• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 7
  • 5
  • Tagged with
  • 17
  • 17
  • 17
  • 10
  • 9
  • 7
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 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

Vibrational sum frequency study on biological interfaces

Lim, Soon Mi 02 June 2009 (has links)
Vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy (VSFS) is a nonlinear optical process. The sum frequency signal is proportional to the square of second order nonlinear susceptibility, which is proportional to the average of polarizabilities of molecules, which is related to molecular orientation. Since the polarizabilities of molecules in bulk phase will be canceled out, a sum frequency signal can only be generated from interfaces where the inversion symmetry is broken. Because of its interfacial specificity, VSFS has been applied to study many interfacial phenomena. In this dissertation we investigated various biological interfaces with VSFS. Fibrinogen adsorption was studied at the protein/solid interface in combination with atomic force microscopy (AFM), immunoassay, and VSFS. Astonishing changes in the interfacial water orientation accompanied by the pH changes provided fibrinogen’s adsorption mechanism up to the amino acid level. Enzymatic fragmentation of fibrinogen revealed that the adsorption property of fibrinogen was mainly from the alpha C fragments of the protein. Mimicking of the fibrinogen binding site with polypeptides was successfully performed and showed very similar properties of fibrinogen adsorption. Protein stability is sensitive to the salts in solutions. The ability of ions to stabilize protein was ordered by Hofmeister in 1888 and the order is SO4 2- ≅ HPO4 2- > F- > Cl- > Br- > NO3 - > I- (≅ ClO4 -) > SCN-. Even though the phenomenon was observed in various biological systems, the origin of those ionic effects is still not well understood. We studied ion effects on alkyl chain ordering and interfacial water structure for octadecylamine, dimethyldidodecylammonium bromide, and dilauroylphosphotidyl choline monolayers. Because of its ability to probe a hydrophobic moiety and interfacial water at the same time, VSFS provided further information to understand the Hofmeister series. We found that the Hofmeister effect is a combinatorial effect of screening effects, ion binding, and dispersion forces.
2

Vibrational Sum Frequency Spectroscopic Investigations of Sulfur Dioxide Adsorption to Atmospherically Relevant Aqueous Surfaces

Ota, Stephanie Tomoko, 1978- 06 1900 (has links)
xv, 108 p. : ill. (chiefly col.) / Aqueous aerosol surfaces are an important platform for chemical reactions through which gases are transported in the atmosphere. The chemical complexity of aqueous aerosols is well-established, but many questions remain about the molecular nature of their surfaces, particularly with respect to the uptake of gases. The pollutant sulfur dioxide, SO<sub>2</sub>, has been implicated in environmental phenomena such as acid rain, climate change, and cloud formation. SO<sub>2</sub> is fundamentally interesting because it forms spectroscopically identifiable complexes with water at aqueous surfaces. This dissertation aims to understand how temperature and aqueous composition impact the formation of surface complexes between water and SO<sub>2</sub>. Vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy (VSFS), a surface specific technique, is used to probe the vibrational modes of water and small organic molecules, investigating changes to the overall orientation, bonding environment, and structure of interfaces when aqueous surfaces are exposed to SO<sub>2</sub>. SO<sub>2</sub> adsorption to water at tropospherically relevant temperatures (0--23 °C) is examined first. The results show enhanced SO<sub>2</sub> surface affinity at colder temperatures, with most of the topmost water molecules showing evidence of binding to SO<sub>2</sub> at 0 °C compared to a much lower fraction at room temperature. Surface adsorption results in significant changes in water orientation at the surface but is reversible at the temperatures examined. The surface and vibrational specificity of these studies can be used to distinguish between the effects of surface adsorption compared to bulk accommodation. This distinction is utilized to demonstrate that SO<sub>2</sub> complexation is independent of solution acidity, confirming that bulk absorption is unnecessary for surface adsorption to occur. Finally, the impact of the organic species succinic acid and formaldehyde on the formation of surface SO<sub>2</sub> complexes is examined. These experiments indicate that SO<sub>2</sub> surface complexation occurs primarily with water but that surface active organic species may interact with gases under certain circumstances, namely when the organic species are more chemically reactive towards the gas. These studies have important implications for atmospheric chemistry and the uptake of gases, particularly in the complex aqueous environments expected in the troposphere. / Committee in charge: Dr. Paul C. Engelking, Chair; Dr. Geraldine L. Richmond, Advisor Dr. Jeffrey A. Cina, Member; Dr. Thomas R. Dyke, Member; Dr. Alan D. Johnston, Outside Member
3

