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John Kelly Spectroscopic and Computational Characterization of Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions 1 University of Mississippi Oxford, MS, USA
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Radiation Damage to DNA 2 Questions Where is the transfer happening? How do LEEs interact with DNA at the molecular lever? What happen in the hydration layer after electron transfer?
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3 Computationally Characterizing Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions Computational Study – Ole Miss Photoelectron Spectroscopy – Prof. Kit Bowen (JHU) Infrared Spectroscopy – Ole Miss 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 90 110 130 150 170 190 210 230 [Py∙(H 2 O) n ] −
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4 Computationally Characterizing Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions
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5 The optimized [Py∙(H 2 O) n ] − (n=1-5) UB3LYP/6-31++G (2df,2pd) with two approaches: 1.Added electron to optimized hydrated pyrimidine neutral 2.Added known hydrated electron structures to pyrimidine molecule e –e – + + – optimization Computationally Characterizing Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions
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Charge Localization of Excess Electron 8 Structures of select [Py∙(H 2 O) n ] − (n=1-5) cluster anions optimized at the B3LYP/6-31**G(2df.2pd) level of theory displaying the singly occupied molecular orbital (SOMO).
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Experiment vs. Theory 9
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Acknowledgements 11 Dr. Nathan Hammer Dr. Greg Tschumper The Hammer Group Dr. Kit Bowen (JHU) National Science Foundation MS EPSCoR
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12 Computationally Characterizing Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions
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13 Computationally Characterizing Hydrated Pyrimidine Anions
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