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Dive into the research topics where Christian Neiss is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Neiss.


Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Molecular Science | 2014

The Dalton quantum chemistry program system

Kestutis Aidas; Celestino Angeli; Keld L. Bak; Vebjørn Bakken; Radovan Bast; Linus Boman; Ove Christiansen; Renzo Cimiraglia; Sonja Coriani; Pål Dahle; Erik K. Dalskov; Ulf Ekström; Thomas Enevoldsen; Janus Juul Eriksen; Patrick Ettenhuber; Berta Fernández; Lara Ferrighi; Heike Fliegl; Luca Frediani; Kasper Hald; Asger Halkier; Christof Hättig; Hanne Heiberg; Trygve Helgaker; Alf C. Hennum; Hinne Hettema; Eirik Hjertenæs; Stine Høst; Ida Marie Høyvik; Maria Francesca Iozzi

Dalton is a powerful general‐purpose program system for the study of molecular electronic structure at the Hartree–Fock, Kohn–Sham, multiconfigurational self‐consistent‐field, Møller–Plesset, configuration‐interaction, and coupled‐cluster levels of theory. Apart from the total energy, a wide variety of molecular properties may be calculated using these electronic‐structure models. Molecular gradients and Hessians are available for geometry optimizations, molecular dynamics, and vibrational studies, whereas magnetic resonance and optical activity can be studied in a gauge‐origin‐invariant manner. Frequency‐dependent molecular properties can be calculated using linear, quadratic, and cubic response theory. A large number of singlet and triplet perturbation operators are available for the study of one‐, two‐, and three‐photon processes. Environmental effects may be included using various dielectric‐medium and quantum‐mechanics/molecular‐mechanics models. Large molecules may be studied using linear‐scaling and massively parallel algorithms. Dalton is distributed at no cost from http://www.daltonprogram.org for a number of UNIX platforms.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009

Structure determination of gold clusters by trapped ion electron diffraction: Au14−–Au19−

Anne Lechtken; Christian Neiss; Manfred M. Kappes; Detlef Schooss

The structures of mass-selected gold cluster anions Au(14)(-)-Au(19)(-) have been reinvestigated using an improved low temperature trapped ion electron diffraction experiment. Structures were assigned by comparing experimental with simulated scattering functions using model structures obtained by density functional calculations. Flat three-dimensional structures are found for Au(14)(-) and Au(15)(-), hollow cages for Au(16)(-)-Au(18)(-) and a tetrahedral structure is found for Au(19)(-). For several clusters in this series, our assignments differ distinctly from previous assignments.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Noncovalent Functionalization of Black Phosphorus

Gonzalo Abellán; Vicent Lloret; Udo Mundloch; Mario Marcia; Christian Neiss; Andreas Görling; M. Varela; Frank Hauke; Andreas Hirsch

Black phosphorus (BP) was functionalized with organic moieties on the basis of liquid exfoliation. The treatment of BP with electron-withdrawing 7,7,8,8-tetracyano-p-quinodimethane (TCNQ) led to electron transfer from BP to the organic dopant. On the other hand, the noncovalent interaction of BP with a perylene diimide was mainly due to van der Waals interactions but also led to considerable stabilization of the BP flakes against oxygen degradation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Laser-induced fluorescence of rhodamine 6G cations in the gas phase: a lower bound to the lifetime of the first triplet state.

Mattias Kordel; Detlef Schooss; Christian Neiss; Lars Walter; Manfred M. Kappes

We have studied the gas-phase laser-induced fluorescence of an ensemble of buffer gas-cooled Rhodamine 6G cations (R6G(+)) stored in a quadrupole ion trap at 90 K. The fluorescence resulting from excitation with continuous-wave 488 nm radiation was observed to disappear almost completely on a time scale of seconds, dependent in detail on the excitation laser fluence. Such decay can be explained by the accumulation of R6G(+) in a dark triplet state. This in turn facilitates the first lifetime determination of the lowest triplet state of free R6G(+) by direct ground-state recovery measurements. A lower bound for the half-life was found to be approximately 2 s. Adding oxygen in a volume fraction of 1% to the buffer gas leads to efficient quenching of the triplet state and correspondingly to complete suppression of the fluorescence intensity decay. Different rare gases were applied as buffers for collisional cooling, but no significant changes in the fluorescence properties were found.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Extensions of r12 corrections to CC2-R12 for excited states.

Christian Neiss; Christof Hättig; Wim Klopper

As known since about two decades, R12 methods, which include terms linear in the interelectronic distance r(12) in the wave function, improve substantially the basis set convergence of the ground state correlation energy. In a previous study, however, it was found that the same approach does not give a similar systematic improvement if applied to excited states in the framework of coupled cluster response theory. In the present work, we examine the reason for this behavior and show that the inclusion of additional orbitals in the construction of the r(12) pair functions leads to an enhanced basis set convergence (and thus a balanced description) also for the excited states.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Frequency-dependent nonlinear optical properties with explicitly correlated coupled-cluster response theory using the CCSD(R12) model.

