• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 3
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 7
  • 7
  • 7
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Theoretical and experimental evaluation of hysteresis in atmospheric chemistry

Haigh, Theodore Alan 01 January 1992 (has links)
This treatise is a recapitulation of the theoretical and experimental study of hysteresis in atmospheric kinetics. The original problem arose from a theoretical study of a series of reactions for clean air. Upon evaluation a bistable equilibrium was predicted. The steady-state analysis had delineated a metastable region for the set of reactions. This bounded region is the hysteresis that this research project evaluated.
2

The Parser Converter Loader: An Implementation of the Computational Chemistry Output Language (CCOL)

Abel, Donald Randall 03 May 1995 (has links)
A necessity of managing scientific data is the ability to maintain experimental legacy information without continually modifying the applications that create and use that information. By facilitating the management of scientific data we hope to give scientists the ability to effectively use additional modeling applications and experimental data. We have demonstrated that an extensible interpreter, using a series of stored directives, allows the loading of data from computational chemistry applications into a generic database. Extending the interpreter to support a new application involves supplying a list of directives for each piece of information to be loaded. This research confirms that an extensible interpreter can be used to load computational chemistry experimental data into a generic database. This procedure may be applicable to the loading and retrieving of other types of experimental data without requiring modifications of the loading and retrieving applications.
3

Object-oriented simulation of chemical and biochemical processes / Damien Hocking.

Hocking, Damien January 1997 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 173-179. / xi, 221 leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / This thesis aims to develop a basic object-oriented data structure and tools for the modelling and simulation of chemical and biochemical processes. The numerical methods are based on the Newton and Gear's Backward Difference methods. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Chemical Engineering, 1997
4

Computational study of the molecules of selected acylated phloroglucinols in vacuo and in solution

Kabanda, Mwombeki Mwadham 19 December 2012 (has links)
PhD (Chemistry) / Department of Chemistry
5

Application of the Correlation Consistent Composite Approach to Biological Systems and Noncovalent Interactions

Riojas, Amanda G. 05 1900 (has links)
Advances in computing capabilities have facilitated the application of quantum mechanical methods to increasingly larger and more complex chemical systems, including weakly interacting and biologically relevant species. One such ab initio-based composite methodology, the correlation consistent composite approach (ccCA), has been shown to be reliable for the prediction of enthalpies of formation and reaction energies of main group species in the gas phase to within 1 kcal mol-1, on average, of well-established experiment, without dependence on experimental parameterization or empirical corrections. In this collection of work, ccCA has been utilized to determine the proton affinities of deoxyribonucleosides within an ONIOM framework (ONIOM-ccCA) and to predict accurate enthalpies of formation for organophosphorus compounds. Despite the complexity of these systems, ccCA is shown to result in enthalpies of formation to within ~2 kcal mol-1 of experiment and predict reliable reaction energies for systems with little to no experimental data. New applications for the ccCA method have also been introduced, expanding the utility of ccCA to solvated systems and complexes with significant noncovalent interactions. By incorporating the SMD solvation model into the ccCA formulation, the Solv-ccCA method is able to predict the pKa values of nitrogen systems to within 0.7 pKa unit (less than 1.0 kcal mol-1), overall. A hydrogen bonding constant has also been developed for use with weakly interacting dimers and small cluster compounds, resulting in ccCA interaction energies for water clusters and dimers of the S66 set to within 1.0 kcal mol-1 of well-established theoretical values.
6

Structure And Dynamics Of Constrained Water : Microscopic Study Of Macromolecular Hydration Using Computer Simulations

