PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Controllability of ionization energy of atoms promises advancements in chemical synthesis

A paper by Kazan Federal University and Tatarstan Academy of Sciences saw light in Physics Letters A

Controllability of ionization energy of atoms promises advancements in chemical synthesis
2021-05-21
(Press-News.org) Ionization energy is one of the most important physicochemical parameters. It is defined in terms of the amount of energy required to rip an electron from an atom. The dependence of the ionization energy on the atomic number determines the periodic law of chemical elements, which is assumed to be fundamentally constant. Based on the previously predicted effect of changing the electron mass, the research team showed that the ionization energy of atoms placed in photonic crystals with an ultrahigh refractive index can be significantly changed.

Photonic crystals are media with periodically changing electromagnetic properties. An example of a photonic crystal is a dense packing of dielectric microspheres, between which there is an empty space. The size of these voids is large enough to consider an electron or an atom placed there free from interaction with the material of the walls. Nevertheless, the environment of photonic crystals indirectly affects the properties of particles by modifying their own radiation field.

The fact is that according to the modern picture of the world, all particles participate in vacuum quantum fluctuations. In particular, an electron constantly creates and immediately destroys virtual photons. It turned out that photonic crystals are capable of influencing this interaction. Traditionally, this question has been studied only for electrons bound in an atom. An atom participating in such a process acquires a correction to its energy which is called the Lamb shift and is very small relative to the atomic energies themselves, even if the atom is placed in photonic crystals.

The reason why no one has considered the quantum fluctuations of a free electron in a photonic crystal is its mass in this state equals infinity. The fact is that due to the interaction with vacuum, the mass of a free electron must acquire a correction, which is called the electromagnetic mass. This correction is added to the "bare" mass of the electron and forms its factually observed mass.

However, calculations performed in the first half of the 20th century showed that the integrals in the formulas for the electromagnetic mass diverge. To get around this problem, physicists came up with a mass renormalization procedure, which consisted of ignoring the electromagnetic mass and replacing in all other formulas the "bare" mass of the particle by the observed mass. This paved the way to quantum electrodynamics, whose predictions under ordinary conditions are confirmed in experiments with high accuracy.

However, if photonic crystals affect the interaction with a vacuum, this should be reflected in the electromagnetic mass, and, as a consequence, in the actually observed electron mass. The researchers showed that in this case a final correction arises, which is equal to the difference between the electromagnetic masses of an electron in a photonic crystal and in a vacuum. Moreover, due to the anisotropy of the photonic crystal, the mass depends on the direction in which the electron is flying. This leads to the fact that an electron bound in an atom has new energy corrections, which depend on its state. It turned out that for very high refractive indices of the substance from which the photonic crystal is made, these corrections become comparable to the energies of transitions between levels, including the energies of ionization transitions.

In this work, they calculated corrections to the ionization energy of hydrogen and alkali atoms placed in the voids of a one-dimensional photonic crystal made of materials with an ultra-high refractive index. It turned out that the decrease in the ionization energy can reach 68 percent in the case of the cesium atom.

The predicted effect is of great importance for both fundamental and applied physics and chemistry. In particular, a method for manipulating the electromagnetic mass has been proposed for the first time. In addition, the effect will allow influencing the periodic law of chemical elements, and the very change in the ionization energy can be used to synthesize new chemical compounds and create drugs based on them.

In the future, the team plans to cooperate with large pharmaceutical centers and study the possibility of its use for the synthesis of new compounds. An experimental verification of the effect can be done by measuring the rate of a chemical reaction occurring in the gas phase between the walls of a one-dimensional photonic crystal. In addition, they want to calculate the correction to the ionization energy for other chemical elements.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Controllability of ionization energy of atoms promises advancements in chemical synthesis

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research examines why some firms prepare for natural disasters and others don't

2021-05-21
Despite the increasing frequency and severity of floods, storms, wildfires and other natural hazards, some firms in disaster-prone areas prepare while others do not. That issue was examined in a new study by Jennifer Oetzel, professor, American University and Chang Hoon Oh, William & Judy Docking Professor of Strategy, University of Kansas published in the Strategic Management Journal (SMJ). "Due to the increased frequency and severity of floods, storms, epidemics, wildfires and other natural hazards anticipated over the coming decades (according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), there is growing pressure on managers and their ...

How human cells and pathogenic shigella engage in battle

How human cells and pathogenic shigella engage in battle
2021-05-21
DALLAS - May 21, 2021 - One member of a large protein family that is known to stop the spread of bacterial infections by prompting infected human cells to self-destruct appears to kill the infectious bacteria instead, a new study led by UT Southwestern scientists shows. However, some bacteria have their own mechanism to thwart this attack, nullifying the deadly protein by tagging it for destruction. The findings, published online today in Cell, could lead to new antibiotics to fight bacterial infections. And insight into this cellular conflict could shed light on a number of other conditions in which this protein is involved, including asthma, Type 1 diabetes, primary biliary cirrhosis, and Crohn's disease. "This ...

OU researcher identifies new mode of transmission for bacteria

OU researcher identifies new mode of transmission for bacteria
2021-05-21
OKLAHOMA CITY AND DENMARK - Campylobacter infection, one of the most common foodborne illnesses in the Western world, can also be spread through sexual contact, according to a new research discovery by an OU Hudson College of Public Health faculty member, working in conjunction with colleagues in Denmark. The team's research has been published in Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and is the first known study to prove this mode of transmission for Campylobacter. During a time when COVID-19 has dominated news about infectious diseases, the research is a reminder that many other pathogens affect lives around the world every day. The study was led by infectious disease epidemiologist Katrin ...

