, P. Ernst, K. Sengstock, K. Bongs | We report on the creation of ultracold heteronuclear molecules assembled from
fermionic 40K and bosonic 87Rb atoms in a 3D optical lattice. Molecules are
produced at a heteronuclear Feshbach resonance both on the attractive and the
repulsive side of the resonance. We precisely determine the binding energy of
the heteronuclear molecules from rf spectroscopy across the Feshbach resonance.
We characterize the lifetime of the molecular sample as a function of magnetic
field and measure between 20 and 120ms. The efficiency of molecule creation via
rf association is measured and is found to decrease as expected for more deeply
bound molecules. | Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 120402 (2006) | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.97.120402 |
2008-07-26T00:00:00 | Non-Local Conductance Modulation by Molecules: STM of Substituted Styrene Heterostructures on H-Terminated Si(100) | Paul G. Piva, Robert A. Wolkow, George Kirczenow | One-dimensional organic heterostructures consisting of contiguous lines of
CF3- and OCH3-substituted styrene molecules on silicon are studied by scanning
tunneling microscopy and ab initio simulation. Dipole fields of OCH3-styrene
molecules are found to enhance conduction through molecules near
OCH3-styrene/CF3-styrene heterojunctions. Those of CF3-styrene depress
transport through the nearby silicon. Thus choice of substituents and their
attachment site on host molecules provide a means of differentially tuning
molecule and substrate transport at the molecular scale. | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.101.106801 |
|
2008-10-07T00:00:00 | Ultracold Heteronuclear Fermi-Fermi Molecules | A. -C. Voigt, M. Taglieber, L. Costa, T. Aoki, W. Wieser, T. W. Hänsch, K. Dieckmann | We report on the first creation of ultracold bosonic heteronuclear molecules
of two fermionic species, 6Li and 40K, by a magnetic field sweep across an
interspecies s-wave Feshbach resonance. This allows us to associate up to
4x10^4 molecules with high efficiencies of up to 50%. Using direct imaging of
the molecules, we measure increased lifetimes of the molecules close to
resonance of more than 100 ms in the molecule-atom mixture stored in a harmonic
trap. | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.020405 |
|
2010-07-29T00:00:00 | Dissociative Electron Attachment to Polyatomic Molecules - V : Formic Acid and Propyl Amine | N. Bhargava Ram, E. Krishnakumar | In this paper, we discuss the dissociative electron attachment process in
Formic Acid and Propyl Amine. These are molecules containing more than one
functional group and have low symmetry (Cs group). We measured the kinetic
energy and angular distributions of fragment H^{-} ions from the resonances
observed in these molecules and compared with that in the precursor molecules,
namely - Water, Ammonia and Methane. Measurements suggest that the dissociation
dynamics in bigger molecules are independent of overall symmetry of the
molecule, rather depend only on the local symmetry of functional group and bond
orientation factors. | null |
|
2011-04-13T00:00:00 | Single-molecule interfacial electron transfer dynamics manipulated by external electric current | Guofeng Zhang, Liantuan Xiao, Ruiyun Chen, Yan Gao, Xiaobo Wang, Suotang Jia | Interfacial electron transfer (IET) dynamics in 1,1'-dioctadecyl-3, 3, 3',
3'-tetramethylindodicarbocyanine (DiD) dye molecules / indium tin oxide (ITO)
film system have been probed at the ensemble and single-molecule level by
recording the change of fluorescence emission intensity. By comparing the
difference of the external electric current (EEC) dependence of lifetime and
intensity for enambles and single molecules, it is shown that the
single-molecule probe can effcienly demonstrate the IET dynamics. The backward
electron transfer and electron transfer of ground state induce the single
molecules fluorescence quenching when an EEC is applied to ITO film. | 10.1039/C1CP20857H |
|
2012-07-11T00:00:00 | Controllable binding of polar molecules and meta-stability of 1-D gases with attractive dipole forces | Jason N. Byrd, John A. Montgomery Jr, Robin Côté | We explore one-dimensional (1-D) samples of ultracold polar molecules with
attractive dipole-dipole interactions and show the existence of a repulsive
barrier due to a strong quadrupole interaction between molecules. This barrier
can stabilize a gas of ultracold KRb molecules and even lead to long-range
wells supporting bound states between molecules. The properties of these wells
can be controlled by external electric fields, allowing the formation of long
polymer-like chains of KRb, and studies of quantum phase transitions by varying
the effective interaction between molecules. We discuss the generalization of
those results to other systems. | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.083003 |
|
2012-12-24T00:00:00 | Blinking Molecule Tracking | Andreas Karrenbauer, Dominik Wöll | We discuss a method for tracking individual molecules which globally
optimizes the likelihood of the connections between molecule positions fast and
with high reliability even for high spot densities and blinking molecules. Our
method works with cost functions which can be freely chosen to combine costs
for distances between spots in space and time and which can account for the
reliability of positioning a molecule. To this end, we describe a top-down
polyhedral approach to the problem of tracking many individual molecules. This
immediately yields an effective implementation using standard linear
programming solvers. Our method can be applied to 2D and 3D tracking. | null |
|
2014-01-27T00:00:00 | A proposal for sympathetically cooling neutral molecules using cold ions | F. Robicheaux | We describe a method for cooling neutral molecules that have magnetic and
electric dipole moments using collisions with cold ions. An external magnetic
field is used to split the ground rovibrational energy levels of the molecule.
The highest energy state within the ground rovibrational manifold increases in
energy as the distance to the ion decreases leading to a repelling potential.
At low energy, inelastic collisions are strongly suppressed due to the large
distance of closest approach. Thus, a collision between a neutral molecule and
a cold ion will lead to a decrease in the molecule's kinetic energy with no
change in internal energy. We present results for the specific case of OH
molecules cooled by Be$^+$, Mg$^+$, or Ca$^+$ ions. | Phys. Rev. A 89, 062701 (2014) | 10.1103/PhysRevA.89.062701 |
2015-10-07T00:00:00 | Adiabatic field-free alignment of asymmetric top molecules with an optical centrifuge | A. Korobenko, V. Milner | We use an optical centrifuge to align asymmetric top $\mathrm{SO_2}$
molecules by adiabatically spinning their most polarizable O-O axis. The
effective centrifugal potential in the rotating frame confines sulfur atoms to
the plane of the laser-induced rotation, leading to the planar molecular
alignment which persists after the molecules are released from the centrifuge.