Understanding Oil Resistance of Nitrile Rubber: CN Group Interactions at Interfaces

Lachat, Veronique M. 17 December 2008 (has links)
No description available.
4

Refining Vibrationally-Resonant Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy for Studies of Interfacial Interactions

Curtis, Alexander D. 09 May 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Many phenomena of interest to science and engineering occur at interfaces; however, access to, or discrimination of, interfacial interactions has been challenging, especially at buried interfaces. Vibrationally resonant sum-frequency generation (VR-SFG) spectroscopy is a powerful tool for investigating the molecular structure of free or buried interfaces, but spectral analysis has relied on many assumptions. To claim accurate new insights, practitioners must be able to make unique determinations from the data without experimental artifacts affecting the final results. For example, two independent and overlapping studies for the polystyrene/air interface were carried out, but reported different surface structures. Initially, this difference was attributed to the use of different substrates, but we have shown that the surface structure is independent of substrate by experimental suppression of the interfering nonresonant signal. These results show difficulties in SFG analysis that have led to faulty determinations of structural changes. Similar problems have been observed in systems assumed to have negligible nonresonant interference, demonstrating the need for proper experimental design instead of relying solely on post-experimental analysis of the data. We have investigated the inherent limitations imposed on the technique from the nature of the signal generation and nonresonant interference, and have developed methods to overcome such difficulties, depending on what is desired from the data. By nature of nonlinear spectroscopy, the desired frequency response is affected by overlapping interactions in the time domain, and these time domain interactions can be exploited to overcome challenges in analysis. By delaying the upconverting pulse, the nonresonant signal can be removed to enable accurate qualitative comparison or even quantify change; however this removal results in incomplete upconversion, or apodization, of the resonant signal, causing distortion in the observed resonant response. If absolute parameters are desired, additional work is necessary to correct the distortion of the resonant response. Correction can be accomplished by further exploiting time domain effects by collecting spectra at various delay times of the upconverting pulse, and this additional data also aids in interpretation of congested spectra. Many practical applications, however, only require a means to quantify change, and measurements of change are unaffected by the effects of apodization. These techniques have been used to more accurately analyze polystyrene and octadecylsilane surfaces.
5

Advancements in the Understanding of Nonlinear Optics and Their Use in Material Analysis

Averett, Shawn C. 01 August 2017 (has links)
Adhesion, heterogeneous catalysis, electrochemistry, and many other important processes and properties are driven by interactions at surfaces and interfaces. Vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy (VSFG) is an increasingly popular analytical technique because it can provide information about the nature and physical orientation of functional groups at these surfaces and interfaces. Analysis of VSFG data can be complicated by the presence of SFG signal that is not associated with a resonant vibration. This nonresonant sum frequency generation (NR-SFG) signal can interfere with the resonant signal and influence the detected spectrum. Methods have been developed to remove NR-SFG signal; however, these methods tend to be complicated and expensive. In fact many SFG practitioners do not have the ability to remove NR-SFG signal components, and systems designed to remove NR-SFG signal contributions may not be able to do so for some materials. We have worked to help develop a better understanding of NR-SFG. As part of this work, a better understanding of the temporal and phase behavior of NR-SFG signal has been developed, based on the behavior of NR-SFG signal from Si(111) wafers. This work calls into question some assumptions underlying nonresonant suppression methods based on time-domain detection. A new method for nondestructively testing (NDT) materials has been developed that uses nonresonant second harmonic generation, the degenerate form of SFG. This new NDT technology has the potential to detect several forms of material damage, such as aluminum sensitization, and plastic deformation of materials, which are largely invisible to current NDT technologies. Methods for extracting functional group orientation from VSFG data that contains NR-SFG contributions are also demonstrated and used to investigate how the surface of high density polyethylene changes in response to mechanical deformation. This work shows that the inability to remove NR-SFG contributions from VSFG spectra does not mean that these instruments cannot be used to make important discoveries. It simply means that NR-SFG contributions must be properly understood and accounted for during experimental design, and kept in mind during the analysis of VSFG spectra.
6

