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  • 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.
191

Elaboration d'une méthode théorique pour la détermination et la prédiction des couleurs de colorants carbonylés./ Elaboration of a theoretical procedure for the evaluation and prediction of the carbonyl dyes colour.

Preat, Julien 14 March 2008 (has links)
Pour notre travail de thèse, nous avons établi une méthodologie, basée sur la DFT et sa variante dépendante du temps, qui permet l'évaluation efficace et la prédiction rapide des couleurs de différentes familles de colorants carbonylés dans différents environnements. Ainsi, nous sommes capables de fournir des valeurs théoriques très précises pour les énergies de transition des dérivés de l'anthraquinone, de la coumarine et de l'indigo ainsi que du thioindigo. Notre stratégie prend en compte aussi bien les effets de solvatation, dans le cadre d'une modélisation en continuum, que les effets du pH, sur la position de la bande d'absorption maximale du spectre UV/VIS. / The project of the Ph. D. work consists in the elaboration of a theoretical methodology able to evaluate and predict the color of organic dyes (see the List of recent publications for more details). Our methodology takes into account the solvent effects as well as the pH impact on the color of the dyes. The theoretical tools used are the Density Functional Theory (DFT, for ground-state optimization) and the Time Dependent TDDFT for excitation spectra calculations. The solvent effects are taken into account via the PCM (Polarizable continuum Model).
192

Computational Methods for Calculation of Ligand-Receptor Binding Affinities Involving Protein and Nucleic Acid Complexes

Almlöf, Martin January 2007 (has links)
The ability to accurately predict binding free energies from computer simulations is an invaluable resource in understanding biochemical processes and drug action. Several methods based on microscopic molecular dynamics simulations exist, and in this thesis the validation, application, and development of the linear interaction energy (LIE) method is presented. For a test case of several hydrophobic ligands binding to P450cam it is found that the LIE parameters do not change when simulations are performed with three different force fields. The nonpolar contribution to binding of these ligands is best reproduced with a constant offset and a previously determined scaling of the van der Waals interactions. A new methodology for prediction of binding free energies of protein-protein complexes is investigated and found to give excellent agreement with experimental results. In order to reproduce the nonpolar contribution to binding, a different scaling of the van der Waals interactions is neccesary (compared to small ligand binding) and found to be, in part, due to an electrostatic preorganization effect not present when binding small ligands. A new treatment of the electrostatic contribution to binding is also proposed. In this new scheme, the chemical makeup of the ligand determines the scaling of the electrostatic ligand interaction energies. These scaling factors are calibrated using the electrostatic contribution to hydration free energies and proposed to be applicable to ligand binding. The issue of codon-anticodon recognition on the ribosome is adressed using LIE. The calculated binding free energies are in excellent agreement with experimental results, and further predict that the Leu2 anticodon stem loop is about 10 times more stable than the Ser stem loop in complex with a ribosome loaded with the Phe UUU codon. The simulations also support the previously suggested roles of A1492, A1493, and G530 in the codon-anticodon recognition process.
193

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
194

Etude des réseaux de reconnaissance biomoléculaire à l'échelle atomique pour les systèmes ARN et ARN/protéines / Atomic-scale investigation of recognition networks in RNA and RNA/protein systems

D'Ascenzo, Luigi 29 September 2016 (has links)
Mis à part les liaisons hydrogène, d’autres interactions non covalentes participent dans les réseaux de reconnaissance ARN et ARN protéines. Parmi celles-ci, j’ai étudié les interactions oxygène-pi. Cette interaction prend la forme phosphate-pi dans les U turns et O4'-pi dans les motifs ARN-Z. Je propose une nouvelle classification des boucles de quatre nucléotides, décrivant les U turn et les Z turn à partir d’interactions oxygène-pi. De plus, les motifs "Z like" présents dans tous les ARN, sont aussi reconnus par certaines protéines immunologiques. Pour mieux comprendre les réseaux de reconnaissance biomoléculaire, nous avons examiné les interactions entre cations/anions et ARN. Nous avons trouvé de nombreuses erreurs dans les structures de la PDB et proposé des règles pour améliorer l'attribution d’espèces ioniques. Les résultats de cette thèse amélioreront notre connaissance des réseaux de reconnaissance biomoléculaire et aideront aux techniques de modélisation structurale des ARN. / Together with hydrogen bonds, uncommon non-covalent interactions are fundamental for recognition networks in RNA and RNA-protein systems. Among them, I focused on oxygen-pi stacking. This interaction takes the form of phosphate-pi within U-turns and of ribose O4’-pi within “Z-RNA” motifs. In that respect, a novel classification of tetraloops is proposed, defining U-turns and Z-turns based on their oxygen-pi stacking properties. Further, “Z-like” motifs are found to pervade small and large RNAs, being also a recognition pattern for immunology-related proteins. To better understand biomolecular recognition networks, we reviewed the binding of metal ions and anions within RNA, finding many examples of ions misattribution in PDB structures. We propose rules to avoid attribution errors. The results of this thesis will improve our knowledge and understanding of biomolecular recognition networks, as well as assist structural determination and structural modelling techniques of RNA systems.
195