Periodic appearance of the full three-dimensional alignment, typically observed
only with linear and symmetric top molecules, is also detected. Together with
strong in-plane centrifugal forces, which bend the molecules by up to 10
degrees, permanent field-free alignment offers new ways of controlling
molecules with laser light. | Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 183001 (2016) | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.183001 |
2017-04-28T00:00:00 | Improved spatial separation of neutral molecules | Jens S. Kienitz, Karol Długołecki, Sebastian Trippel, Jochen Küpper | We have developed and experimentally demonstrated an improved electrostatic
deflector for the spatial separation of molecules according to their
dipole-moment-to-mass ratio. The device features a very open structure that
allows for significantly stronger electric fields as well as for stronger
deflection without molecules crashing into the device itself. We have
demonstrated its performance using the prototypical OCS molecule and we discuss
opportunities regarding improved quantum-state-selectivity for complex
molecules and the deflection of unpolar molecules. | J. Chem. Phys. 147, (2017) | 10.1063/1.4991479 |
2009-11-14T00:00:00 | Rotational States of Magnetic Molecules | E. M. Chudnovsky, D. A. Garanin | We study a magnetic molecule that exhibits spin tunneling and is free to
rotate about its anisotropy axis. Exact low-energy eigenstates of the molecule
that are superpositions of spin and rotational states are obtained. We show
that parameter $\alpha = 2(\hbar S)^2/(I\Delta)$ determines the ground state of
the molecule. Here $\hbar S$ is the spin, $I$ is the moment of inertia, and
$\Delta$ is the tunnel splitting. The magnetic moment of the molecule is zero
at $\alpha < \alpha_c = [1-1/(2S)^{2}]^{-1}$ and non-zero at $\alpha >
\alpha_c$. At $\alpha \to \infty$ the spin of the molecule localizes in one of
the directions along the anisotropy axis. | Physical Review B 81, 214423 (2010) [5 pages] | 10.1103/PhysRevB.81.214423 |
2007-09-19T00:00:00 | Vibrational energy transfer in ultracold molecule - molecule collisions | Goulven Quéméner, Naduvalath Balakrishnan, Roman V. Krems | We present a rigorous study of vibrational relaxation in p-H2 + p-H2
collisions at cold and ultracold temperatures and identify an efficient
mechanism of ro-vibrational energy transfer. If the colliding molecules are in
different rotational and vibrational levels, the internal energy may be
transferred between the molecules through an extremely state-selective process
involving simultaneous conservation of internal energy and total rotational
angular momentum. The same transition in collisions of distinguishable
molecules corresponds to the rotational energy transfer from one vibrational
state of the colliding molecules to another. | Phys. Rev. A 77, 030704(R) (2008) | 10.1103/PhysRevA.77.030704 |
2016-11-27T00:00:00 | Nondestructive Detection of Polar Molecules via Rydberg Atoms | Martin Zeppenfeld | A highly sensitive, general, and preferably nondestructive technique to
detect polar molecules would greatly advance a number of fields, in particular
quantum science with cold and ultracold molecules. Here, we propose using
resonant energy transfer between molecules and Rydberg atoms to detect
molecules. Based on an energy transfer cross section of $>10^{-6}\,$cm$^2$ for
sufficiently low collision energies, a near unit efficiency non-destructive
detection of basically any polar molecule species in a well defined internal
state should be possible. | Europhys. Lett. 118 13002 (2017) | 10.1209/0295-5075/118/13002 |
2018-03-26T00:00:00 | Active Colloidal Molecules | Hartmut Löwen | Like ordinary molecules are composed of atoms, colloidal molecules consist of
several species of colloidal particles tightly bound together. If one of these
components is self-propelled or swimming, novel "active colloidal molecules"
emerge. Active colloidal molecules exist on various levels such as
"homonuclear", "heteronuclear" and "polymeric" and possess a dynamical function
moving as propellers, spinners or rotors. Self-assembly of such active
complexes has been studied a lot recently and this perspective article
summarizes recent progress and gives an outlook to future developments in the
rapidly expanding field of active colloidal molecules. | EPL 121, 58001 (2018) | 10.1209/0295-5075/121/58001 |
2019-06-21T00:00:00 | Quantum Zeno-based Detection and State Engineering of Ultracold Polar Molecules | Amit Jamadagni, Silke Ospelkaus, Luis Santos, Hendrik Weimer | We present and analyze a toolbox for the controlled manipulation of ultracold
polar molecules, consisting of detection of molecules, atom-molecule
entanglement, and engineering of dissipative dynamics. Our setup is based on
fast chemical reactions between molecules and atoms leading to a quantum
Zeno-based collisional blockade in the system. We demonstrate that the
experimental parameters for achieving high fidelities can be found using a
straightforward numerical optimization. We exemplify our approach for a system
comprised of NaK molecules and Na atoms and we discuss the consequences of
residual imperfections such as a finite strength of the quantum Zeno blockade. | Phys. Rev. Research 3, 033208 (2021) | 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.033208 |
2019-06-26T00:00:00 | A general Zeeman slower for type-II transitions and polar molecules | Qian Liang, Wenhao Bu, Yuhe Zhang, Tao Chen, Bo Yan | We proposed a general Zeeman slower scheme applicable to the majority of the
laser-coolable molecules. Different from previous schemes, the key idea of our
scheme lies in that the compensation of the detuning with the magnetic field is
done for the repumping laser instead of the cooling laser. Only atoms or
molecules with the right velocity will be repumped and laser slowed. Such
scheme is more feasible for molecules with complex energy sturcutres. We apply
this scheme for molecules with large Land\'e g-factor of the excited states and
polyatomic molecules, and it shows a better slowing efficiency. | Phys. Rev. A 100, 053402 (2019) | 10.1103/PhysRevA.100.053402 |
2021-02-11T00:00:00 | Single Molecule Mixture: A Concept in Polymer Science | Yu Tang | In theory, there exist two extreme forms of substances: pure form and
single-molecule mixture form. Single-molecule mixture form contains a mixture
of molecules that have molecularly different structures. This elusive form has
not yet been explored. Herein, we report a study of single molecule mixture
state by a combination of model construction and mathematical analysis, and a
series of interesting results were obtained. These results provide theoretical
evidence that single-molecule mixture state may indeed exist in realistic
synthetic or natural polymer system. | null |
|
2022-07-15T00:00:00 | BaF molecules in neon ice: trapping, spectroscopy and optical control of electron spins | Samuel J. Li, Harish D. Ramachandran, Rhys Anderson, Amar C. Vutha | We have trapped BaF molecules in neon ice, and used laser-induced
fluorescence spectroscopy to map out optical transitions in the trapped
molecules. Our measurements show that the neon lattice does not significantly
perturb certain optical transitions in the trapped molecules. We used one of
these transitions to polarize the electron spins, detect spin flips and measure
hyperfine transitions in the trapped molecules, entirely using lasers. This
demonstration with heavy polar molecules opens up new opportunities for
precision measurements of beyond-standard-model physics. | null |
|
2005-10-04T00:00:00 | Two-probe theory of scanning tunneling microscopy of single molecules: Zn(II)-etioporphyrin on alumina | John Buker, George Kirczenow | We explore theoretically the scanning tunneling microscopy of single
molecules on substrates using a framework of two local probes. This framework
is appropriate for studying electron flow in tip/molecule/substrate systems
where a thin insulating layer between the molecule and a conducting substrate
transmits electrons non-uniformly and thus confines electron transmission
between the molecule and substrate laterally to a nanoscale region
significantly smaller in size than the molecule. The tip-molecule coupling and
molecule-substrate coupling are treated on the same footing, as local probes to
the molecule, with electron flow modelled using the Lippmann-Schwinger Green
function scattering technique. STM images are simulated for various positions
of the stationary (substrate) probe below a Zn(II)-etioporphyrin I molecule. We
find that these images have a strong dependence on the substrate probe
position, indicating that electron flow can depend strongly on both tip
position and the location of the dominant molecule-substrate coupling.
