Daniel Hewett
Purdue University
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Featured researches published by Daniel Hewett.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2016
Daniel P. Tabor; Daniel Hewett; Sebastian Bocklitz; Joseph A. Korn; Anthony J. Tomaine; Arun K. Ghosh; Timothy S. Zwier; Edwin L. Sibert
Conformation-specific UV-IR double resonance spectra are presented for ethyl, n-propyl, and n-butylbenzene. With the aid of a local mode Hamiltonian that includes the effects of stretch-scissor Fermi resonance, the spectra can be accurately modeled for specific conformers. These molecules allow for further development of a first principles method for calculating alkyl stretch spectra. Across all chain lengths, certain dihedral patterns impart particular spectral motifs at the quadratic level. However, the anharmonic contributions are consistent from molecule to molecule and conformer to conformer. This transferability of anharmonicities allows for the Hamiltonian to be constructed from only a harmonic frequency calculation, reducing the cost of the model. The phenyl ring alters the frequencies of the CH2 stretches by about 15 cm(-1) compared to their n-alkane counterparts in trans configurations. Conformational changes in the chain can lead to shifts in frequency of up to 30 cm(-1).
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Daniel Hewett; Daniel P. Tabor; Joshua L. Fischer; Edwin L. Sibert; Timothy S. Zwier
An ultraviolet-infrared (UV-IR) double-resonance method for recording conformation-specific excited-state infrared spectra is described. The method takes advantage of an increase in fluorescence signal in phenylalkanes produced by infrared excitation of the S1 origin levels of different conformational isomers. The shorter lifetimes of these IR-excited molecules, combined with their red-shifted emission, provides a way to discriminate the fluorescence due to the infrared-excited molecules from the S1 origin fluorescence, resulting in spectra with high signal-to-noise ratios. Spectra for a series of phenylalkanes and a capped phenylalanine derivative (Ac-Phe-NHMe) demonstrate the potential of the method. The excited-state spectrum in the alkyl CH stretch region of ethylbenzene is well-fit by an anharmonic model developed for the ground electronic state, which explicitly takes into account stretch-bend Fermi resonance.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Joseph R. Gord; Daniel Hewett; Alicia Hernandez-Castillo; Karl N. Blodgett; Matthew C. Rotondaro; Adalgisa Varuolo; Matthew A. Kubasik; Timothy S. Zwier
The conformational preferences of a series of capped peptides containing the helicogenic amino acid aminoisobutyric acid (Aib) (Z-Aib-OH, Z-(Aib)2-OMe, and Z-(Aib)4-OMe) are studied in the gas phase under expansion-cooled conditions. Aib oligomers are known to form 310-helical secondary structures in solution and in the solid phase. However, in the gas phase, accumulation of a macrodipole as the helix grows could inhibit helix stabilization. Implementing single-conformation IR spectroscopy in the NH stretch region, Z-Aib-OH and Z-(Aib)2-OMe are both observed to have minor conformations that exhibit dihedral angles consistent with the 310-helical portion of the Ramachandran map (ϕ, ψ = -57°, -30°), even though they lack sufficient backbone length to form 10-membered rings which are a hallmark of the developed 310-helix. For Z-(Aib)4-OMe three conformers are observed in the gas phase. Single-conformation infrared spectroscopy in both the NH stretch (Amide A) and C[double bond, length as m-dash]O stretch (Amide I) regions identifies the main conformer as an incipient 310-helix, having two free NH groups and two C10 H-bonded NH groups, labeled an F-F-10-10 structure, with a calculated dipole moment of 13.7 D. A second minor conformer has an infrared spectrum characteristic of an F-F-10-7 structure in which the third and fourth Aib residues have ϕ, ψ = 75°, -74° and -52°, 143°, Ramachandran angles which fall outside of the typical range for 310-helices, and a dipole moment that shrinks to 5.4 D. These results show Aib to be a 310-helix former in the gas phase at the earliest stages of oligomer growth.
70th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy | 2015
Joseph A. Korn; Timothy S. Zwier; Daniel Hewett; Khadija Jawad
Combustion processes involve complex chemistry including pathways leading to polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from small molecule precursors. Resonance stabilized radicals (RSRs) likely play an important role in the pathways to PAHs due to their unusual stability. Benzyl radical is a prototypical RSR that is stabilized by conjugation with the phenyl ring. Earlier work on α-methyl benzyl radical showed perturbations to the spectroscopy due to a hindered methyl rotor.a If the alkyl chain is lengthened then multiple conformations become possible. This talk will discuss the jet-cooled spectroscopy of α-ethyl benzyl radical and α-propyl benzyl radical produced from the discharge of 1-phenyl propanol and 1-phenyl butanol respectively. Electronic spectra were obtained via resonant two-photon ionization, and IR spectra were obtained by resonant ion-dip infrared spectroscopy.
Faraday Discussions | 2016
Natércia D.N. Rodrigues; Michael Staniforth; Jamie D. Young; Yoann Peperstraete; Neil C. Cole-Filipiak; Joseph R. Gord; Patrick S. Walsh; Daniel Hewett; Timothy S. Zwier; Vasilios G. Stavros
Chemical Science | 2017
Daniel Hewett; Sebastian Bocklitz; Daniel P. Tabor; Edwin L. Sibert; Martin A. Suhm; Timothy S. Zwier
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017
Piyush Mishra; Daniel Hewett; Timothy S. Zwier
72nd International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy | 2017
Alicia Hernandez-Castillo; Timothy S. Zwier; Daniel Hewett; Chamara Abeysekera
72nd International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy | 2017
Daniel Hewett; Timothy S. Zwier
71st International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy | 2016
Sebastian Bocklitz; Martin A. Suhm; Timothy S. Zwier; Daniel Hewett