Pal, Subrata 02 1900 (has links)
The thesis, which contains nine chapters, reports extensive large scale atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulation studies of water structure and dynamics at the surface of an anionic micelle, hydration layer of two proteins, and in the grooves of a 38-base pairs long DNA. Understanding the structure and dynamics of water molecules at the surfaces of self-organized assemblies and complex biological macromolecules has become a subject of intense research in recent times. Chapter 1 contains a brief overview of the biomolecular hydration dynamics. Relevant experimental, computational, and theoretical studies of biomolecular hydration and the time scales associated with the water dynamics are discussed. In Chapters 2 and 3, the structure, environment, energetics, and dynamics of constrained water molecules in the aqueous anionic micelle of cesium perfluorooctanoate (CsPFO) have been studied using large scale atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. Based on the number of hydrogen bond (HB) that interfacial water molecule makes with the polar head group (PHG) oxygen of the micelle, we find the existence of three kinds of water at the interface. We introduce a nomenclature to identify the species as IBW2 (form two HBs with two different PHG), IBW1 (form one HB with PHG), and IFW (no HB with PHG). Despite of possessing two strong w-PHG bonds, the concentration of the IBW2 species is rather low due to entropic effect. The ion solvation dynamics study at the interface shows the presence of a slow component, with a relaxation time 1-2 order of magnitude slower than that in the corresponding bulk solvent in agreement with the experimental results. Both the translational and orientational dynamics of the water molecules near the micellar surface is found to be much slower than those in the bulk. The HB between the PHG of the micelle and the water molecule has almost 13 times longer life time than that in the bulk between two tagged water molecules. In Chapter 4, we present results of extensive atomistic MD simulation studies of the structure and dynamics of aqueous protein solution of the toxic domain of Enterotoxin (1ETN) and the chicken villin headpiece sub-domain containing 36 amino acid residues (HP-36). Reduced water structure and the faster water dynamics around the active site of these proteins have been observed which may have biological significance. Chapter 5 presents an extensive atomistic molecular dynamics simulations study of water dynamics in the hydration layer of a 38 base long hydrated DNA duplex. The computed rotational time correlation function (TCF) of the minor groove water dipoles is found to be markedly non-exponential with a slow component at long time. The constrained water molecule is also found to exhibit anisotropic diffusion in both the major and minor grooves. At short-to-intermediate times, translational motion of water molecules in minor groove is sub-diffusive. Chapter 6 presents the study of water entropy in both the grooves DNA. The average values of the entropy of water at 300K in both the grooves of DNA are found to be significantly lower than that in bulk water. We propose that the configurational entropy of water in the grooves can be used as a measure of the mobility (or micro viscosity) of water molecules in a given domain. In Chapter 7, we study the specific DNA base-water hydrogen bond lifetime (HBLT) dynamics at the major and the minor grooves of a hydrated duplex. The base-water HBLT correlation functions are in general multi-exponential and the average lifetime depends significantly on the specificity of the DNA sequence. The average HBLT is longer in the minor groove than that in the major groove by almost a factor of 2. Chapter 8 presents the solvation dynamics of constituent bases of aqueous DNA duplex. The solvation TCFs of the four individual bases display highly non-exponential decay with time. An interesting negative cross-correlation between water and counterions is observed which makes an important contribution to relaxation at intermediate to longer times. In the concluding note, Chapter 9 presents a brief summary of the outcome of the thesis and suggests several relevant problems that may prove w orthwhile to be addressed in future
7

Systematic Approaches to Predictive Computational Chemistry using the Correlation Consistent Basis Sets

Prascher, Brian P. 05 1900 (has links)
The development of the correlation consistent basis sets, cc-pVnZ (where n = D, T, Q, etc.) have allowed for the systematic elucidation of the intrinsic accuracy of ab initio quantum chemical methods. In density functional theory (DFT), where the cc-pVnZ basis sets are not necessarily optimal in their current form, the elucidation of the intrinsic accuracy of DFT methods cannot always be accomplished. This dissertation outlines investigations into the basis set requirements for DFT and how the intrinsic accuracy of DFT methods may be determined with a prescription involving recontraction of the cc-pVnZ basis sets for specific density functionals. Next, the development and benchmarks of a set of cc-pVnZ basis sets designed for the s-block atoms lithium, beryllium, sodium, and magnesium are presented. Computed atomic and molecular properties agree well with reliable experimental data, demonstrating the accuracy of these new s-block basis sets. In addition to the development of cc-pVnZ basis sets, the development of a new, efficient formulism of the correlation consistent Composite Approach (ccCA) using the resolution of the identity (RI) approximation is employed. The new formulism, denoted 'RI-ccCA,' has marked efficiency in terms of computational time and storage, compared with the ccCA formulism, without the introduction of significant error. Finally, this dissertation reports three separate investigations of the properties of FOOF-like, germanium arsenide, and silicon hydride/halide molecules using high accuracy ab initio methods and the cc-pVnZ basis sets.

Page generated in 0.4167 seconds