Differences in the STM images are explained in terms of the molecular orbitals
that mediate electron flow in each case. Recent experimental results, showing
STM topographs of Zn(II)-etioporphyrin I on alumina/NiAl(110) to be strongly
dependent on which individual molecule on the substrate is being probed, are
explained using this model. A further experimental test of the model is also
proposed. | 10.1103/PhysRevB.72.205338 |
|
2011-03-30T00:00:00 | Laser cooling of a diatomic molecule | E. S. Shuman, J. F. Barry, D. DeMille | It has been roughly three decades since laser cooling techniques produced
ultracold atoms, leading to rapid advances in a vast array of fields.
Unfortunately laser cooling has not yet been extended to molecules because of
their complex internal structure. However, this complexity makes molecules
potentially useful for many applications. For example, heteronuclear molecules
possess permanent electric dipole moments which lead to long-range, tunable,
anisotropic dipole-dipole interactions. The combination of the dipole-dipole
interaction and the precise control over molecular degrees of freedom possible
at ultracold temperatures make ultracold molecules attractive candidates for
use in quantum simulation of condensed matter systems and quantum computation.
Also ultracold molecules may provide unique opportunities for studying chemical
dynamics and for tests of fundamental symmetries. Here we experimentally
demonstrate laser cooling of the molecule strontium monofluoride (SrF). Using
an optical cycling scheme requiring only three lasers, we have observed both
Sisyphus and Doppler cooling forces which have substantially reduced the
transverse temperature of a SrF molecular beam. Currently the only technique
for producing ultracold molecules is by binding together ultracold alkali atoms
through Feshbach resonance or photoassociation. By contrast, different proposed
applications for ultracold molecules require a variety of molecular
energy-level structures. Our method provides a new route to ultracold
temperatures for molecules. In particular it bridges the gap between ultracold
temperatures and the ~1 K temperatures attainable with directly cooled
molecules (e.g. cryogenic buffer gas cooling or decelerated supersonic beams).
Ultimately our technique should enable the production of large samples of
molecules at ultracold temperatures for species that are chemically distinct
from bialkalis. | Nature 467, 820-823 (2010) | 10.1038/nature09443 |
2012-05-09T00:00:00 | Cavity-meidated collisionless sympathetic cooling of molecules with atoms | Guangjiong Dong, Chang Wang, Weiping Zhang | Cooling a range of molecules to ultracold temperatures (<1 mK) is a difficult
but important challenge in molecular physics and chemistry. Collective cavity
cooling of molecules is a promising method that does not rely on molecular
energy level and thus can be applied to all molecules in principle. However,
the initial lack of cold molecules leads to the difficulty in its experimental
implementation. We show that efficient collective sympathetic cooling of
molecules to sub-mK temperatures using a large ensemble of atoms within a
cavity is feasible. This approach is a new type of sympathetic cooling which
does not rely on direct collisions between atoms and molecules, but utilizes
thermalization via their mutual interaction with a cavity field. Two important
mechanisms are identified. This include: (1) giant enhancement of cavity
optical field from the efficient scattering of the pump light by the atoms; (2)
cavity-mediated collective interaction between the atoms and the molecules. We
show an optimal cavity detuning for maximizing cooling, which is dependent on
the atom and molecule numbers. We determine a threshold for the molecular pump
strength and show that it is independent of molecule number when the number of
atoms is much greater than the molecules. This can be reduced by orders of
magnitude when compared to cavity cooling of single molecular species only.
Using this new sympathetic cavity cooling technique, cooling molecules to
sub-mK within a high-Q cavity could be within reach of experimental
demonstration. | null |
|
2016-06-23T00:00:00 | Molecules associated to Hardy spaces with pointwise variable anisotropy | Víctor Almeida, Jorge J. Betancor, Lourdes Rodríguez-Mesa | In this paper we introduce molecules associated to Hardy spaces with
pointwise variable anisotropy, and prove that each molecule can be represented
as a sum of atoms. | null |
|
2018-06-15T00:00:00 | Theory of chemical evolution of molecule compositions in the universe, in the Miller-Urey experiment and the mass distribution of interstellar and intergalactic molecules | Stuart A. Kauffman, David P. Jelenfi, Gabor Vattay | Chemical evolution is essential in understanding the origins of life. We
present a theory for the evolution of molecule masses and show that small
molecules grow by random diffusion and large molecules by a preferential
attachment process leading eventually to life's molecules. It reproduces
correctly the distribution of molecules found via mass spectroscopy for the
Murchison meteorite and estimates the start of chemical evolution back to 12.8
billion years following the birth of stars and supernovae. From the Frontier
mass between the random and preferential attachment dynamics the birth time of
molecule families can be estimated. Amino acids emerge about 165 million years
after chemical elements emerge in stars. Using the scaling of reaction rates
with the distance of the molecules in space we recover correctly the few days
emergence time of amino acids in the Miller-Urey experiment. The distribution
of interstellar and extragalactic molecules are both consistent with the
evolutionary mass distribution, and their age is estimated to 108 and 65
million years after the start of evolution. From the model, we can determine
the number of different molecule compositions at the time of the emergence of
Earth to be 1.6 million and the number of molecule compositions in interstellar
space to a mere 719 species. | Journal of Theoretical Biology 2019 | null |
2020-10-05T00:00:00 | MIMOSA: Multi-constraint Molecule Sampling for Molecule Optimization | Tianfan Fu, Cao Xiao, Xinhao Li, Lucas M. Glass, Jimeng Sun | Molecule optimization is a fundamental task for accelerating drug discovery,
with the goal of generating new valid molecules that maximize multiple drug
properties while maintaining similarity to the input molecule. Existing
generative models and reinforcement learning approaches made initial success,
but still face difficulties in simultaneously optimizing multiple drug
properties. To address such challenges, we propose the MultI-constraint
MOlecule SAmpling (MIMOSA) approach, a sampling framework to use input molecule
as an initial guess and sample molecules from the target distribution. MIMOSA
first pretrains two property agnostic graph neural networks (GNNs) for molecule
topology and substructure-type prediction, where a substructure can be either
atom or single ring. For each iteration, MIMOSA uses the GNNs' prediction and
employs three basic substructure operations (add, replace, delete) to generate
new molecules and associated weights. The weights can encode multiple
constraints including similarity and drug property constraints, upon which we
select promising molecules for next iteration. MIMOSA enables flexible encoding
of multiple property- and similarity-constraints and can efficiently generate
new molecules that satisfy various property constraints and achieved up to
49.6% relative improvement over the best baseline in terms of success rate. The
code repository (including readme file, data preprocessing and model
construction, evaluation) is available https://github.com/futianfan/MIMOSA. | null |
|
2021-10-15T00:00:00 | Growth modes of partially fluorinated organic molecules on amorphous silicon dioxide | Mila Miletic, Karol Palczynski, Joachim Dzubiella | We study the influence of fluorination on nucleation and growth of the
organic para-sexiphenyl molecule (p-6P) on amorphous silicon dioxide
($\alpha$-SiO$_2$) by means of atomistically resolved classical molecular
dynamics computer simulations. We use a simulation model that mimics the
experimental deposition from the vapor and subsequent self-assembly onto the
underlying surface. Our model reproduces the experimentally observed
orientational changes from lying to upright standing configurations of the
grown layers. We demonstrate that the increase in the number of fluorinated
groups inside the p-6P leads to a smoother, layer-by-layer growth on the
$\alpha$-SiO$_2$ surface: We observe that in the first layers, due to strong
molecule-substrate interactions the molecules first grow in chiral (fan-like)
structures, where each consecutive molecule has a higher angle, supported by
molecules lying underneath. Subsequently deposited molecules bind to the
already standing molecules of the chiral structures until all molecules are
standing. The growth of chiral islands is the main mechanism for growth of the
fluorinated p-6P derivative, while the p-6P, due to the lower interaction with
the underlying substrate, forms less chiral structures. This leads to a lower
energy barrier for step-edge crossing for the fluorinated molecules. We find
that partial fluorination of the p-6P molecule can in this way significantly
alter its growth behaviour by modifying the rough, 3D growth into a smooth,
layer-by-layer growth. This has implications for the rational design of
molecules and their functionalized forms which could be tailored for a desired
growth behavior and structure formation. | null |
|
1994-09-06T00:00:00 | A simple approach to the correlation of rotovibrational states in four-atomic molecules | N. Manini, S. Oss | The problem of correlation between quantum states of four-atomic molecules in
different geometrical configurations is reviewed in detail. A general, still
simple rule is obtained which allows one to correlate states of a linear
four-atomic molecule with those of any kind of non-linear four-atomic molecule. | Z. Phys. D 32, 85 (1994) | 10.1007/BF01425928 |
1998-10-15T00:00:00 | Quantum Theory of Chiral Interactions in Cholesteric Liquid Crystals | A. S. Issaenko, A. B. Harris, T. C. Lubensky | We study the effective chiral interaction between molecules arising from
quantum dispersion interactions within a model in which a) the dominant excited
states of a molecule form a band whose width is small compared to the average
excitation energy and b) biaxial orientational correlation between adjacent
molecules can be neglected. Previous treatments of quantum chiral interactions
were based on a multipole expansion of the intermolecular interaction. However,
because real liquid crystals are composed of elongated molecules, we utilize an
expansion in terms of only coordinates transverse to the long molecular axes.
