Investigations of silicon nano-crystal floating gate memories
Arvind Kumar, Jeffrey J. Welser, et al.
MRS Spring 2000
Free proline amino acid is a natural cryoprotectant expressed by numerous organisms under low-temperature stress. Previous reports have suggested that complex assemblies underlie its functional properties. We investigate here aqueous proline solutions as a function of temperature using combinations of Raman spectroscopy, Rayleigh - Brillouin light scattering, and molecular dynamics simulations with the view to revealing the molecular origins of the mixtures' functionality as a cryoprotectant. The evolution of the Brillouin frequency shifts and line widths with temperature shows that, above a critical proline concentration, the water-like dynamics is suppressed and viscoelastic behavior emerges: Here, the Landau - Placzek ratio also shows a temperature-independent maximum arising from concentration fluctuations. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that the water - water correlations in the mixtures depend much more weakly on temperature than does bulk water. By contrast, the water OH Raman bands exhibit strong red-shifts on cooling similar to those seen in ices; however, no evidence of ice lattice phonons is observed in the low-frequency spectrum. We attribute this primarily to enhanced proline - water hydrogen bonding. In general, the picture that emerges is that aqueous proline is a heterogeneous mixture on molecular length scales (characterized by significant concentration fluctuations rather than well-defined aggregates). Simulations reveal that proline also appears to suppress the normal dependence of water structure on temperature and preserves the ambient-temperature correlations even in very cold solutions. The water structure in cold proline solutions therefore appears to be similar to that at a higher effective temperature. This, coupled with the emergence of glassy dynamics offers a molecular explanation for the functional properties of proline as a cryoprotectant without the need to invoke previously proposed complex aggregates. © 2008 American Chemical Society.
Arvind Kumar, Jeffrey J. Welser, et al.
MRS Spring 2000
Surendra B. Anantharaman, Joachim Kohlbrecher, et al.
MRS Fall Meeting 2020
R.M. Macfarlane, R.L. Cone
Physical Review B - CMMP
P. Martensson, R.M. Feenstra
Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology A: Vacuum, Surfaces and Films