Cyril Falvo
University of California, Irvine
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Featured researches published by Cyril Falvo.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009
Sayan Bagchi; Cyril Falvo; Shaul Mukamel; Robin M. Hochstrasser
The carboxylate side chains of Asp and Glu have significant coupling with the amide states of the backbone of the Villin headpiece. In two-dimensional spectroscopy, cross peaks are observed between these side chains and the main amide-I band. To model the absorption of the side chains, the electric field variations of vibrational frequencies of a carboxylic acid group (neutral form, CH(3)-COOH) and a carboxylate group (ionized form, CH(3)-COO(-)) are parametrized by means of density functional theory calculations. Simulations indicate that the side chains significantly couple to only one or two amide-I modes out of all of the amino acid residues which makes them useful as spectroscopic markers, providing information about the local structural behavior of the protein. Both experiment and simulations show that the cross peaks between the carboxylate and the amide-I bands are significantly diminished above the melting temperature.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Xingcan Dai; Marten Richter; Hebin Li; Alan D. Bristow; Cyril Falvo; Shaul Mukamel; Steven T. Cundiff
We report the observation of double-quantum coherence signals in a gas of potassium atoms at twice the frequency of the one-quantum coherences. Since a single atom does not have a state at the corresponding energy, this observation must be attributed to a collective resonance involving multiple atoms. These resonances are induced by weak interatomic dipole-dipole interactions, which means that the atoms cannot be treated in isolation, even at a low density of 10(12)u2009u2009cm(-3).
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009
Cyril Falvo; Benoit Palmieri; Shaul Mukamel
The two-dimensional vibrational response of the disordered strongly fluctuating OH exciton band in liquid water is investigated using a new simulation protocol. The direct nonlinear exciton propagation generalizes the nonlinear exciton equations to include nonadiabatic time dependent Hamiltonian and transition dipole fluctuations. The excitonic picture is retained and the large cancellation between Liouville pathways is built-in from the outset. The sensitivity of the photon echo and double-quantum-coherence techniques to frequency fluctuations, molecular reorientation, intermolecular coupling, and the two-exciton coherence is investigated. The photon echo is particularly sensitive to the frequency fluctuations and molecular reorientation, whereas the double-quantum coherence provides a unique probe for intermolecular couplings and two-exciton coherence.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2012
Cyril Falvo; Wei Zhuang; Yung Sam Kim; Paul H. Axelsen; Robin M. Hochstrasser; Shaul Mukamel
The infrared optical response of amyloid fibrils Aβ(1-40) is investigated. Simulations of two models corresponding to different protonation states are compared with experiment. The simulations reveal that vibrational frequency distributions inside the fibrils are dominated by side chain fluctuations. We further confirm earlier suggestions based on 2D-IR measurements that water molecules can be trapped inside the fibrils.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010
Jun Jiang; Darius Abramavicius; Cyril Falvo; Benjamin M. Bulheller; Jonathan D. Hirst; Shaul Mukamel
Revealing the structure and aggregation mechanism of amyloid fibrils is essential for the treatment of over 20 diseases related to protein misfolding. Coherent two-dimensional (2D) infrared spectroscopy is a novel tool that provides a wealth of new insight into the structure and dynamics of biomolecular systems. Recently developed ultrafast laser sources are extending multidimensional spectroscopy into the ultraviolet (UV) region, and this opens up new opportunities for probing fibrils. In a simulation study, we show that 2DUV spectra of the backbone of a 32-residue β-amyloid (Aβ(9-40)) fibril associated with Alzheimers disease and two intermediate prefibrillar structures carry characteristic signatures of fibril size and geometry that could be used to monitor its formation kinetics. The dependence of these signals on the fibril size and geometry is explored. We demonstrate that the dominant features of the β-amyloid fibril spectra are determined by intramolecular interactions within a single Aβ(9-40), and intermolecular interactions at the external interface have clear signatures in the fine details of these signals.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008
Cyril Falvo; Tomoyuki Hayashi; Wei Zhuang; Shaul Mukamel
