Ryan P. Forrest
University of Notre Dame
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Featured researches published by Ryan P. Forrest.
Nature | 2014
Natalie A. Wasio; Rebecca C. Quardokus; Ryan P. Forrest; Craig S. Lent; Steven A. Corcelli; John A. Christie; Kenneth W. Henderson; S. Alex Kandel
The process of molecular self-assembly on solid surfaces is essentially one of crystallization in two dimensions, and the structures that result depend on the interplay between intermolecular forces and the interaction between adsorbates and the underlying substrate. Because a single hydrogen bond typically has an energy between 15 and 35 kilojoules per mole, hydrogen bonding can be a strong driver of molecular assembly; this is apparent from the dominant role of hydrogen bonding in nucleic-acid base pairing, as well as in the secondary structure of proteins. Carboxylic acid functional groups, which provide two hydrogen bonds, are particularly promising and reliable in creating and maintaining surface order, and self-assembled monolayers of benzoic acids produce structure that depends on the number and relative placement of carboxylic acid groups. Here we use scanning tunnelling microscopy to study self-assembled monolayers of ferrocenecarboxylic acid (FcCOOH), and find that, rather than producing dimeric or linear structures typical of carboxylic acids, FcCOOH forms highly unusual cyclic hydrogen-bonded pentamers, which combine with simultaneously formed FcCOOH dimers to form two-dimensional quasicrystallites that exhibit local five-fold symmetry and maintain translational and rotational order (without periodicity) for distances of more than 400 ångströms.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Ramkrishna Adhikary; Jörg Zimmermann; Jian Liu; Ryan P. Forrest; Tesia D. Janicki; Philip E. Dawson; Steven A. Corcelli; Floyd E. Romesberg
Many residues within proteins adopt conformations that appear to be stabilized by interactions between an amide N-H and the amide N of the previous residue. To explore whether these interactions constitute hydrogen bonds, we characterized the IR stretching frequencies of deuterated variants of proline and the corresponding carbamate, as well as the four proline residues of an Src homology 3 domain protein. The CδD2 stretching frequencies are shifted to lower energies due to hyperconjugation with Ni electron density, and engaging this density via protonation or the formation of the Ni+1-H···Ni interaction ablates this hyperconjugation and thus induces an otherwise difficult to explain blue shift in the C-D absorptions. Along with density functional theory calculations, the data reveal that the Ni+1-H···Ni interactions constitute H-bonds and suggest that they may play an important and previously underappreciated role in protein folding, structure, and function.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Douglas A. Hines; Ryan P. Forrest; Steven A. Corcelli; Prashant V. Kamat
Current interest in quantum dot solar cells (QDSCs) motivates an understanding of the electron transfer dynamics at the quantum dot (QD)-metal oxide (MO) interface. Employing transient absorption spectroscopy, we have monitored the electron transfer rate (ket) at this interface as a function of the bridge molecules that link QDs to TiO2. Using mercaptoacetic acid, 3-mercaptopropionic acid, 8-mercaptooctanoic acid, and 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid, we observe an exponential attenuation of ket with increasing linker length, and attribute this to the tunneling of the electron through the insulating linker molecule. We model the electron transfer reaction using both rectangular and trapezoidal barrier models that have been discussed in the literature. The one-electron reduction potential (equivalent to the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital) of each molecule as determined by cyclic voltammetry (CV) was used to estimate the effective barrier height presented by each ligand at the CdSe-TiO2 interface. The electron transfer rate (ket) calculated for each CdSe-ligand-TiO2 interface using both models showed the results in agreement with the experimentally determined trend. This demonstrates that electron transfer between CdSe and TiO2 can be viewed as electron tunneling through a layer of linking molecules and provides a useful method for predicting electron transfer rate constants.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