We identify two distinct physical limits depending on whether one or both of
the interacting molecules are excited in the virtual state. When both molecules
are excited, our results are similar to those found previously by van der Meer
et al. Previously unidentified terms in which only one molecule is excited
involve the interactions of local dipole moments, which exist even when the
global dipole moment of the molecule vanishes. We present analytic and
numerical results for helical molecules. Our results do not indicate whether
the dominant chiral interaction in cholesterics results from quantum or from
steric interactions. | null |
|
2005-12-02T00:00:00 | Slow Vibrations in Transport through Molecules | Tero T. Heikkila, Wolfgang Belzig | We show how one can measure the signal from slow jumps of a single molecule
between metastable positions using a setup where the molecule is fixed to one
lead, and one of the coupling strengths is controlled externally. Such a
measurement yields information about slow processes deforming the molecule in
times much longer than the characteristic time scales for the electron
transport process. | Nano Lett. 5, 2088 (2005) | 10.1021/nl051453a |
2006-03-09T00:00:00 | Signatures of Molecular Magnetism in Single-Molecule Transport Spectroscopy | Moon-Ho Jo, Jacob E. Grose, Kanhayalal Baheti, Mandar M. Deshmukh, Jennifer J. Sokol, Evan M. Rumberger, David N. Hendrickson, Jeffrey R. Long, Hongkun Park, D. C. Ralph | Single-molecule transistors provide a unique experimental tool to investigate
the coupling between charge transport and the molecular degrees of freedom in
individual molecules. One interesting class of molecules for such experiments
are the single-molecule magnets, since the intramolecular exchange forces
present in these molecules should couple strongly to the spin of transport
electrons, thereby providing both new mechanisms for modulating electron flow
and also new means for probing nanoscale magnetic excitations. Here we report
single-molecule transistor measurements on devices incorporating Mn12
molecules. By studying the electron-tunneling spectrum as a function of
magnetic field, we are able to identify clear signatures of magnetic states and
their associated magnetic anisotropy. A comparison of the data to simulations
also suggests that electron flow can strongly enhance magnetic relaxation of
the magnetic molecule. | 10.1021/nl061212i |
|
2006-06-21T00:00:00 | Molecular Self-Assembly of Jointed Molecules on a Metallic Substrate: From Single Molecule to Monolayer | T. Zambelli, S. Goudeau, J. Lagoute, A. Gourdon, X. Bouju, S. Gauthier | Because of its promising contribution to the bottom-up approach for
nanofabrication of complex molecular architectures, self-organization is widely
studied nowadays. Numerous studies have tackled supramolecular chirality or
low-dimensional molecular nanostructures using in most cases small and rigid
molecules adsorbed on metallic substrates. In this situation, self-assembled
structures can be understood in relative simple terms considering
molecule-molecule versus molecule-substrate interactions. In contrast, the case
of large and three-dimensional molecules which can adopt different adsorption
conformations is more complex. Here, we investigate the self-assembly of
V-Landers molecules (C108H104) on Cu(100) by STM at room temperature under
ultrahigh vacuum. This molecule is constituted of a central poly-aromatic board
linked by sigma bonds to four 3,5-di-tert-butylphenyl legs. | null |
|
2006-07-31T00:00:00 | Dependence of Single Molecule Junction Conductance on Molecular Conformation | Latha Venkataraman, Jennifer E. Klare, Colin Nuckolls, Mark S. Hybertsen, Michael L. Steigerwald | The conductance of a single metal-molecule-metal junction depends critically
on the conformations of the molecule. In the simple case of a biphenyl, two
phenyl rings linked together by a single C-C bond, the conductance is expected
to depend on the relative twist angle between the two rings, with the planar
conformation having the highest conductance. A number of different techniques
have measured the conductance of metal-molecule(s)-metal junctions. However,
the conductance variation from junction to junction has made it difficult to
verify even the simplest predictions about how molecules should behave in
unimolecular devices. Here, using amine link groups to form single molecule
junctions, we show a clear correlation between molecule conformation and
junction conductance in a series of seven biphenyl molecules with different
ring substitutions that alter the twist angle of the molecules. We find that
the conductance for the series decreases with increasing twist angle,
consistent with a cosine squared relation predicted theoretically for transport
through pi-conjugated systems. | 10.1038/nature05037 |
|
2007-04-20T00:00:00 | Prospects for making polar molecules with microwave fields | Svetlana Kotochigova | We propose a new mechanism to produce ultracold polar molecules with
microwave fields. The proposed mechanism converts trapped ultracold atoms of
different species into vibrationally excited molecules by a single microwave
transition and entirely depends on the existence of a permanent dipole moment
in the molecules. As opposed to production of molecules by photoassociation or
magnetic-field Feshbach resonances our method does not rely on the structure
and lifetime of excited states or existence of Feshbach resonances. In
addition, we determine conditions for optimal creation of polar molecules in
vibrationally excited states of the ground-state potential by changing
frequency and intensity of the microwave field. We also explore the possibility
to produce vibrationally cold molecules by combining the microwave field with
an optical Raman transition or by applying a microwave field to Feshbach
molecules. The production mechanism is illustrated for two polar molecules: KRb
and RbCs. | 10.1103/PhysRevLett.99.073003 |
|
2007-10-07T00:00:00 | Rotation of C60 in a single-molecule contact | N. Neel, L. Limot, J. Kroeger, R. Berndt | The orientation of individual C60 molecules adsorbed on Cu(100) is reversibly
switched when the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope is approached to
contact the molecule. The probability of switching rises sharply upon
displacing the tip beyond a threshold. A mechanical mechanism is suggested to
induce the rotation of the molecule. | 10.1103/PhysRevB.77.125431 |
|
2007-12-19T00:00:00 | Strong Correlations and Fickian Water Diffusion in Narrow Carbon Nanotubes | Biswaroop Mukherjee, Prabal K. Maiti, Chandan Dasgupta, A. K. Sood | We have used atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study the
structure and dynamics of water molecules inside an open ended carbon nanotube
placed in a bath of water molecules. The size of the nanotube allows only a
single file of water molecules inside the nanotube. The water molecules inside
the nanotube show solid-like ordering at room temperature, which we quantify by
calculating the pair correlation function. It is shown that even for the
longest observation times, the mode of diffusion of the water molecules inside
the nanotube is Fickian and not sub-diffusive. We also propose a
one-dimensional random walk model for the diffusion of the water molecules
inside the nanotube. We find good agreement between the mean-square
displacements calculated from the random walk model and from MD simulations,
thereby confirming that the water molecules undergo normal-mode diffusion
inside the nanotube. We attribute this behavior to strong positional
correlations that cause all the water molecules inside the nanotube to move
collectively as a single object. The average residence time of the water
molecules inside the nanotube is shown to scale quadratically with the nanotube
length. | Journal of Chemical Physics, 126, 124704 (2007) | 10.1063/1.2565806 |
2008-03-06T00:00:00 | Preparation and manipulation of molecules for fundamental physics tests | M. R. Tarbutt, J. J. Hudson, B. E. Sauer, E. A. Hinds | This paper is a chapter from an upcoming book on cold molecule physics. In it
we describe techniques for the preparation and manipulation of cold molecules.