The structure of langmuir monolayers probed with vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy

Gurau, Marc Cory 29 August 2005 (has links)
Langmuir monolayers can be employed as simple model systems to study interactions at surfaces. Such investigations are important to fields ranging from biology to materials science. Herein, several aspects of these films and their associated water structure have been examined with vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy (VSFS). This second order nonlinear optical spectroscopy is particularly well suited for simultaneous investigations of the monolayer and the associated water structure with unprecedented surface specificity. The structures of these systems were altered through the control of experimental parameters including monolayer pressure, subphase temperature, pH and ionic content. Thermodynamic information about structural changes in a fatty amine monolayer's hydrophobic region was obtained by observation of the pressure and temperature dependence of the monolayer's solid to liquid phase transition. Further studies used the coordination of divalent cations to acid monolayers to perturb the water layers nearest to the film which enabled a better understanding of the water related VSFS features from these hydrophilic interfaces. Information from both the monolayer and water structure was then combined in order to examine the role of water in mediating ion-biomaterial interactions, often expressed in terms of the Hofmeister series.
7

The structure of langmuir monolayers probed with vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy

Gurau, Marc Cory 29 August 2005 (has links)
Langmuir monolayers can be employed as simple model systems to study interactions at surfaces. Such investigations are important to fields ranging from biology to materials science. Herein, several aspects of these films and their associated water structure have been examined with vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy (VSFS). This second order nonlinear optical spectroscopy is particularly well suited for simultaneous investigations of the monolayer and the associated water structure with unprecedented surface specificity. The structures of these systems were altered through the control of experimental parameters including monolayer pressure, subphase temperature, pH and ionic content. Thermodynamic information about structural changes in a fatty amine monolayer's hydrophobic region was obtained by observation of the pressure and temperature dependence of the monolayer's solid to liquid phase transition. Further studies used the coordination of divalent cations to acid monolayers to perturb the water layers nearest to the film which enabled a better understanding of the water related VSFS features from these hydrophilic interfaces. Information from both the monolayer and water structure was then combined in order to examine the role of water in mediating ion-biomaterial interactions, often expressed in terms of the Hofmeister series.
8

Molecular studies of initial atmospheric corrosion of copper : Exploration of ultra-sensitive techniques for the inhibiting effect of self assembled monolayers, and the effect of gamma radiation