John A. Christie; Ryan P. Forrest; Steven A. Corcelli; Natalie A. Wasio; Rebecca C. Quardokus; Ryan D. Brown; S. Alex Kandel; Yuhui Lu; Craig S. Lent; Kenneth W. Henderson
The preparation of 7-Fc(+) -8-Fc-7,8-nido-[C2 B9 H10 ](-) (Fc(+) FcC2 B9 (-) ) demonstrates the successful incorporation of a carborane cage as an internal counteranion bridging between ferrocene and ferrocenium units. This neutral mixed-valence Fe(II) /Fe(III) complex overcomes the proximal electronic bias imposed by external counterions, a practical limitation in the use of molecular switches. A combination of UV/Vis-NIR spectroscopic and TD-DFT computational studies indicate that electron transfer within Fc(+) FcC2 B9 (-) is achieved through a bridge-mediated mechanism. This electronic framework therefore provides the possibility of an all-neutral null state, a key requirement for the implementation of quantum-dot cellular automata (QCA) molecular computing. The adhesion, ordering, and characterization of Fc(+) FcC2 B9 (-) on Au(111) has been observed by scanning tunneling microscopy.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015
Rebecca C. Quardokus; Natalie A. Wasio; Ryan D. Brown; John A. Christie; Kenneth W. Henderson; Ryan P. Forrest; Craig S. Lent; Steven A. Corcelli; S. Alex Kandel
Low-temperature scanning tunneling microscopy is used to observe self-assembled structures of ferrocenedicarboxylic acid (Fc(COOH)2) on the Au(111) surface. The surface is prepared by pulse-deposition of Fc(COOH)2 dissolved in methanol, and the solvent is evaporated before imaging. While the rows of hydrogen-bonded dimers that are common for carboxylic acid species are observed, the majority of adsorbed Fc(COOH)2 is instead found in six-molecule clusters with a well-defined and chiral geometry. The coverage and distribution of these clusters are consistent with a random sequential adsorption model, showing that solution-phase species are determinative of adsorbate distribution for this system under these reaction conditions.
2016 IEEE International Conference on Rebooting Computing (ICRC) | 2016
Craig S. Lent; Kenneth W. Henderson; S. Alex Kandel; Steven A. Corcelli; Gregory L. Snider; Alexei O. Orlov; Peter M. Kogge; Michael Niemier; Ryan C. Brown; John A. Christie; Natalie A. Wasio; Rebecca C. Quardokus; Ryan P. Forrest; Jacob P. Peterson; Angela M. Silski; David A. Turner; Enrique P. Blair; Yuhui Lu
The two fundamental limitations of the present computing paradigm are power dissipation from transistor switching and the architectural von Neumann bottleneck that segregates processing from memory. We examine a cellular architecture which radically intermixes memory and processing, and which is based on a transistor-less approach to representing binary information using the arrangement of charge within the molecule. Representing bits by molecular configuration, rather than a current switch, yields the limits of functional density and low power dissipation. Matching a new computational element to a new architectural framework could enable general purpose computing to evolve along a new roadmap.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Natalie A. Wasio; Rebecca C. Quardokus; Ryan P. Forrest; Steven A. Corcelli; Yuhui Lu; Craig S. Lent; Frédéric Justaud; Claude Lapinte; S. Alex Kandel
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013
Rebecca C. Quardokus; Natalie A. Wasio; Ryan P. Forrest; Craig S. Lent; Steven A. Corcelli; John A. Christie; Kenneth W. Henderson; S. Alex Kandel
Chemical Communications | 2014
Rebecca C. Quardokus; Natalie A. Wasio; John A. Christie; Kenneth W. Henderson; Ryan P. Forrest; Craig S. Lent; Steven A. Corcelli; S. Alex Kandel
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2015
Natalie A. Wasio; Rebecca C. Quardokus; Ryan D. Brown; Ryan P. Forrest; Craig S. Lent; Steven A. Corcelli; John A. Christie; Kenneth W. Henderson; S. Alex Kandel