We further describe techniques for applying said cold molecules to tests of
fundamental physics. | null |
|
2011-05-10T00:00:00 | Rydberg atom mediated polar molecule interactions: a tool for molecular-state conditional quantum gates and individual addressability | Elena Kuznetsova, Seth T. Rittenhouse, Hossein R. Sadeghpour, Susanne F. Yelin | We study the possibility to use interaction between a polar molecule in the
ground electronic and vibrational state and a Rydberg atom to construct
two-qubit gates between molecular qubits and to coherently control molecular
states. A polar molecule within the electron orbit in a Rydberg atom can either
shift the Rydberg state, or form Rydberg molecule. Both the atomic shift and
the Rydberg molecule states depend on the initial internal state of the polar
molecule, resulting in molecular state dependent van der Waals or dipole-dipole
interaction between Rydberg atoms. Rydberg atoms mediated interaction between
polar molecules can be enhanced up to $10^{3}$ times. We describe how the
coupling between a polar molecule and a Rydberg atom can be applied to coherent
control of molecular states, specifically, to individual addressing of
molecules in an optical lattice and non-destructive readout of molecular
qubits. | 10.1039/C1CP21476D |
|
2011-10-17T00:00:00 | The origin of large molecules in primordial autocatalytic reaction networks | Varun Giri, Sanjay Jain | Large molecules such as proteins and nucleic acids are crucial for life, yet
their primordial origin remains a major puzzle. The production of large
molecules, as we know it today, requires good catalysts, and the only good
catalysts we know that can accomplish this task consist of large molecules.
Thus the origin of large molecules is a chicken and egg problem in chemistry.
Here we present a mechanism, based on autocatalytic sets (ACSs), that is a
possible solution to this problem. We discuss a mathematical model describing
the population dynamics of molecules in a stylized but prebiotically plausible
chemistry. Large molecules can be produced in this chemistry by the coalescing
of smaller ones, with the smallest molecules, the `food set', being buffered.
Some of the reactions can be catalyzed by molecules within the chemistry with
varying catalytic strengths. Normally the concentrations of large molecules in
such a scenario are very small, diminishing exponentially with their size.
ACSs, if present in the catalytic network, can focus the resources of the
system into a sparse set of molecules. ACSs can produce a bistability in the
population dynamics and, in particular, steady states wherein the ACS molecules
dominate the population. However to reach these steady states from initial
conditions that contain only the food set typically requires very large
catalytic strengths, growing exponentially with the size of the catalyst
molecule. We present a solution to this problem by studying `nested ACSs', a
structure in which a small ACS is connected to a larger one and reinforces it.
We show that when the network contains a cascade of nested ACSs with the
catalytic strengths of molecules increasing gradually with their size (e.g., as
a power law), a sparse subset of molecules including some very large molecules
can come to dominate the system. | 10.1371/journal.pone.0029546 |
|
2013-03-25T00:00:00 | Geometrical terms in the effective Hamiltonian for rotor molecules | Ian G. Moss | An analogy between asymmetric rotor molecules and anisotropic cosmology can
be used to calculate new centrifugal distortion terms in the effective
potential of asymmetric rotor molecules which have no internal 3-fold symmetry.
The torsional potential picks up extra $\cos\alpha$ and $\cos2\alpha$
contributions, which are comparable to corrections to the momentum terms in
methanol and other rotor molecules with isotope replacements. | null |
|
2013-06-04T00:00:00 | Manipulation of Molecules with Electromagnetic Fields | Mikhail Lemeshko, Roman V. Krems, John M. Doyle, Sabre Kais | The goal of the present article is to review the major developments that have
led to the current understanding of molecule-field interactions and
experimental methods for manipulating molecules with electromagnetic fields.
Molecule-field interactions are at the core of several, seemingly distinct,
areas of molecular physics. This is reflected in the organization of this
article, which includes sections on Field control of molecular beams, External
field traps for cold molecules, Control of molecular orientation and molecular
alignment, Manipulation of molecules by non-conservative forces, Ultracold
molecules and ultracold chemistry, Controlled many-body phenomena, Entanglement
of molecules and dipole arrays, and Stability of molecular systems in
high-frequency super-intense laser fields. The article contains 853 references. | Molecular Physics 111, 1648 (2013) | 10.1080/00268976.2013.813595 |
2015-02-13T00:00:00 | Formation of Ultracold NaRb Feshbach Molecules | Fudong Wang, Xiaodong He, Xiaoke Li, Bing Zhu, Jun Chen, Dajun Wang | We report the creation of ultracold bosonic $^{23}$Na$^{87}$Rb Feshbach
molecules via magneto-association. By ramping the magnetic field across an
interspecies Feshbach resonance, at least 4000 molecules can be produced out of
the near degenerate ultracold mixture. Fast loss due to inelastic atom-molecule
collisions is observed, which limits the pure molecule number, after residual
atoms removal, to 1700. The pure molecule sample can live for 21.8(8) ms in the
optical trap, long enough for future molecular spectroscopy studies toward
coherently transferring to the singlet ro-vibrational ground state, where these
molecules are stable against chemical reaction and have a permanent electric
dipole moment of 3.3 Debye. We have also measured the Feshbach molecule's
binding energy near the Feshbach resonance by the oscillating magnetic field
method and found these molecules have a large closed-channel fraction. | New J. Phys. 17 035003(2015) | 10.1088/1367-2630/17/3/035003 |
2017-01-05T00:00:00 | Generating Focussed Molecule Libraries for Drug Discovery with Recurrent Neural Networks | Marwin H. S. Segler, Thierry Kogej, Christian Tyrchan, Mark P. Waller | In de novo drug design, computational strategies are used to generate novel
molecules with good affinity to the desired biological target. In this work, we
show that recurrent neural networks can be trained as generative models for
molecular structures, similar to statistical language models in natural
language processing. We demonstrate that the properties of the generated
molecules correlate very well with the properties of the molecules used to
train the model. In order to enrich libraries with molecules active towards a
given biological target, we propose to fine-tune the model with small sets of
molecules, which are known to be active against that target.