Christian Neiss; Christof Hättig

Response theory up to infinite order is combined with the explicitly correlated coupled-cluster singles and doubles model including linear-r(12) corrections, CCSD(R12). The additional terms introduced by the linear-r(12) contributions, not present in the conventional CCSD calculation, are derived and discussed with respect to the extra costs required for their evaluation. An implementation is presented up to the cubic response function for one-electron perturbations, i.e., up to frequency-dependent second hyperpolarizabilities. As first applications the authors computed the electronic polarizabilities and second hyperpolarizabilities of BH, N(2), and formaldehyde and show that the improvement in the one-electron basis set convergence known from the R12 method for ground state energies is retained for higher-order optical properties. Frequency-dependent results are presented for the second hyperpolarizability of N(2).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Comparative study of the structures of copper, silver, and gold icosamers : Influence of metal type and charge state

Anne Lechtken; Christian Neiss; Jason Stairs; Detlef Schooss

We present a comparative study on the structural properties of the coinage metal icosamers Cu(20)(+/-), Ag(20)(+/-), and Au(20)(+/-). Using trapped ion electron diffraction measurements in combination with density functional structure calculations we find distinct structural differences depending on the cluster material and the charge state: Cu(20)(-), Cu(20)(+), as well as Ag(20)(+) prefer icosahedral structures. Ag(20)(-) adopts a rearranged, distorted icosahedral structure. While Au(20)(-) is tetrahedral, Au(20)(+) cannot be described satisfyingly by a single isomer alone. Here a mixture of tetrahedral and distorted icosahedral structures is suggested. The influence of material and charge on the structural properties of the coinage metal icosamers is discussed.


Nature Chemistry | 2017

Gallium-rich Pd–Ga phases as supported liquid metal catalysts

Nicola Taccardi; Mathias Grabau; Jonas Debuschewitz; Monica Distaso; Marco Brandl; Rainer Hock; Florian Maier; Christian Papp; Jannis Erhard; Christian Neiss; Wolfgang Peukert; Andreas Görling; Hans-Peter Steinrück; Peter Wasserscheid

A strategy to develop improved catalysts is to create systems that merge the advantages of heterogeneous and molecular catalysis. One such system involves supported liquid-phase catalysts, which feature a molecularly defined, catalytically active liquid film/droplet layer adsorbed on a porous solid support. In the past decade, this concept has also been extended to supported ionic liquid-phase catalysts. Here we develop this idea further and describe supported catalytically active liquid metal solutions (SCALMS). We report a liquid mixture of gallium and palladium deposited on porous glass that forms an active catalyst for alkane dehydrogenation that is resistant to coke formation and is thus highly stable. X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, supported by theoretical calculations, confirm the liquid state of the catalytic phase under the reaction conditions. Unlike traditional heterogeneous catalysts, the supported liquid metal reported here is highly dynamic and catalysis does not proceed at the surface of the metal nanoparticles, but presumably at homogeneously distributed metal atoms at the surface of a liquid metallic phase.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012

Structures of small bismuth cluster cations

Rebecca Kelting; Alexander Baldes; Ulrike Schwarz; Thomas Rapps; Detlef Schooss; Patrick Weis; Christian Neiss; Florian Weigend; Manfred M. Kappes

The structures of bismuth cluster cations in the range between 4 and 14 atoms have been assigned by a combination of gas phase ion mobility and trapped ion electron diffraction measurements together with density functional theory calculations. We find that above 8 atoms the clusters adopt prolate structures with coordination numbers between 3 and 4 and highly directional bonds. These open structures are more like those seen for clusters of semiconducting-in-bulk elements (such as silicon) rather than resembling the compact structures typical for clusters of metallic-in-bulk elements. An accurate description of bismuth clusters at the level of density functional theory, in particular of fragmentation pathways and dissociation energetics, requires taking spin-orbit coupling into account. For n = 11 we infer that low energy isomers can have fragmentation thresholds comparable to their structural interconversion barriers. This gives rise to experimental isomer distributions which are dependent on formation and annealing histories.


Journal of Molecular Modeling | 2012

Molecular mechanics modeling of azobenzene-based photoswitches

Patrick Duchstein; Christian Neiss; Andreas Görling; Dirk Zahn

We present an extension of the generalized amber force field to allow the modeling of azobenzenes by means of classical molecular mechanics. TD-DFT calculations were employed to derive different interaction models for 4-hydroxy-4′-methyl-azobenzene, including the ground (S0) and S1 excited state. For both states, partial charges and the –N = N– torsion potentials were characterized. On this basis, we pave the way to large-scale model simulations involving azobenzene molecular switches. Using the example of an isolated molecule, the mechanics of cyclic switching processes are demonstrated by classical molecular dynamics simulations.

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Andreas Görling

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Frank Hampel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Detlef Schooss

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Johanna A. Januszewski

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Dominik Wendinger

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Manfred M. Kappes

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Michael Franz

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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