The two-dimensional infrared photon echo spectrum of Antamanide (- (1)Val- (2)Pro- (3)Pro- (4)Ala- (5)Phe- (6)Phe- (7)Pro- (8)Pro- (9)Phe- (10)Pro-) in chloroform is calculated using an explicit solvent molecular dynamics (MD) simulation combined with a density functional theory (DFT) map for the effective vibrational Hamiltonian. Evidence for a strong intramolecular hydrogen bonding network is found. Comparison with experimental absorption allows the identification of the dominant conformation. Multidimensional spectroscopy reveals intramolecular couplings and gives information on its dynamics. A two-color amide-I and amide-A crosspeak is predicted and analyzed in terms of local structure.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013
Cyril Falvo; Arunangshu Debnath; Christoph Meier
We present simulations on vibrational ladder climbing in carboxy-hemoglobin. Motivated by recent experiments, we study the influence of different realistic pump probe parameters. To allow for a direct comparison with experimental results, transient absorption spectra obtained by a weak probe pulse following the strong, shaped pump pulse are calculated. The influence of the protein fluctuations is taken into account using a recently developed microscopic model. This model consists of a quantum Hamiltonian describing the CO vibration in carboxy-hemoglobin, together with a fluctuating potential, which is obtained by electronic structure calculation based on a large number of protein configurations. Using realistic pulse parameters, vibrational excitations to very high-lying states are possible, in qualitative agreement with experimental observations.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013
F. Calvo; Cyril Falvo; P. Parneix
An explicit polarizable potential for the naphthalene-argon complex has been derived assuming only atomic contributions, aiming at large scale simulations of naphthalene under argon environment. The potential was parametrized from dedicated quantum chemical calculations at the CCSD(T) level, and satisfactorily reproduces available structural and energetic properties. Combining this potential with a tight-binding model for naphthalene, collisional energy transfer is studied by means of dedicated molecular dynamics simulations, nuclear quantum effects being accounted for in the path-integral framework. Except at low target temperature, nuclear quantum effects do not alter the average energies transferred by the collision or the collision duration. However, the distribution of energy transferred is much broader in the quantum case due to the significant zero-point energy and the higher density of states. Using an ab initio potential for the Ar-Ar interaction, the IR absorption spectrum of naphthalene solvated by argon clusters or an entire Ar matrix is computed via classical and centroid molecular dynamics. The classical spectra exhibit variations with growing argon environment that are absent from quantum spectra. This is interpreted by the greater fluxional character experienced by the argon atoms due to vibrational delocalization.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2012
Cyril Falvo; F. Calvo; P. Parneix
The anharmonic infrared emission spectrum following an optical excitation has been calculated for a variety of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecules in their ground singlet electronic state or in their triplet state. The computational protocol relies on second-order perturbation theory and involves a quartic vibrational Hamiltonian, the vibrational quantum numbers being sampled according to a Monte Carlo procedure. In the case of neutral naphthalene, the IR spectrum obtained in the (ground) singlet state differs significantly from the spectrum in the triplet state, especially for out-of-plane CH bending modes. Although not as prominent, spectral differences in larger molecules are still observable.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2016
Cyril Falvo
This article presents a new approximation to understand the connection between the center of line slope from a single peak of a two-dimensional (2D) infrared spectrum and the frequency-frequency correlation function. This approximation which goes beyond the short-time approximation includes explicitly pure dephasing mechanisms by introducing a time parameter that separates the fast fluctuations and slow fluctuations. While in the short-time approximation, the center of line slope is given by the normalized frequency fluctuations auto-correlation function, I show using this new approximation that the center of line slope measures on long time scales a shifted and scaled correlation function. The results present a new interpretation of the meaning of the center of line slope that allows for a better understanding of what 2D experiments can measure. To illustrate these findings, I compare this approximation with the short-time approximation for several examples of frequency-frequency correlation functions. I also give an estimate of the value of the time separation parameter for a correlation function with a simple exponential decay.