Against Staphylococcus aureus, the model reproduced 14% of 6051 hold-out test
molecules that medicinal chemists designed, whereas against Plasmodium
falciparum (Malaria) it reproduced 28% of 1240 test molecules. When coupled
with a scoring function, our model can perform the complete de novo drug design
cycle to generate large sets of novel molecules for drug discovery. | null |
|
2017-12-20T00:00:00 | Terahertz dynamics of electron-vibron coupling in single molecules with tunable electrostatic potential | Shaoqing Du, Kenji Yoshida, Ya Zhang, Ikutaro Hamada, Kazuhiko Hirakawa | Clarifying electronic and vibronic properties at individual molecule level
provides key insights to future chemistry, nanoelectronics, and quantum
information technologies. The single electron tunneling spectroscopy has been
used to study the charging/discharging process in single molecules. The
obtained information was, however, mainly on static electronic properties, and
access to their dynamical properties was very indirect. Here, we report on the
terahertz (THz) spectroscopy of single fullerene molecules by using a single
molecule transistor (SMT) geometry. From the time-domain THz autocorrelation
measurements, we have obtained THz spectra associated with the THz-induced
center-of-mass oscillation of the molecules. The observed peaks are finely
split into two, reflecting the difference in the van der Waals potential
profile experienced by the molecule on the metal surface when the number of
electrons on the molecule fluctuates by one during the single electron
tunneling process. Such an ultrahigh-sensitivity to the electronic/vibronic
structures of a single molecule upon adding/removing a single electron has been
achieved by using the THz spectroscopy in the SMT geometry. This novel scheme
provides a new opportunity for investigating ultrafast THz dynamics of sub-nm
scale systems. | 10.1038/s41566-018-0241-1 |
|
2018-09-26T00:00:00 | Interference in Electron-Molecule Elastic Scattering: s-, p- and d-spherical waves | A. S. Baltenkov, S. T. Manson, A. Z. Msezane | General formulas describing the multiple scattering of electron by polyatomic
molecules have been derived within the framework of the model of
non-overlapping atomic potentials. These formulas are applied to different
carbon molecules, both for fixed-in-space and randomly oriented molecules. | null |
|
2014-10-11T00:00:00 | Simple hydrogen-bearing molecules in translucent molecular clouds | T. Weselak, J. Krełowski | We demonstrate relations between column densities of simple molecules: CH,
CH$^{+}$, H$_{2}$ and OH. The H$_{2}$, CH and OH molecules seem to occupy the
same environments because of tight relations between their column densities. In
contrary to this CH$^{+}$ column density does not correlate with those of other
simple molecules. | null |
|
2012-10-23T00:00:00 | Faddeev Random Phase Approximation applied to molecules | Matthias Degroote | This Ph.D. thesis derives the equations of the Faddeev Random Phase
Approximation (FRPA) and applies the method to a set of small atoms and
molecules. The occurence of RPA instabilities in the dissociation limit is
addressed in molecules and by the study of the Hubbard molecule as a test
system with reduced dimensionality. | 10.1140/epjst/e2013-01772-8 |
|
2020-05-18T00:00:00 | Inducing the controlled rotation of single o MeO DMBI molecules anchored on Au(111) | Frank Eisenhut, Jörg Meyer, Justus Krüger, Robin Ohmann, Gianaurelio Cuniberti, Francesca Moresco | A key step towards building single molecule machines is to control the
rotation of molecules and nanostructures step by step on a surface. Here, we
used the tunneling electrons coming from the tip of a scanning tunneling
microscope to achieve the controlled directed rotation of complex o-MeO-DMBI
molecules. We studied the adsorption of single o-MeO-DMBI molecules on Au(111)
by scanning tunneling microscopy at low temperature. The enantiomeric form of
the molecule on the surface can be determined by imaging the molecule by STM at
high bias voltage. We observed by lateral manipulation experiments that the
molecules chemisorb on the surface and are anchored on Au(111) with an
oxygen-gold bond via their methoxy-group. Driven by inelastic tunneling
electrons, o-MeO-DMBI molecules can controllably rotate, stepwise and
unidirectional, either clockwise or counterclockwise depending on their
enantiomeric form. | null |
|
2020-08-04T00:00:00 | Entanglement via rotational blockade of MgF molecules in a magic potential | Eunmi Chae | Diatomic polar molecules are one of the most promising platforms of quantum
computing due to their rich internal states and large electric dipole moments.
Here, we propose entangling rotational states of adjacent polar molecules via a
strong electric dipole-dipole interaction. The splitting of 1.27 kHz between
two entangled states is predicted for MgF molecules in an optical tweezer
array. The resolution of the entangled states can be achieved in a magic
potential for the molecules where the rotational states have the same trap
frequencies. The magic potential can be formed by tuning the angle between the
molecules' quantization axis and the linear polarization of trapping light,
so-called magic angle. We calculate the magic angle for MgF molecules in a
reasonable experimental condition and obtain that the trap frequencies of the
two involved states can be matched within a few 10s of Hz. Establishing
entanglement between molecules, our results provide a first step towards
quantum computing using diatomic polar molecules. | Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 23, 1215 (2021) | 10.1039/D0CP04042H |
2022-02-14T00:00:00 | MGCVAE: Multi-objective Inverse Design via Molecular Graph Conditional Variational Autoencoder | Myeonghun Lee, Kyoungmin Min | The ultimate goal of various fields is to directly generate molecules with
desired properties, such as finding water-soluble molecules in drug development
and finding molecules suitable for organic light-emitting diode (OLED) or
photosensitizers in the field of development of new organic materials. In this
respect, this study proposes a molecular graph generative model based on the
autoencoder for de novo design. The performance of molecular graph conditional
variational autoencoder (MGCVAE) for generating molecules having specific
desired properties is investigated by comparing it to molecular graph
variational autoencoder (MGVAE). Furthermore, multi-objective optimization for
MGCVAE was applied to satisfy two selected properties simultaneously. In this
study, two physical properties -- logP and molar refractivity -- were used as
optimization targets for the purpose of designing de novo molecules, especially
in drug discovery. As a result, it was confirmed that among generated
molecules, 25.89% optimized molecules were generated in MGCVAE compared to
0.66% in MGVAE. Hence, it demonstrates that MGCVAE effectively produced
drug-like molecules with two target properties. The results of this study
suggest that these graph-based data-driven models are one of the effective
methods of designing new molecules that fulfill various physical properties,
such as drug discovery. | null |
|
2022-03-28T00:00:00 | MolGenSurvey: A Systematic Survey in Machine Learning Models for Molecule Design | Yuanqi Du, Tianfan Fu, Jimeng Sun, Shengchao Liu | Molecule design is a fundamental problem in molecular science and has
critical applications in a variety of areas, such as drug discovery, material
science, etc. However, due to the large searching space, it is impossible for
human experts to enumerate and test all molecules in wet-lab experiments.