In silico methods to prioritize chemicals with high exposure potential

Reppas Chrysovitsinos, Efstathios January 2017 (has links)
Chemicals offer a wide range of desired functions and are used in a variety of consumer goods and industrial sectors. The number of individual synthetic organic chemicals produced and the total global chemical production volume are increasing. The majority of these anthropogenic chemicals are not monitored in environmental matrices nor in the indoor environment even though some are associated with undesirable consequences and the range of possible chemical impacts is still far from being fully understood. Chemicals that remain in the environment for a long time and/or distribute over a large area have high exposure potential, and will present particularly acute challenges if a currently unknown undesirable effect is discovered.  This thesis describes the development of a set of in silico methods to identify and prioritize chemicals with high exposure potential that are currently not subject to national or international restrictions. In brief, we i) compiled databases of contaminants of potential concern, ii) established models to predict key properties to fill data gaps in the absence of experimental data, and iii) developed and applied methods to screen chemicals to identify those that should be assigned high priority for future study.  Paper I delivers screening-level models to predict partition ratios of organic chemicals between polymeric materials commonly found indoors, and both air and water. These models can be used in high-throughput exposure assessment studies, passive sampling experiments, and models of emissions, fate and transport of chemicals.  Paper II presents a scoring method to prioritize 464 organic chemicals of emerging Arctic concern for their potential to fit a set of four exposure-based hazard profiles. These four profiles represent persistent organic pollutants (POPs) regulated under the Stockholm Convention, very persistent and very bioaccumulative substances (vPvBs) regulated under REACH and for two novel and unregulated profiles derived from the planetary boundary threats framework; airborne persistent contaminants (APCs) and waterborne persistent contaminants (WPCs). APCs and WPCs are chemicals that are mobile in air and water, respectively, and that contaminate the environment in a poorly reversible manner due to their persistence. The prioritization method is based on a reference set of 148 chemicals that is used to contextualize the scoring results.  Paper III describes the prioritization of 8,648 chemicals that were reportedly produced in five OECD countries. Paper III elucidates the relationship between the elemental composition of these chemicals and the exposure-based hazard scores, and presents a strategy to disentangle overlaps among the four exposure hazard profiles by categorizing chemicals according to the spatial coverage of profiles they best fit.  Paper IV focuses on refining the prioritization method described in Papers II and III using a set of 5,600 hypothetical chemicals. The refined method is used to prioritize the chemicals from Papers II and III, and an additional 4,567 chemicals from the REACH database.  The in silico methods developed in this thesis can be applied to conduct screening-level exposure assessments using only chemical structures as a starting point. Substances prioritized as having high potential to be POPs, vPvB, APC, or WPC should be considered for more detailed study to unequivocally determine their identity and physicochemical properties. / <p>At the time of the doctoral defense, the following papers were unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 3: Manuscript. Paper 4: Manuscript.</p>
196

Structure, dynamics and phase behavior of concentrated electrolytes for applications in energy storage devices

Park, Chanbum 03 March 2021 (has links)
Diese Arbeit widmet sich der Untersuchung der dynamischen und strukturellen Eigenschaften sowie des Phasenverhaltens konzentrierter flüssiger Elektrolyte und ihrer Anwendung in Energiespeichern mittels Methoden der statistischen Mechanik und mithilfe atomistischer Molekulardynamik (MD) Simulationen. Zuerst untersuchen wir die Struktur-Eigenschafts-Beziehungen in konzentrierten Elektrolytlösungen wie sie in Lithium-Schwefel (Li/S), durch wir ein MD Simulationsmodell repräsentativer state-of-the-art Elektrolyt-Systeme für Li/S-Batterien bestehend aus Polysulfiden, lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide (LiTFSI) und LiNO 3 Elektrolyten mit jeweils unterschiedlichen Kettenlängen gemischt in organischen Lösungsmitteln aus 1,2-dimethoxyethane and 1,3-dioxolane erstellen. Als Zweites befassen wir uns mit der Phasenseparation, die auftritt, wenn sich die physikalisch-chemischen Eigenschaften flüssiger Gemische voneinander unterscheiden. Diese Systeme bestehen üblicherweise aus einem konzentrierten anorganischen Salz und einer ionischen Flüssigkeit. In dieser Arbeit untersuchen wir eine Vielfalt von hochkonzentrierten wässrigen Elektrolytlösungen, die aus unterschiedlichen Zusammensetzungen von LiCl und LiTFSI bestehen. Daraufhin beantworten wir die Frage, wie unterschiedlich die Komponenten in der wässrigen Lösung gemischt sein sollten, damit eine solche flüssig-flüssig-Phasentrennung stattfinden kann. Als letztes untersuchen wir die Ladungsabschirmung, die ein grundlegendes Phänomen ist, das die Struktur von Elektrolyten im Bulk und an Grenzflächen bestimmt. Wir haben in dieser Arbeit die Abschirmlängen für verschiedene Elektrolyte von niedrigen bis zu hohen Konzentrationen untersucht. / Electrolytes can be found in numerous applications in daily life as well as in scientific research. The increases in demand for energy-storage systems, such as fuel cells, supercapacitors and batteries in which liquid electrolyte properties are critical for optimal function, draw critical attention to the physical and chemical properties of electrolytes. Those energy-storage devices contain intermediate or highly concentrated electrolytes where established theories, like the Debye-Hückel (DH) theory, are not applicable. Despite the efforts to describe the physical properties of intermediate or highly concentrated electrolytes, theoretical atomistic-level studies are still lacking. This thesis is devoted to critically investigate the transport/structural properties and a phase behavior of concentrated liquid electrolytes and their application in energy-storage devices, using statistical mechanics and atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Firstly, we investigate the structure-property relationship in concentrated electrolyte solutions in next-generation lithium-sulfur (Li/S) batteries. Secondly, phase separation may exist if the physio-chemical properties of liquid mixtures are very different. Recently, the coexistence phase of two aqueous solutions of different salts at high concentrations was found, called aqueous biphasic systems. We explore a wide range of compositions at room temperature for highly concentrated aqueous electrolytes solutions that consist of LiCl and LiTFSI. Lastly, charge screening is a fundamental phenomenon that governs the structure of liquid electrolytes in the bulk and at interfaces. From the DH theory, the screening length is expected to be extremely small in highly concentrated electrolytes. Yet, recent experiments show unexpectedly high screening lengths in those. This intriguing phenomenon has prompted a new set of theoretical works. We investigate the screening lengths for various electrolytes from low to high concentrations.
197