Sand's urban role demands key part on sustainability stage

Sands urban role demands key part on sustainability stage
2021-05-21
Over 20 Indonesian islands mysteriously disappear. One of the world's deadliest criminal syndicates rises to power. Eight cities the size of New York will be built every year for the next three decades. What connects them is sand, embedded in the concrete of nearly all of the world's buildings, roads, and cities, the glass in the windows, laptops and phone screens, and COVID-19 vaccine vials. The unexamined true costs of sand - broadly, construction aggregates production -- has spurred a group of scientists to call for a stronger focus on understanding the physical dimension of sand use and extraction. They also suggest new ways to achieve economic and environmental justice. Four years ago, an international group of scientists, including two from Michigan State University (MSU), called ...

Medication use in hospitalized patients with COVID-19

2021-05-21
What The Study Did: Medication use among hospitalized patients for COVID-19-related treatment in a large university health care system was examined in this study. Authors: Jonathan H. Watanabe, Pharm.D., Ph.D., of the University of California, Irvine, School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.10775) Editor's Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support. INFORMATION: Media advisory: ...

Women's access to abortion care under Oregon's reproductive health equity act

2021-05-21
What The Study Did: Oregon's Reproductive Health Equity Act ensured coverage for family planning (abortion and contraception) using state funds for all low-income state residents regardless of citizenship status. Researchers in this study describe the first two years of abortion services covered and the distances traveled by women to receive care. Authors: Maria I. Rodriguez, M.D., M.P.H., of Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/  (doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2021.0402) Editor's ...

Examining variation in SARS-CoV-2 infection risk, socioeconomic disadvantage in Mayan-Latinx population

2021-05-21
What The Study Did: Variation in SARS-CoV-2 infection risk and socioeconomic disadvantage among a Mayan-Latinx population in Fruitvale, California, was examined in this study. Authors: Paul Wesson, Ph.D., of the University of California, San Francisco, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.10789) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding/support disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, ...

Long-term gluten intake, cognitive function among women

2021-05-21
What The Study Did: This observational study found no association between long-term dietary intake of gluten and cognitive function among a large group of middle-age women without celiac disease. Authors: Andrew T. Chan, M.D., M.P.H., of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.13020) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding/support disclosures. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support. #  ...

Brain's memory center stays active during 'infantile amnesia'

2021-05-21
One trait shared by all humans is that they don't remember specific life episodes that occurred before the age of 3 or 4. Many scientists have attributed this so-called "infantile amnesia" to a lack of development in the hippocampus, an area of the brain located in the temporal lobe that is crucial to encoding memory. However, a new brain imaging study by Yale scientists shows that infants as young as three months are already enlisting the hippocampus to recognize and learn patterns. The findings were published May 21 in the journal Current Biology. "A fundamental mystery ...

Efforts to treat COVID-19 patients chronicled in UC Health medications data

Efforts to treat COVID-19 patients chronicled in UC Health medications data
2021-05-21
Irvine, Calif. - A record of medicine utilization patterns assembled by an interdisciplinary team of researchers at the University of California, Irvine and the UC San Diego School of Medicine reveals the thought, care and scientific rigor clinicians at UC Health medical centers applied in their treatment of patients with COVID-19 in 2020. For a study published today in Journal of the American Medical Association Network Open, the investigators examined data on the usage rates of 10 different medicines and medicine categories to map how drugs were used on people hospitalized with the viral infection. The authors got their data ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Science council: “Tasks excellently fulfilled”

USC-led study introduces a new and improved way to grow the cells that give rise to the kidney’s filtration system

USPSTF recommendation statement on screening for breast cancer

Machine listening: Making speech recognition systems more inclusive

Biodegradable ‘living plastic’ houses bacterial spores that help it break down

Loneliness grows as we age

Listening to mindfulness audios during radiation improves physical, emotional side effects

INSEAD’s research on sustainable circular models among the most influential papers in last 30 years

Quitting smoking during pregnancy may have a positive effect on placental weight

GPT-4, Google Gemini fall short in breast imaging classification

Lung abnormality progression linked to acute respiratory disease in smokers

Innovation promises to prevent power pole-top fires

Citizen scientists help discover record-breaking exoplanet in binary star system

Tambourine Philanthropies commits over $5 million in new funding for research into ALS, in partnership with the Milken Institute

E-bike incentives prove to be worth the investment

Trotting robots reveal emergence of animal gait transitions

Lundquist investigator Dr. Ashraf Ibrahim is the lead author in the landmark study on pioneering oral fungal infection treatment showing promise in preclinical trials

Deep-learning decoding for a noninvasive brain-computer interface

Elucidating the role of a shared lncRNA-miRNA-mRNA network in exacerbating Parkinson’s disease symptoms in the context of COVID-19 infection

American College of Lifestyle Medicine announces unique screening tool for clinicians to efficiently assess patient dietary patterns

Cranberry extracts could boost microbiota and counter cardiometabolic diseases

Discovery of uranium-contaminated soil purification material without secondary environmental pollution

The carbon emissions of academic astronomy

Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis articles reveal the importance of phytocompounds and metabolomics analysis

Great strides in the development of high refractive index polymers for optoelectronics

Engineered increase in mesophyll conductance improves photosynthetic efficiency in field trial

Unlocking the genetic mysteries behind plant adaptation: New insights into the evolution of a water-saving trait in the pineapple family (bromeliaceae)

Childcare pick-up: a 1-hour window to build healthier eating habits

MD Anderson and Replay announce FDA clearance of IND application for first-in-class PRAME-targeted TCR NK cell therapy for hematological malignancies

Discovery of mechanism plants use to change seed oil could impact industrial, food oils

[Press-News.org] Controllability of ionization energy of atoms promises advancements in chemical synthesis
A paper by Kazan Federal University and Tatarstan Academy of Sciences saw light in Physics Letters A