Hosseinpour, Saman January 2013 (has links)
Atmospheric corrosion indoors is of great practical importance for the degradation of metals, for example in electronics, military equipment, and cultural heritage items. It involves a wide range of chemical, electrochemical, and physical processes occurring in gas, liquid, and solid phases, and at the interfaces between them. Hence, a molecular understanding of the fundamental interactions during atmospheric corrosion is of utmost importance. Copper is one of the most used metals in electrical contacts, power generators, heat exchangers, etc. and is prone to indoor atmospheric corrosion. Although corrosion and oxidation of copper in the presence of corrosion stimulators is thermodynamically inevitable, there are ways to reduce the kinetics of corrosion and oxidation reactions. Self assembled monolayers (SAMs) of organic molecules, when adsorbed on copper surfaces, have proven to be efficient barriers against copper corrosion. However, understanding at the molecular level of the initial stages of corrosion of SAM covered copper in atmospheric corrosion conditions is lacking. The main reason is the inability of the conventional analytical methods to detect and characterize very thin corrosion products formed during the initial stages (from seconds to days) of atmospheric corrosion of SAM covered copper. To overcome this situation a highly surface sensitive technique, vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy (VSFS), has been utilized in situ and ex situ in this thesis to detect and follow the oxidation of alkanethiol SAM covered copper in dry air as well as to assess the conformational changes of SAM molecules during oxidation.  A very sensitive gravimetric method, quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D), and a highly sensitive and versatile optical technique, nanoplasmonic sensing (NPS), were combined in situ with VSFS to quantify this very slow oxidation process. This combination allowed the heterogeneity of the oxidation process as well as the mass and the rigidity of the corrosion products to be detected simultaneously. To address indoor atmospheric corrosion conditions where carboxylic acids play an important role we next studied the interaction between SAM covered copper and humidified air, to which formic acid was added. The in situ identification of the corrosion products and their formation kinetics was done using near surface sensitive infrared reflection/absorption spectroscopy (IRAS), and the effect of hydrocarbon chain length in alkanethiol SAMs on their corrosion protection efficiency was investigated. The effect of the anchoring group in the SAMs on their corrosion protection efficiency was studied for hexaneselenol using -SeH as the anchoring group, and the results were compared with its thiol counterpart, hexanethiol, with -SH as the anchoring group. Complementary in situ and ex situ VSFS measurements were performed to assess the quality of the SAMs before, during, and after exposure. It was shown that the SAMs of alkanethiols greatly inhibited the formation of copper (I) oxide and slowed down the formation of other corrosion products, i.e. copper formate and copper hydroxid. This was due to a selective hindrance of the corrosion stimulators, oxygen, water, and formic acid molecules reaching the copper-SAM interface. The corrosion inhibiting effect increased with the hydrocarbon chain length. The SAMs of hexaneselenols, on the other hand, exhibited an accelerated formation of copper (I) oxide, copper formate and copper hydroxide compared to an unprotected surface as a result of the partial removal of hexaneselenol molecules from the copper surface during prolonged exposure. The experience gained in characterizing and quantifying thin copper oxides was further used to explore the influence of gamma (γ) radiation on copper corrosion in anoxic water. This multi-analytical approach included IRAS, cathodic reduction, confocal Raman microscope, atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and inductively coupled plasma - atomic emission spectroscopy. The results clearly showed that copper dissolution as well as the oxide layer thickness increase with gamma radiation under the exposure conditions. / Atmosfärisk korrosion under inomhusförhållanden är av stor praktisk betydelse på grund av dess inverkan på exempelvis vårt kulturarv i museimiljöer, tillförlitligheten hos elektronik i olika industriella sammanhang, eller militär utrustning förvarad i olika förråd. Den atmosfäriska korrosionen styrs av ett brett spektrum av kemiska, elektrokemiska och fysikaliska processer som äger rum i tre faser: atmosfären, den tunna fuktfilmen på objektytan och den fasta fasen, samt i de bägge fasgränserna mellan de tre faserna. För