Recently, with the rapid development of machine learning methods, especially
generative methods, molecule design has achieved great progress by leveraging
machine learning models to generate candidate molecules. In this paper, we
systematically review the most relevant work in machine learning models for
molecule design. We start with a brief review of the mainstream molecule
featurization and representation methods (including 1D string, 2D graph, and 3D
geometry) and general generative methods (deep generative and combinatorial
optimization methods). Then we summarize all the existing molecule design
problems into several venues according to the problem setup, including input,
output types and goals. Finally, we conclude with the open challenges and point
out future opportunities of machine learning models for molecule design in
real-world applications. | null |
|
2022-08-21T00:00:00 | On the possibility of exploring tip-molecule interactions with STM experiments | Christoph Schiel, Philipp Rahe, Philipp Maass | We present a theory for analyzing residence times of single molecules in a
fixed detection area of a scanning tunneling microscope (STM). The approach is
developed for one-dimensional molecule diffusion and can be extended to two
dimensions by using the same methodology. Explicit results are derived for an
harmonic attractive and repulsive tip-molecule interaction. Applications of the
theory allows one to estimate the type and strength of interactions between the
STM tip and the molecule. This includes the possibility of an estimation of
molecule-molecule interaction when the tip is decorated by a molecule. Despite
our focus on STM, this theory can analogously be applied to other experimental
probes that monitor single molecules. | null |
|
2010-02-12T00:00:00 | Applying the extended molecule approach to correlated electron transport: important insight from model calculations | Ioan Baldea, Horst Koppel, Robert Maul, Wolfgang Wenzel | Theoretical approaches of electronic transport in correlated molecules
usually consider an extended molecule, which includes, in addition to the
molecule itself, parts of electrodes. In the case where electron correlations
remain confined within the molecule, and the extended molecule is sufficiently
large, the current can be expressed by means of Laudauer-type formulae.
Electron correlations are embodied into the retarded Green function of a
sufficiently large but isolated extended molecule, which represents the key
quantity that can be accurately determined by means of ab initio quantum
chemical calculations. To exemplify these ideas, we present and analyze
numerical results obtained within full CI calculations for an extended molecule
described by the interacting resonant level model. Based on them, we argue that
for organic electrodes the transport properties can be reliably computed,
because the extended molecule can be chosen sufficiently small to be tackled
within accurate ab initio methods. For metallic electrodes, larger extended
molecules have to be considered in general, but a (semi-)quantitative
description of the transport should still be possible particularly in the
typical cases where electron transport proceeds by off-resonant tunneling. Our
numerical results also demonstrate that, contrary to the usual claim, the ratio
between the characteristic Coulomb strength and the level width due to
molecule-electrode coupling is not the only quantity needed to assess whether
electron correlation effects are strong or weak. | 10.1063/1.3455056 |
|
2021-12-21T00:00:00 | Cooperative molecular structure in polaritonic and dark states | Lorenz S. Cederbaum | An ensemble of identical, intrinsically non-interacting molecules exposed to
quantum light is discussed. Their interaction with the quantum light induces
interactions between the molecules. The resulting hybrid light-matter states
exhibit complex structure even if only a single vibrational coordinate per
molecule is considered. Since all molecules are identical, it is appealing to
start from the uniform situation where all molecules possess the same value of
this vibrational coordinate. Then, polaritons and dark states follow like in
atoms, but are functions of this coordinate, and this vibrational degree of
freedom makes the physics different from that of atoms. However, in spite of
all molecules being identical, each molecule does have its own vibrational
coordinate. It is thus a vital issue to understand the meaning of the uniform
situation and how to depart from it, and enable one to realistically
investigate the ensemble. A rigorous and physically relevant meaning of the
polariton energy curves in the uniform situation has been found. It is proven
that any point on a polariton curve is a minimum or maximum for departing from
the uniform situation. It is shown how to explicitly compute the energetic
impact of departing from the uniform situation using solely properties of a
single free molecule. The dark states and their behavior upon departing from
the uniform situation are analyzed as well. Useful techniques not used in this
topical domain are introduced and general results on, e.g., minimum energy
path, symmetry breaking and restoration, are obtained. It is shown how to
transfer the findings to include several or even many nuclear degrees of
freedom per molecule and thus to address the problem of quantum light
interacting with many complex molecules. The interplay of several degrees of
freedom in a single molecule of the ensemble leads to qualitatively different
physics. | null |
|
2002-08-21T00:00:00 | Measurement of the conductance of a hydrogen molecule | R. H. M. Smit, Y. Noat, C. Untiedt, N. D. Lang, M. van Hemert, J. M. van Ruitenbeek | Recent years have shown steady progress in research towards molecular
electronics [1,2], where molecules have been investigated as switches [3-5],
diodes [6], and electronic mixers [7]. In much of the previous work a Scanning
Tunnelling Microscope was employed to address an individual molecule. As this
arrangement does not provide long-term stability, more recently
metal-molecule-metal links have been made using break junction devices [8-10].
However, it has been difficult to establish unambiguously that a single
molecule forms the contact [11]. Here, we show that a single H2 molecule can
form a stable bridge between Pt electrodes. In contrast to results for other
organic molecules, the bridge has a nearly perfect conductance of one quantum
unit, carried by a single channel. The H2-bridge provides a simple test system
and a fundamental step towards understanding transport properties of
single-molecule devices. | Nature Vol. 419 (2002) 906-909 | 10.1038/nature01103 |
2006-04-07T00:00:00 | Radius and chirality dependent conformation of polymer molecule at nanotube interface | Chenyu Wei | Temperature dependent conformations of linear polymer molecules adsorbed at
carbon nanotube (CNT) interfaces are investigated through molecule dynamics
simulations. Model polyethylene (PE) molecules are shown to have selective
conformations on CNT surface, controlled by atomic structures of CNT lattice
and geometric coiling energy. PE molecules form entropy driven assembly
domains, and their preferred wrapping angles around large radius CNT (40, 40)
reflect the molecule configurations with energy minimums on a graphite plane.
While PE molecules prefer wrapping on small radius armchair CNT (5, 5)
predominantly at low temperatures, their configurations are shifted to larger
wrapping angle ones on a similar radius zigzag CNT (10, 0). A nematic
transformation around 280 K is identified through Landau-deGennes theory, with
molecule aligning along tube axis in extended conformations | 10.1021/nl0605770 |
|
2006-12-06T00:00:00 | A Mott-like State of Molecules | S. Dürr, T. Volz, N. Syassen, D. M. Bauer, E. Hansis, G. Rempe | We prepare a quantum state where each site of an optical lattice is occupied
by exactly one molecule. This is the same quantum state as in a Mott insulator
of molecules in the limit of negligible tunneling. Unlike previous Mott
insulators, our system consists of molecules which can collide inelastically.
