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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.
121

In-process vibrational spectroscopy and ultrasound measurements in polymer melt extrusion

Scowen, Ian J., Barnes, S.E., Coates, Philip D., Sibley, M.G., Edwards, Howell G.M., Brown, Elaine January 2003 (has links)
No / Spectroscopic techniques have the potential to provide powerful, molecular-specific, non-invasive measurements on polymers during melt processing operations. An exploration is reported of the application and assessment of sensitivity of in-process vibrational spectroscopy¿on-line mid-infrared (MIR), on-line near-infrared (NIR), in-line NIR and in-line Raman¿for monitoring of single screw extrusion of high-density polyethylene and polypropylene blends. These vibrational spectroscopic techniques are compared with novel in-line ultrasound velocity measurements, which were acquired simultaneously, to assess the sensitivity of each method to changes in blend composition and to explore the suitability for their use in real time process monitoring and control.
122

A Comprehensive Model for the Rotational Spectra of Propyne CH₃CCH in the Ground and V₁₀=1,2,3,4,5 Vibrational States

Rhee, Won Myung 12 1900 (has links)
The energy states of C₃ᵥ symmetric top polyatomic molecules were studied. Both classical and quantum mechanical methods have been used to introduce the energy states of polyatomic molecules. Also, it is shown that the vibration-rotation spectra of polyatomic molecules in the ground and excited vibrational states can be predicted by group theory. A comprehensive model for predicting rotational frequency components in various v₁₀ vibrational levels of propyne was developed by using perturbation theory and those results were compared with other formulas for C₃ᵥ symmetric top molecules. The v₁₀=1,2,3 and ground rotational spectra of propyne in the frequency range 17-70 GHz have been reassigned by using the derived comprehensive model. The v₁₀=3 and v₁₀=4 rotational spectra of propyne have been investigated in the 70 GHz, and 17 to 52 GHz regions, respectively, and these spectral components assigned using the comprehensive model. Molecular constants for these vibrationally excited states have been determined from more than 100 observed rotational transitions. From these experimentally observed components and a model based upon first principles for C₃ᵥ symmetry molecules, rotational constants have been expressed in a form which enables one to predict rotational components for vibrational levels for propyne up to v₁₀=5. This comprehensive model also appears to be useful in predicting rotational components in more highly excited vibrational levels but data were not available for comparison with the theory. Several techniques of assignment of rotational spectra for each excited vibrational state are discussed. To get good agreement between theory and experiment, an additional term 0.762(J+1) needed to be added to Kℓ=1 states in v₁₀=3. No satisfactory theoretical explanation of this term has been found. Experimentally measured frequencies for rotational components for J→(J+1)=+1 (0≤J≤3) in each vibration v₁₀=n (0≤n≤4) are presented and compared with those calculated using the results of basic perturbation theory. The v₉=2 rotational spectrum of the propyne molecule was introduced in Appendix A to compare the rotational spectra of the same molecule in different vibrational levels v₉ and v₁₀.
123

The Rotational Spectra of Propyne in the Ground, V₁₀=1, V₁₀=2, and V₉=1 Vibrational States

Ware, John Matthew 08 1900 (has links)
The problem of a vibrating-rotating polyatomic molecule is treated, with emphasis given to the case of molecules with C_3v symmetry. It is shown that several of the gross features of the rotational spectra of polyatomic molecules in excited vibrational states can be predicted by group theoretical considerations. Expressions for the rotational transition frequencies of molecules of C_3v symmetry in the ground vibrational state, singly excited degenerate vibrational states, and doubly excited degenerate vibrational states are given. The derivation of these expressions by fourth order perturbation theory as given by Amat, Nielsen, and Tarrago is discussed. The ground and V_10=1 rotational spectra of propyne have been investigated in the 17 to 70 GHz, and 17 to 53 GHz regions, respectively, and compared with predictions based on higher frequency measurements. The V_9=1 and V_10=2 rotational spectra of propyne have been investigated and assigned for the first time. A perturbation of the V_9=1 rotational spectra for K=-l has been discovered and discussed.
124

Vibrational Dephasing of Haloalkanes and Halobenzenes

Ho, Salina Yuen-Han 05 1900 (has links)
The Raman linewidths of the carbon-halogen stretching mode was measured as a function of temperature in ethyl bromide, isopropyl chloride, isopropyl bromide, t-butyl chloride, t-butyl bromide, chlorobenzene, bromobenzene, iodobenzene and o-dichlorobenzene. The vibrational relaxation times showed a very clear trend. Together with earlier work on methyl iodide, these results provide evidence that the vibrational dephasing efficiencies (T^-1_iso) of the carbon-halogen mode vary in the order of Cl > Br > I. Vibrational dephasing times were calculated from the Fischer-Laubereau Isolated Binary Collision Mode. If further work shows this transferability to extend to other types of skeletal modes in molecular systems, this would have significant ramifications on future vibrational lineshape studies.
125

