McCormack Gupta (kenyapolo2)
InterMetalDB is regularly updated and will continue to be regularly updated with new content in the future. InterMetalDB is a useful tool for all researchers interested in metalloproteins, protein engineering, and metal-driven oligomerization.Binary halide-water complexes X-(H2O) are examined by means of symmetry-adapted perturbation theory, using charge-constrained promolecular reference densities to extract a meaningful charge-transfer component from the induction energy. As is known, the X-(H2O) potential energy surface (for X = F, Cl, Br, or I) is characterized by symmetric left and right hydrogen bonds separated by a C2v-symmetric saddle point, with a tunneling barrier height that is less then 2 kcal/mol except in the case of F-(H2O). Our analysis demonstrates that the charge-transfer energy is correspondingly small ( less then 2 kcal/mol except for X = F), considerably smaller than the electrostatic interaction energy. Nevertheless, charge transfer plays a crucial role determining the conformational preferences of X-(H2O) and provides a driving force for the formation of quasi-linear X··· H-O hydrogen bonds. Charge-transfer energies correlate well with measured O-H vibrational redshifts for the halide-water complexes and also for OH-(H2O) and NO2-(H2O), providing some indication of a general mechanism.Pyrrolyl (C4H4N) is a nitrogen-containing aromatic radical that is a derivative of pyrrole (C4H5N) and is an important intermediate in the combustion of biomass. It is also relevant for chemistry in Titan's atmosphere and may be present in the interstellar medium. The lowest-energy isomer, 1-pyrrolyl, has been involved in many experimental and theoretical studies of the N-H photodissociation of pyrrole, yet it has only been directly spectroscopically detected via electron paramagnetic resonance and through the photoelectron spectrum of the pyrrolide anion, yielding three vibrational frequencies. No direct measurements of 2- or 3-pyrrolyl have been made, and little information is known from theoretical calculations beyond their relative energies. Here, we present an ab initio quantum chemical characterization of the three pyrrolyl isomers at the CCSD(T) level of theory in their ground electronic states, with an emphasis on spectroscopic parameters relevant for vibrational and rotational spectroscopy. Equilibrium geometries were optimized at the CCSD(T)/cc-pwCVTZ level of theory, and the quadratic, cubic, and partial quartic force constants were evaluated at CCSD(T)/ANO0 for analysis using second-order vibrational perturbation theory to obtain harmonic and anharmonic vibrational frequencies. In addition, zero-point-corrected rotational constants, electronic spin-rotation tensors, and nuclear hyperfine tensors are calculated for rotational spectroscopy. Our computed structures and energies agree well with earlier density functional theory calculations, and spectroscopic parameters for 1-pyrrolyl are compared with the limited existing experimental data. Finally, we discuss strategies for detecting these radicals using rotational and vibrational spectroscopy on the basis of the calculated spectroscopic constants.Densification in glassy networks has traditionally been described in terms of short-range structures, such as how atoms are coordinated and how the coordination polyhedron is linked in the second coordination environment. While changes in medium-range structures beyond the second coordination shells may play an important role, experimental verification of the densification beyond short-range structures is among the remaining challenges in the physical sciences. Here, a correlation NMR experiment for prototypical borate glasses under compression up to 9 GPa offers insights into the pressure-induced evolution of proximity among cations on a medium-range scale. Whereas amorphous networks at ambient pressure may favor the formation of medium-range clusters consisting primarily of similar coordination species, such segregat