Jens Ulrik Nielsen
Technical University of Denmark
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Featured researches published by Jens Ulrik Nielsen.
Trends in Analytical Chemistry | 1999
Jens Enevold Thaulov Andersen; Jingdong Zhang; Qijin Chi; Allan Glargaard Hansen; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Esben P. Friis; Jens Ulstrup; Anja Boisen; H. Jensenius
Abstract The resolution of scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and other scanning probe microscopies is unprecedented but the techniques are fraught with limitations as analytical tools. These limitations and their relationship to the physical mechanisms of image contrast are first discussed. Some new options based on in situ STM, which hold prospects for molecular- and mesoscopic-scale analytical chemistry, are then reviewed. They are illustrated by metallic electro-crystallisation and -dissolution, and in situ STM spectroscopy of large redox molecules. The biophysically oriented analytical options of in situ atomic force microscopy, and analytical chemical perspectives for the new microcantilever sensor techniques are also discussed.
Bioelectrochemistry | 2002
Jesper Brask; Hainer Wackerbarth; Knud J. Jensen; Jingdong Zhang; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Jens Enevold Thaulov Andersen; Jens Ulstrup
Mapping of structure and function of proteins adsorbed on solid surfaces is important in many contexts. Electrochemical techniques based on single-crystal metal surfaces and in situ scanning probe microscopies (SPM) have recently opened new perspectives for mapping at the single-molecule level. De novo design of model proteins has evolved in parallel and holds promise for test and control of protein folding and for new tailored protein structural motifs. These two strategies are combined in the present report. We present a synthetic scheme for a new 4-alpha-helix bundle carboprotein built on a galactopyranoside derivative with a thiol anchor aglycon suitable for surface immobilization on gold. The galactopyranoside with thiol anchor and the thiol anchor alone were prepared for comparison. Voltammetry of the three molecules on Au(111) showed reductive desorption peaks caused by monolayer adsorption via thiolate-Au bonding. In situ STM of the thiol anchor disclosed an ordered adlayer with clear domains and molecular features. This holds promise, broadly for single-molecule voltammetry and the SPM and scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) of natural and synthetic proteins.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2000
Alexei A. Kornyshev; Alexander M. Kuznetsov; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Jens Ulstrup
Long-distance electrochemical electron transfer exhibits approximately exponential dependence on the electron transfer distance. On the basis of a jellium model of the metal surface we show that the slope of the logarithm of the current vs. the transfer distance also depends strongly on the electrode charge. The slope is smaller the more negative the charge density due to enhanced extension of the surface electronic density profile on the solution side, and thereby better electronic overlap with the reacting molecule. The effect is sensitive to the bulk electron density of the metal and the localization of the electronic state at the molecular reactant site. Effects similar to these have been observed experimentally and could be common for electronically light metals.
Russian Journal of Electrochemistry | 2003
Allan Glargaard Hansen; Hainer Wackerbarth; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Jingdong Zhang; Al. M. Kuznetsov; Jens Ulstrup
Electrochemical science and technology in the 21st century have reached high levels of sophistication. A fundamental quantum mechanical theoretical frame for interfacial electrochemical electron transfer (ET) was introduced by Revaz Dogonadze. This frame has remained for four decades as a basis for comprehensive later theoretical work and data interpretation in many areas of chemistry, electrochemistry, and biology. We discuss here some new areas of theoretical electrochemical ET science, with focus on nanoscale electrochemical and bioelectrochemical sciences. Particular attention is given to in situ scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and single-electron tunneling (SET, or Coulomb blockade) in electrochemical. systems directly in aqueous electrolyte solution and at room temperature. We illustrate the new theoretical formalism and its perspectives by recent cases of electrochemical SET, negative differential resistance patterns, and by ET dynamics of organized assemblies of biological macromolecules, such as redox metalloproteins and oligonucleotides on single-crystal Au(111)-electrode surfaces.
Russian Journal of Electrochemistry | 2002
Jingdong Zhang; Qijin Chi; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Allan Glargaard Hansen; Jens Enevold Thaulov Andersen; Hainer Wackerbarth; Jens Ulstrup
Single-crystal electrochemistry and scanning tunneling microscopy directly in aqueous electrolyte solution (in situ STM) are established in physical electrochemistry but new in studies of adsorption and interfacial electrochemistry of biological macromolecules. These high-resolution techniques have now been applied comprehensively to proteins and other biomolecules in recent studies, discussed in this report. Focus is on three systems. The first one is a pair of amino acids, cysteine and cystine. These are strongly adsorbed via thiolate and disulfide, respectively, with identical reductive desorption and in situ STM patterns. Long-range lateral order can be imaged to molecular resolution. The amino acids are also reference molecules for the blue single-copper protein Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin. This protein assembles in two well-defined orientations. One applies on bare Au(111) to which the protein is linked via its surface disulfide group. This orients the copper center away from the electrode surface. The other mode is by hydrophobic interactions with variable-length alkanethiols self-assembled on Au(111). In this mode the copper center is directed towards the surface. Adsorption and long-range electron tunneling in both modes have been characterized in detail using different electrochemical and spectroscopic techniques, as well as STM. Other data show that penta-(A–T) oligonucleotide adsorbed via a covalently bound thiol linker also displays reductive desorption and in situ STM to molecular resolution. The three systems thus appear to open new perspectives for broader use of high-resolution electrochemical techniques in comprehensive investigations of large biological molecules.
Journal of Chemistry | 2014
David Mogensen; Jan-Dierk Grunwaldt; Peter Vang Hendriksen; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Kim Dam-Johansen
The kinetics of catalytic steam reforming of methane over an Ni-YSZ anode of a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) have been investigated with the cell placed in a stack configuration. In order to decrease the degree of conversion, a single cell stack with reduced area was used. Measurements were performed in the temperature range 600–800°C and the partial pressures of all reactants and products were varied. The obtained rates could be well fitted with a power law expression (). A simple model is presented which is capable of predicting the methane conversion in a stack configuration from intrinsic kinetics of the anode support material. The predictions are compared with the stack measurements presented here, and good agreement is observed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2000
Qijin Chi; Jingdong Zhang; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Esben P. Friis; Ib Chorkendorff; Gerard W. Canters; Jens Enevold Thaulov Andersen; Jens Ulstrup
Langmuir | 2000
Jingdong Zhang; Qijin Chi; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Esben P. Friis; and Jens E. T. Andersen; Jens Ulstrup
Journal of Power Sources | 2011
David Mogensen; Jan-Dierk Grunwaldt; Peter Vang Hendriksen; Kim Dam-Johansen; Jens Ulrik Nielsen
Fuel and Energy Abstracts | 2011
Sune Dalgaard Ebbesen; Jens Valdemar Thorvald Høgh; Karsten Agersted Nielsen; Jens Ulrik Nielsen; Mogens Bjerg Mogensen