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Dive into the research topics where Hans W. Horn is active.

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Featured researches published by Hans W. Horn.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1989

ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE CALCULATIONS ON WORKSTATION COMPUTERS: THE PROGRAM SYSTEM TURBOMOLE

Reinhart Ahlrichs; Michael Bär; Marco Häser; Hans W. Horn; Christoph Kölmel

The basic structure of the program system TURBOMOLE for SCF - including first and second analytical derivatives with respect to nuclear coordinates - and MP2 calculations is briefly described. The program takes full advantage of all discrete point group symmetries and has only modest - and (partially) adjustable - I/O and background storage requirements. The performance of TURBOMOLE is documented for demonstrative applications.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1992

Fully optimized contracted Gaussian basis sets for atoms Li to Kr

Ansgar Schäfer; Hans W. Horn; Reinhart Ahlrichs

Various contracted Gaussian basis sets for atoms up to Kr are presented which have been determined by optimizing atomic self‐consistent field ground state energies with respect to all basis set parameters, i.e., orbital exponents and contraction coefficients.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2004

Development of an improved four-site water model for biomolecular simulations: TIP4P-Ew

Hans W. Horn; William C. Swope; Jed W. Pitera; Jeffry D. Madura; Thomas J. Dick; Greg L. Hura; Teresa Head-Gordon

A re-parameterization of the standard TIP4P water model for use with Ewald techniques is introduced, providing an overall global improvement in water properties relative to several popular nonpolarizable and polarizable water potentials. Using high precision simulations, and careful application of standard analytical corrections, we show that the new TIP4P-Ew potential has a density maximum at approximately 1 degrees C, and reproduces experimental bulk-densities and the enthalpy of vaporization, DeltaH(vap), from -37.5 to 127 degrees C at 1 atm with an absolute average error of less than 1%. Structural properties are in very good agreement with x-ray scattering intensities at temperatures between 0 and 77 degrees C and dynamical properties such as self-diffusion coefficient are in excellent agreement with experiment. The parameterization approach used can be easily generalized to rehabilitate any water force field using available experimental data over a range of thermodynamic points.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

The Reaction Mechanism for the Organocatalytic Ring-Opening Polymerization of l-Lactide Using a Guanidine-Based Catalyst: Hydrogen-Bonded or Covalently Bound?

Anthony Chuma; Hans W. Horn; William C. Swope; Russell C. Pratt; Lei Zhang; Bas G. G. Lohmeijer; Charles G. Wade; Robert M. Waymouth; James L. Hedrick; Julia E. Rice

We have investigated two alternative mechanisms for the ring-opening polymerization of l-lactide using a guanidine-based catalyst, the first involving acetyl transfer to the catalyst, and the second involving only hydrogen bonding to the catalyst. Using computational chemistry methods, we show that the hydrogen bonding pathway is considerably preferred over the acetyl transfer pathway and that this is consistent with experimental information.


Theoretical Chemistry Accounts | 1992

Direct computation of second-order SCF properties of large molecules on workstation computers with an application to large carbon clusters

Marco Häser; Reinhart Ahlrichs; H. P. Baron; P. Weis; Hans W. Horn

SummaryThe ab initio SCF computation of second-order properties of large molecules (with 50 atoms or more) on workstation computers is demonstrated for static dipole polarizabilities and nuclear magneting shieldings. The magnetic shieldings are calculated on the basis of gauge including atomic orbitals (GIAO). Algorithmic advances (semi-direct algorithms with efficient integral pre-screening, and use of a quadratically convergent functional for the polarizabilities) are presented together with an illustrative application to the fullerenes C60 and C70.


Science | 2014

Recyclable, strong thermosets and organogels via paraformaldehyde condensation with diamines

Jeannette M. Garcia; Gavin O. Jones; Kumar Virwani; Bryan D. McCloskey; Dylan J. Boday; Gijs M. ter Huurne; Hans W. Horn; Daniel J. Coady; Abdulmalik M. Bintaleb; Abdullah M. Alabdulrahman; Fares D. Alsewailem; Hamid A. Al-Megren; James L. Hedrick