In the absence of the optical lattice these collisions would lead to fast loss
of the molecules from the sample. To prepare the state, we start from a Mott
insulator of atomic 87Rb with a central region, where each lattice site is
occupied by exactly two atoms. We then associate molecules using a Feshbach
resonance. Remaining atoms can be removed using blast light. Our method does
not rely on the molecule-molecule interaction properties and is therefore
applicable to many systems. | 10.1063/1.2400658 |
|
2000-02-08T00:00:00 | Time invariance violation in photon-atom and photon-molecule interactions | V. A. Kuz'menko | A direct experimental proof of very strong T-invariance violation in
interactions of the photons with atoms and molecules exists in the molecular
physics. | null |
|
2005-01-05T00:00:00 | Discreteness-Induced Transitions in Autocatalytic Systems | Yuichi Togashi, Kunihiko Kaneko | To study the dynamics of chemical processes, we often adopt rate equations to
observe the change in chemical concentrations. However, when the number of the
molecules is small, the fluctuations cannot be neglected. We often study the
effects of fluctuations with the help of stochastic differential equations.
Chemicals are composed of molecules on a microscopic level. In principle, the
number of molecules must be an integer, which must only change discretely.
However, in analysis using stochastic differential equations, the fluctuations
are regarded as continuous changes. This approximation can only be valid if
applied to fluctuations that involve a sufficiently large number of molecules.
In the case of extremely rare chemical species, the actual discreteness of the
molecules may critically affect the dynamics of the system.
To elucidate the effects of the discreteness, we study an autocatalytic
system consisting of several interacting chemical species with a small number
of molecules through stochastic particle simulations. We found novel states,
which were characterized as an extinction of molecule species, due to the
discrete nature of the molecules. We also observed a strong dependence of the
chemical concentrations on the size of the system, which was caused by
transitions to the novel states. | null |
|
2006-09-05T00:00:00 | Dwell time of a Brownian interacting molecule in a cellular microdomain | Adi Taflia, David Holcman | The time spent by an interacting Brownian molecule inside a bounded
microdomain has many applications in cellular biology, because the number of
bounds is a quantitative signal, which can initiate a cascade of chemical
reactions and thus has physiological consequences. In the present article, we
propose to estimate the mean time spent by a Brownian molecule inside a
microdomain $\Omega$ which contains small holes on the boundary and agonist
molecules located inside. We found that the mean time depends on several
parameters such as the backward binding rate (with the agonist molecules), the
mean escape time from the microdomain and the mean time a molecule reaches the
binding sites (forward binding rate). In addition, we estimate the mean and the
variance of the number of bounds made by a molecule before it exits $\Omega$.
These estimates rely on a boundary layer analysis of a conditional mean first
passage time, solution of a singular partial differential equation. In
particular, we apply the present results to obtain an estimate of the mean time
spent (Dwell time) by a Brownian receptor inside a synaptic domain, when it
moves freely by lateral diffusion on the surface of a neuron and interacts
locally with scaffolding molecules. | null |
|
2006-02-01T00:00:00 | Controlling Polar Molecules in Optical Lattices | S. Kotochigova, E. Tiesinga | We investigate theoretically the interaction of polar molecules with optical
lattices and microwave fields. We demonstrate the existence of frequency
windows in the optical domain where the complex internal structure of the
molecule does not influence the trapping potential of the lattice. In such
frequency windows the Franck-Condon factors are so small that near-resonant
interaction of vibrational levels of the molecule with the lattice fields have
a negligible contribution to the polarizability and light-induced decoherences
are kept to a minimum. In addition, we show that microwave fields can induce a
tunable dipole-dipole interaction between ground-state rotationally symmetric
(J=0) molecules. A combination of a carefully chosen lattice frequency and
microwave-controlled interaction between molecules will enable trapping of
polar molecules in a lattice and possibly realize molecular quantum logic
gates. Our results are based on ab initio relativistic electronic structure
calculations of the polar KRb and RbCs molecules combined with calculations of
their rovibrational motion. | 10.1103/PhysRevA.73.041405 |
|
2007-04-17T00:00:00 | Photonic molecules made of matched and mismatched microcavities: new functionalities of microlasers and optoelectronic components | Svetlana V. Boriskina, Trevor M. Benson, Phillip Sewell | Photonic molecules, named by analogy with chemical molecules, are clusters of
closely located electromagnetically interacting microcavities or "photonic
atoms". As two or several microcavities are brought close together, their
optical modes interact, and a rich spectrum of photonic molecule supermodes
emerges, which depends both on geometrical and material properties of
individual cavities and on their mutual interactions. Here, we discuss ways of
controllable manipulation of photonic molecule supermodes, which improve or add
new functionalities to microcavity-based optical components. We present several
optimally-tuned photonic molecule designs for lowering thresholds of
semiconductor microlasers, producing directional light emission, enhancing
sensitivity of microcavity-based bio(chemical)sensors, and optimizing
electromagnetic energy transfer around bends of coupled-cavity waveguides.
Photonic molecules composed of identical microcavities as well as of
microcavities with various degrees of size or material detuning are discussed.
Microwave experiments on scaled photonic molecule structures are currently
under way to confirm our theoretical predictions. | Proc. SPIE, vol. 6452, 6452X, Feb. 2007 | 10.1117/12.714344 |
2007-06-30T00:00:00 | Molecular coupling of light with plasmonic waveguides | Anton Kuzyk, Mika Pettersson, J. Jussi Toppari, Tommi K. Hakala, Hanna Tikkanen, Henrik Kunttu, Paivi Torma | We use molecules to couple light into and out of microscale plasmonic
waveguides. Energy transfer, mediated by surface plasmons, from donor molecules
to acceptor molecules over ten micrometer distances is demonstrated. Also
surface plasmon coupled emission from the donor molecules is observed at
similar distances away from the excitation spot. The lithographic fabrication
method we use for positioning the dye molecules allows scaling to nanometer
dimensions. The use of molecules as couplers between far-field and near-field
light offers the advantages that no special excitation geometry is needed, any
light source can be used to excite plasmons and the excitation can be localized
below the diffraction limit. Moreover, the use of molecules has the potential
for integration with molecular electronics and for the use of molecular
self-assembly in fabrication. Our results constitute a proof-of-principle
demonstration of a plasmonic waveguide where signal in- and outcoupling is done
by molecules. | Optics Express, Vol. 15, Issue 16, pp. 9908-9917, 2007 | 10.1364/OE.15.009908 |
2008-04-14T00:00:00 | A first principles study on organic molecules encapsulated BN nanotubes | Wei He, Zhenyu Li, Jinlong Yang, J. G. Hou | The electronic structures of boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs) doped by organic
molecules are investigated with density functional theory. Electrophilic
molecule introduces acceptor states in the wide gap of BNNT close to the
valence band edge, which makes the doped system a $p$-type semiconductor.
However, with typical nucleophilic organic molecules encapsulation, only deep
occupied molecular states but no shallow donor states are observed. There is a
significant electron transfer from BNNT to electrophilic molecule, while the
charge transfer between nucleophilic molecule and BNNT is neglectable. When
both electrophilic and nucleophilic molecules are encapsulated in the same
BNNT, large charge transfer between the two kinds of molecules occurs. The
resulted small energy gap can strongly modify the transport and optical
properties of the system. | Journal of Chemical Physics 128, 164701-5 (2008) | 10.1063/1.2901026 |
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