att kunna hitta motmedel mot korrosionen är det av yttersta vikt att öka den molekylära förståelsen för dessa processer. Koppar är en mycket använd metall i elektriska eller elektroniska komponenter, i värmeväxlare eller VVS-sammanhang, som beslag och i en rad olika dekorer. Metallen korroderar eller oxiderar spontant i många korrosiva miljöer, men det finns ett brett spektrum av metoder för att minska korrosions- eller oxidationshastigheten. Monoskikt av tätpackade självassocierande organiska molekyler (engelska: self assembled monolayers, förkortat SAM) adsorberade på kopparytan har visat sig vara effektiva barriärer för kopparkorrosion. Den molekylära insikten i dessa monoskikts funktionssätt för att minska den atmosfäriska korrosionen är dock ännu rätt så begränsad. Den främsta orsaken är oförmågan hos mer etablerade analytiska metoder att kunna karakterisera de ytterst små mängder av korrosionsprodukter som bildas under den atmosfäriska korrosionens inledande skeenden upp till några dagars exponering. Den extremt ytkänsliga och i korrosionssammanhang fortfarande relativt oprövade analysmetoden summafrekvensspektroskopi (engelska: vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy, förkortat VSFS) har därför använts för att under pågående exponering följa det mycket långsamma oxidationsförlopp som uppstår när koppar, skyddat av något organiskt monoskikt, exponeras för torr luft. VSFS har även kunnat användas för att under pågående oxidation följa strukturella förändringar hos monoskiktet. För att kvantifiera en så långsam oxidationsprocess har även en annan extremt masskänslig metod kunnat kombineras med VSFS, en kvartskristallmikrovåg med s.k. dissipationsövervakning, förkortat QCM-D. Ytterligare en i korrosionssammanhang oprövad men lika masskänslig teknik har kunnat kombineras med VSFS. Den metoden besitter än så länge bara ett engelskt namn, nanoplasmonic sensing (NPS). Kombinationen VSFS–QCM-D–NPS har utnyttjats i en serie unika försök, där inte bara de ytterst långsamma oxidationshastigheterna kunnat mätas upp, utan även andra viktiga faktorer såsom graden av heterogenitet i den bakomliggande oxidationsprocessen. För att närma sig en miljö som kan efterlikna korrosiva inomhusförhållanden har atmosfären i nästa steg befuktats och dessutom har låga halter av myrsyra tillsats. Just tillsatsen av karboxylsyror har visat sig generera korrosionsprodukter med en sammansättning som på koppar och vissa andra metaller efterliknar de som bildas under atmosfärisk korrosion inomhus. Identifiering av korrosionsprodukter och deras tillväxthastighet på koppar, skyddat av olika långa tätpackade kolkedjor med en tiolgrupp i ena ändan som binder till kopparsubstratet, har kunnat ske med infraröd reflektions-absorptionsspektroskopi (IRAS) under in situ-förhållanden. Ju längre kolvätekedjor desto större korrosionsinhibieringsförmåga kunde påvisas. När den på koppar förankrade tiolgruppen ersattes med en selenolgrupp blev korrosionsinhibieringsförmågan sämre. Kompletterande mätningar in situ och ex situ  utfördes med hjälp av VSFS för att undersöka kvaliteten på de tätpackade kolvätekedjorna, varvid kunde påvisas att graden av tätpackning hos kolkedjorna försämrades med ökad exponeringstid. Förutom den allmänna nedbromsningen av korrosionshastigheten på koppar blev sammansättningen av bildade korrosionsprodukter på oskyddat koppar en annan än på  koppar skyddat av tioler. I det förra fallet detekterades korrosionsprodukterna koppar(I)oxid, koppar(II)format och koppar(II)hydroxid, under det att ingen koppar(I)oxid påvisades på skyddat koppar, endast små mängder koppar(II)format och koppar(II)hydroxid kunde detekteras. De adsorberade kolkedjorna tycks hindra de korrosionsstimulerande molekylerna vatten, myrsyra och syrgas från att nå kopparytan lika effektivt. När de tiolförankrade kolvätekedjorna ersattes med selenolförankrade kolvätekedjor desorberades en del kolvätekedjor från kopparsubstratet vid längre exponeringstider. Resultatet blev att mängden korrosionsprodukter nu blev signifikant större än på oskyddat koppar, sannolikt på grund av galvanisk korrosion. Erfarenheterna från detta doktorsarbete vad gäller kvantifiering av små mängder kopparoxider har även utnyttjats för att undersöka inverkan av g-strålning på kopparkorrosion i rent vatten. Härvid användes ett multianalytiskt angreppssätt bestående av IRAS, katodisk reduktion, konfokal Ramanmikroskopi, atomkraftsmikroskopi, svepelektronmikroskopi, fotoelektronspektroskopi, samt analys av utlöst mängd koppar i vattenlösningen med induktivt kopplad plasmaatomemissionsspektroskopi. Resultaten visar tydligt att utlösningen av koppar, liksom det bildade oxidskiktets tjocklek, ökar med g-strålningen under rådande exponeringsförhållanden. / <p>QC 20131206</p>
9