Fluorosolvatochromism of furanyl- and thiophenyl-substituted acetophenones

Friebe, Nadine, Schreiter, Katja, Kübel, Joachim, Dietzek, Benjamin, Moszner, Norbert, Burtscher, Peter, Oehlke, Alexander, Spange, Stefan 15 February 2016 (has links)
A series of para-substituted acetophenones bearing a furanyl or a thiophenyl moiety show a large Stokes-shift, which is a function of various solvent properties. Photophysical properties such as emission lifetime of the compounds have been determined using time-correlated-single photon counting to secure the intrinsic fluorescence behaviour. The solvent dependent position of the UV/Vis emission band [small nu, Greek, tilde]max,em of the compounds has been measured in 26 various solvents. The influence of the solvent on [small nu, Greek, tilde]max,em is of very complex nature and mathematically analysed by multiple square linear solvation energy (LSE)-correlation analysis using Catalán's four-solvent parameter set. Solvent acidity has a strong influence on the bathochromic shift of 2,5-disubstituted furan derivatives compared to the non-5-substituted furan and thiophene derivatives, which show a contrary behaviour. Therefore, the 5-cyanofuranyl-substituted acetophenone derivative is useful as a probe for measuring environmental properties by fluorescence spectroscopy. / Dieser Beitrag ist aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.
198

Synthesis and Characterization of Surface-Confined Ionic Liquid Stationary Phases for High Performance Liquid Chromatography

Van Meter, David S., III January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
199

Theoretical Studies of Molecular Recognition in Protein-Ligand and Protein-Protein Complexes

Yang, Hui January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
200

Modern Computational Physical Chemistry : An Introduction to Biomolecular Radiation Damage and Phototoxicity / Modern fysikalisk-kemisk beräkningsmetodik : En introduktion till biomolekylära strålningsskador och fototoxicitet

Llano, Jorge January 2004 (has links)
<p>The realm of molecular physical chemistry ranges from the structure of matter and the fundamental atomic and molecular interactions to the macroscopic properties and processes arising from the average microscopic behaviour.</p><p>Herein, the conventional electrodic problem is recast into the simpler molecular problem of finding the electrochemical, real chemical, and chemical potentials of the species involved in redox half-reactions. This molecular approach is followed to define the three types of absolute chemical potentials of species in solution and to estimate their standard values. This is achieved by applying the scaling laws of statistical mechanics to the collective behaviour of atoms and molecules, whose motion, interactions, and properties are described by first principles quantum chemistry. For atomic and molecular species, calculation of these quantities is within the computational implementations of wave function, density functional, and self-consistent reaction field theories. Since electrons and nuclei are the elementary particles in the realm of chemistry, an internally consistent set of absolute standard values within chemical accuracy is supplied for all three chemical potentials of electrons and protons in aqueous solution. As a result, problems in referencing chemical data are circumvented, and a uniform thermochemical treatment of electron, proton, and proton-coupled electron transfer reactions in solution is enabled.</p><p>The formalism is applied to the primary and secondary radiation damage to DNA bases, e.g., absorption of UV light to yield electronically excited states, formation of radical ions, and transformation of nucleobases into mutagenic lesions as OH radical adducts and 8-oxoguanine. Based on serine phosphate as a model compound, some insight into the direct DNA strand break mechanism is given.</p><p>Psoralens, also called furocoumarins, are a family of sensitizers exhibiting cytostatic and photodynamic actions, and hence, they are used in photochemotherapy. Molecular design of more efficient photosensitizers can contribute to enhance the photophysical and photochemical properties of psoralens and to reduce the phototoxic reactions. The mechanisms of photosensitization of furocoumarins connected to their dark toxicity are examined quantum chemically.</p>

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