Recyclable Thermoset Polymers The high mechanical strength and durability of thermoset polymers are exploited in applications such as composite materials, where they form the matrix surrounding carbon fibers. The thermally driven polymerization reaction is usually irreversible, so it is difficult to recycle the constituent monomers and to remove and repair portions of a composite part. García et al. (p. 732; see the Perspective by Long) now describe a family of polymers formed by condensation of paraformaldehyde with bisanilines that could form hard thermoset polymers or, when more oxygenated, produce self-healing gels. Strong acid digestion allowed recovery of the bisaniline monomers. A strong polymer formed by heating can be digested with strong acid to recover and recycle its bisaniline monomers. [Also see Perspective by Long] Nitrogen-based thermoset polymers have many industrial applications (for example, in composites), but are difficult to recycle or rework. We report a simple one-pot, low-temperature polycondensation between paraformaldehyde and 4,4ʹ-oxydianiline (ODA) that forms hemiaminal dynamic covalent networks (HDCNs), which can further cyclize at high temperatures, producing poly(hexahydrotriazine)s (PHTs). Both materials are strong thermosetting polymers, and the PHTs exhibited very high Young’s moduli (up to ~14.0 gigapascals and up to 20 gigapascals when reinforced with surface-treated carbon nanotubes), excellent solvent resistance, and resistance to environmental stress cracking. However, both HDCNs and PHTs could be digested at low pH (<2) to recover the bisaniline monomers. By simply using different diamine monomers, the HDCN- and PHT-forming reactions afford extremely versatile materials platforms. For example, when poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) diamine monomers were used to form HDCNs, elastic organogels formed that exhibited self-healing properties.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Hydrogen-Bonding Catalysts Based on Fluorinated Alcohol Derivatives for Living Polymerization†

Olivier Coulembier; Daniel P. Sanders; Alshakim Nelson; Andrew N. Hollenbeck; Hans W. Horn; Julia E. Rice; Masaki Fujiwara; Philippe Dubois; James L. Hedrick

Recognize this! A hydrogen-bonding motif based on hexafluorinated alcohol derivatives (see picture; O red, F yellow) activates electrophilic substrates. The catalytic activity of the hydrogen-bonded systems was demonstrated for the ring-opening polymerization of a variety of strained heterocycles. Narrowly dispersed polymers with predictable molecular weights were obtained with end-group fidelity.


Journal of Computational Chemistry | 1993

Parallel direct SCF and gradient program for workstation clusters

Stefan Brode; Hans W. Horn; Michael Ehrig; Diane Moldrup; Julia E. Rice; Reinhart Ahlrichs

A parallel direct SCF and gradient program for workstation clusters has been implemented on the basis of the ab initio program package TURBOMOLE. Applications on large molecular systems monitor an appreciable speedup in residence time.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1996

Design of optimized photorefractive polymers: A novel class of chromophores

Rüdiger Wortmann; Constantina Poga; R. J. Twieg; Christian Geletneky; Christopher R. Moylan; P. M. Lundquist; Ralph G. Devoe; Patricia M. Cotts; Hans W. Horn; Julia E. Rice; D. M. Burland

It is demonstrated that the microscopic mechanism of the photorefractive (PR) effect in organic composites with low glass transition temperatures involves the formation of refractive index gratings through a space‐charge field‐modulated Kerr effect. A tensorial formulation of the macroscopic aspects of the PR Kerr effect and its microscopic interpretation is presented. The second‐order dipole orientation term containing the anisotropy of the first‐order optical polarizability α(−ω;ω) is shown to yield the dominant contribution to the Kerr susceptibility χ(3)(−ω;ω,0,0). A class of special chromophores having negligible second‐order polarizabilities β(−ω;ω,0) and large dipole moments μ has been identified in order to optimize this term. These chromophores are not subject to the efficiency‐transparency tradeoff typically encountered with second‐order nonlinear optical (NLO) chromophores, providing highly transparent materials with large PR Kerr response. Contrary to previous approaches in this field, the bes...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Characterization of the TIP4P-Ew water model: Vapor pressure and boiling point

Hans W. Horn; William C. Swope; Jed W. Pitera

The liquid-vapor-phase equilibrium properties of the previously developed TIP4P-Ew water model have been studied using thermodynamic integration free-energy simulation techniques in the temperature range of 274-400 K. We stress that free-energy results from simulations need to be corrected in order to be compared to the experiment. This is due to the fact that the thermodynamic end states accessible through simulations correspond to fictitious substances (classical rigid liquids and classical rigid ideal gases) while experiments operate on real substances (liquids and real gases, with quantum effects). After applying analytical corrections the vapor pressure curve obtained from simulated free-energy changes is in excellent agreement with the experimental vapor pressure curve. The boiling point of TIP4P-Ew water under ambient pressure is found to be at 370.3+/-1.9 K, about 7 K higher than the boiling point of TIP4P water (363.7+/-5.1 K; from simulations that employ finite range treatment of electrostatic and Lennard-Jones interactions). This is in contrast to the approximately +15 K by which the temperature of the density maximum and the melting temperature of TIP4P-Ew are shifted relative to TIP4P, indicating that the temperature range over which the liquid phase of TIP4P-Ew is stable is narrower than that of TIP4P and resembles more that of real water. The quality of the vapor pressure results highlights the success of TIP4P-Ew in describing the energetic and entropic aspects of intermolecular interactions in liquid water.

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Reinhart Ahlrichs

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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Abdullah M. Alabdulrahman

King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology

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Fares D. Alsewailem

King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology

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Hamid A. Al-Megren

King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology

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