Specific Cation Effects in Biological Systems: Thermodynamic and Spectroscopic Insights

Kherb, Jaibir 2011 December 1900 (has links)
Very specific protein-salt interactions are involved in a multitude of biological phenomena such as protein folding/stability, enzymatic activity, and signal transduction events. In this work, we used two very simple, protein-mimic model biopolymers to obtain a better understanding of specific cation effects operating in aqueous protein environments. The two biopolymers used were Elastin-like Polypeptides (ELPs) and poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM). ELPs are an especially an ideal model system as these polypeptides can be easily genetically engineered to observe the effect of specific amino acid residues and peptide chain length on these salt interactions. Both of these biopolymers are also highly thermoresponsive as their aqueous solutions undergo a hydrophobic collapse/aggregation induced phase transition process above a lower critical solution temperature (LCST). Thermodynamic measurements of these biopolymers were carried out under various salt solution conditions. Additionally, both of these biopolymers are suitable for making surface specific spectroscopic measurements. Vibrational sum frequeny spectroscopy (VSFS), a non-linear interface sensitive spectroscopic technique, was employed here to investigate biologically relevant cation interactions which occur at peptide/protein surfaces. First, the LCST response of a non-polar ELP and a neutral biopolymer, PNIPAM, was investigated in the presence of 12 different alkali, alkaline-earth metal and transition metal chloride salts. Even though the salt interactions for uncharged proteins are dominated by anions, subtle specific cation effects were also observed. The results followed a direct Hofmeister series for cations. Most alkali cations are excluded from the polar amide regions of proteins. More polarizable cations, however, can solvate the hydrophobic moieties and somewhat counter the salting-out effect of the chloride anion. More charged and hydrated ions like lithium and divalent cations showed a weak interaction to the amide moiety through their hydration shell. The role of acidic amino acid residues in inducing cation specificities was investigated using an aspartate-rich ELP system. Both thermodynamic and spectroscopic data conclusively proved that the negative charge on protein surfaces is the main driving force for cation partitioning and specificity under physiological relevant concentration regimes. Apparent binding constants of carboxylate moieties with cations were determined. This is the first quantitative and thoroughly systematic study of such biologically relevant cation-carboxylate interactions prevalent in enzyme active sites and protein surfaces.
10

Characterizing Heterogeneously Charged Mineral Oxide Surfaces Using Nonlinear Spectroscopy