Vibrational dynamics of strongly hydrogen-bonded acid-base complexes in solution

Grafton, Andrea Bray 01 May 2017 (has links)
Proton-transfer reactions are one of the most fundamental chemical reactions. However, the chemical dynamics of these processes remain elusive due to the difficulty of modeling these reactions. Establishing an experimental model system and using infrared absorption and two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopies as means for detection, the chemical dynamics of the protonation states that are involved in a ground-electronic-state proton-transfer reaction in solution can be determined. In this study, experimental models are established with formic acid and nitrogenous bases in a low dielectric solvent. A hydrogen bond forms between the acid and the base, which will allow for the proton to transfer between the two molecules to form the neutral and the ion-pair protonation states. The carbon-deuterium (C-D) stretch and the carbonyl (C=O) stretch of the formic acid molecule are used as the reporter groups for the 2D IR measurements. The results of the C-D stretch demonstrate that there is a high sensitivity to the deprotonation, vibrational coupling, and vibrational dynamics trends that are linked to the solute-solvent interactions. The results of the C=O stretch demonstrate a sensitivity to the deprotonation and conformational disorder in which the position of the C=O changes the dynamics of the protonation state. Although, a proton-transfer is not detected, the experimental model system provides an understanding of the features that govern the chemical dynamics of proton-transfer reactions.
126

Molecular Dynamics and Interactions in Liquids

Chen, Jen Hui 05 1900 (has links)
Various modern spectroscopies have been utilized with considerable success in recent years to probe the dynamics of vibrational and reorientational relaxation of molecules in condensed phases. We have studied the temperature dependence of the polarized and depolarized Raman spectra of various modes in the following dihalomethanes: dibromomethane, dichloromethane, dichloromethane-d2, and bromochloromethane. Among other observed trends, we have found the following: Vibrational dephasing times calculated from the bend) and (C-Br stretch) lineshapes are of the same magnitude in CI^B^. The vibrational dephasing time of [C-D(H) stretch] is twice as long in CD2Cl2 as in CH-^C^, and the relaxation time of (C-Cl stretch) is greater in CI^C^ than in CD2CI2. Isotropic relaxation times for all three stretching vibrations are significantly shorter in C^BrCl than in CI^C^ or CI^B^. Application of the Kubo model revealed that derived modulation times are close to equal for equivalent vibrations in the various dihalomethanes. Thus, the more efficient relaxation of the A^ modes in CE^BrCl can be attributed almost entirely to the broader mean squared frequency perturbation of the vibrations in this molecule.
127

Mixed States of Infrared Light and Matter: Electromagnetic Cavities, Metal Surfaces, and Molecular Vibrations

Erwin, Justin D. January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
128

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
129

STUDY OF PORE SIZE EFFECT IN CHROMATOGRAPHY BY VIBRATIONAL SPECTROSCOPY AND COLLOIDAL ARRAYS

Huang, Yuan January 2008 (has links)
Current study of separation mechanism in chromatography heavily relies on the measurement of macroscopic properties, such as retention time and peak width. This dissertation describes the vibrational spectroscopy characterization of separation processes.Raman Spectroscopic characterization of a silica-based, strong anion exchange stationary phase in concentrated aqueous solutions is presented. Spectral response of stationary phase quaternary amine is closely related to changes in interaction between counter anions and the amine functional groups as the result of anion hydration. The molecular-level information obtained will provide useful guidance for control of stationary phase selectivity.To study the effects of stationary phase pore size on separations processes, monodisperse silica particles in the sub-100 nm range are prepared and self-assembled to well-ordered, three-dimensional colloidal arrays. A modified LaMer model is proposed and demonstrated for optimization of reaction conditions that lead to uniform and spherical silica particles. This approach greatly reduces the number of training experiments required for optimization. Fast Fourier transformation of colloidal array scanning electron microscopy images indicates closely-packed hexagonal packing patterns.Using these arrays, a novel system for the measurement of molecular diffusion coefficients in nanopores is reported. This system consists of an ordered colloidal array with well-defined pore structure deposited onto an internal reflection element for in-sit collection of kinetic information by attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). A mathematical model is established to extract diffusion coefficients from these data. A decrease of approximately eight orders of magnitude in molecular diffusion coefficients is observed for molecular transport in nanopores.Finally, by using this colloidal array-ATR-FTIR system and the corresponding mathematical models that describe absorption in the colloidal array, the distribution in the nanopores of the acetonitrile organic modifier in an aqueous mobile phase solvent system is determined. Based on the results of 50 nm colloidal arrays, pore surface properties have a strong effect on the distribution of organic molecules from bulk solution to the pores.
130

Nové materiály pro nelineární optiku - soli a kokrystaly heteroaromatických bází / Novel materials for nonlinear optics - salts and cocrystals of heteroaromatic bases

Kloda, Matouš January 2014 (has links)
The main issue of this master thesis is investigation of new compounds of aminopyrazine and 3-amino-1,2,4-triazine in consideration of their potential usage in the field of nonlinear optics. The focus of this thesis was finishing of characterisation of an adduct of aminopyrazine and boric acid prepared as a part of previous bachelor thesis, as well as preparation of salts and cocrystals combining 3-amino-1,2,4-triazine with selected acids. Prepared materials were characterised mainly by the means of vibrational spectroscopy and x-ray diffraction analysis. Prediction of nonlinear optical properties of selected molecules and interpretation of recorded vibrational spectra was based on quantum chemical calculations. Finally, measurements of second harmonic generation efficiency of selected powder samples were performed.

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