Piontek, Stefan Mathew January 2019 (has links)
Mineral oxide/aqueous interfaces play an important role in the transport of water through aquafers and streams, erosion, the formation of beaches and river deltas, nuclear waste storage, the sequestration and filtration of small ions, and are widely used in industrial scale catalysis. Unlike metal or semiconductor electrodes, the surface charge resulting from the protonation or deprotonation of insulating mineral oxides is highly localized and heterogeneous in nature. While the unique acid/base chemistry associated with different mineral oxide surfaces leads to their wide variety of applications, the extent to which surface groups found on mineral oxides partake in acid/base chemistry is still controversial due to the difficulty associated with experimentally probing them. Surface specific spectroscopic techniques, such as vibrational Sum Frequency Generation (vSFG), provide an opportunity to investigate how the surface architecture and corresponding chemical nature of various mineral oxide surfaces orient the interfacial solvent at a variety of solvent compositions and surface charges. Although vSFG has been used as a tool to measure the orientation and composition of interfacial O-H species originating from the surface and solvent for many mineral oxide/aqueous interfaces since the late 1990’s, controversy still exists in the assignment of vSFG spectra in the O-H stretching region of SiO2, Al2O3, CaF2, and TiO2/aqueous interfaces. The first section of this dissertation focuses on how the nonlinear optics and computational community’s understanding of the structure associated with mineral oxide/aqueous interfaces has evolved and where it stands now. Of particular interest is how the addition of electrolyte and variation of bulk pH allow modulation of the depth of the interfacial region and surface charge. Electrolyte solutions can vary the length of the interface by screening interfacial charges through non-specific adsorption at the interface, or generating surface charge if accumulation is facilitated by specific adsorption. The specific interaction of small ions with mineral oxide surfaces is relevant in geochemistry and filtration technology, and can also aid in prediction of contaminant mobility in ground water systems. Chapters two and three discuss the theory and application of vSFG, and the experimental setup used to capture vSFG spectra in this work, respectively. The fourth chapter investigates how monovalent or divalent cations accumulate at alpha-Al2O3(0001)/H2O interfaces and reorganize the interfacial solvent structure. The reactivity of these interfaces is strongly impacted by the presence of ions. Thus, it is critical to understand how ions alter the interfacial environment. This is achieved by measuring the changes in the structure and vibrational dynamics of interfacial water induced by the presence of ions in close vicinity to the mineral surface. The alpha-Al2O3(0001) surface represents a flexible platform to study the effect of ions on interfacial aqueous environments at positive, neutral and negative surface charge. Using vibrational sum frequency generation (vSFG) in the frequency and time domain, we investigate how monovalent and divalent cations affect the hydrogen bonding environment of the first few layers of interfacial water next to an alpha-Al2O3(0001) surface. Our results indicate that monovalent cations, such as Li+, Na+, K+, and Cs+, appear to have lower adsorption affinities for the interface compared to Ca2+, Sr2+, and Ba2+. This leads to an interfacial region that is structured in a cation valence dependent manner. Time resolved vSFG measurements reveal that the O-H vibrational lifetime (T1) of interfacial species at pH 10 conditions in the presence of NaCl and BaCl2 remains similar, but restructuring of the surface seen in steady state vSFG is manifested in the degree to which strongly hydrogen bonded species recover to their original populations post excitation. By tracking the accumulation of ions at the interface via the vSFG response, we can characterize the unique surface arrangements of interfacial water molecules induced by a range of monovalent and divalent cations at the alpha-Al2O3(0001)/water interface. In the fifth chapter the Stark active C ≡ N stretch of potassium thiocyanate is used as a molecular probe of interfacial electrostatic potential at the alpha-Al2O3(0001)/H2O interface. We confirm the presence of the thiocyanate ion in the interfacial region via reorganization of surface waters in the O-H stretching region. Changes in electrostatic potential are then tracked via Stark shifts of the vibrational frequency of the C ≡ N stretch. Our vSFG measurements show that we can simultaneously measure the SFG response of SCN- ions experiencing charged and neutral surface sites and assign a local potential of + 308 mV and -154 mV to positively and negatively charged aluminol groups, respectively. Thiocyanate anions at charged surface sites adopt similar relative orientations independent of surface charge, but adopt an opposite orientation at neutral surface sites. MD-DFT simulations of SCN- near the neutral alpha-Al2O3(0001)//H2O interface show that the vSFG response in the C ≡ N stretch region originates from a SCN-H-O-Al complex, suggesting the surface site specificity of these experiments. By tracking how this molecular probe responds to local surface charges we offer insight into the local electrostatic potential at neutral and charged surface aluminol groups. Chapter six investigates the vibrational dynamics of potassium thiocyanate at the alumina/water interface. Here, we leverage the sensitivity of the C ≡ N stretch vibrational lifetime of potassium thiocyanate to measure the local electrostatic potential at the alpha-Al2O3(0001)/H2O interface. To accomplish this, KSCN was investigated using free induction decay vSFG (FID-vSFG) and time resolved pump probe (TR-vSFG) measurements, which measure the total dephasing time and vibrational lifetime of the excited C ≡ N stretch, respectively. Our FID-vSFG spectra suggest that at all surface charges the total dephasing time of SCN- is on the order of ~300-600 fs. TR-vSFG characterizations of potassium thiocyanate report the vibrational lifetime of the excited C ≡ N stretch between ~0.5-2 ps. TR-vSFG measurements show two distinct vibrational relaxation rates, which are assigned the CN stretch and the HOH bend plus libration combination band of interfacial water. The variation in the T1 lifetime of the CN stretch with bulk pH show that changes in the SCN- net orientation measured using steady-state vSFG can be correlated to the vibrational dynamics in the interfacial region. The energy transfer to the bend plus libration combination band of water is also sensitive to the surface charge, as the lifetime of this species becomes shorter as the bulk pH is increased. Lastly, in chapter seven this thesis is summarized, and future directions of the experiments presented here are discussed. / Chemistry

Page generated in 0.062 seconds