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Dive into the research topics where Salvatore Mamone is active.

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Featured researches published by Salvatore Mamone.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Quantum rotation of ortho and para-water encapsulated in a fullerene cage

C. Beduz; Marina Carravetta; Judy Y.-C. Chen; Maria Concistrè; Mark Denning; Michael Frunzi; A.J. Horsewill; Ole G. Johannessen; Ronald G. Lawler; Xuegong Lei; Malcolm H. Levitt; Yongjun Li; Salvatore Mamone; Yasujiro Murata; Urmas Nagel; Tomoko Nishida; Jacques Ollivier; S. Rols; Toomas Room; Riddhiman Sarkar; Nicholas J. Turro; Y. Yang

Inelastic neutron scattering, far-infrared spectroscopy, and cryogenic nuclear magnetic resonance are used to investigate the quantized rotation and ortho–para conversion of single water molecules trapped inside closed fullerene cages. The existence of metastable ortho-water molecules is demonstrated, and the interconversion of ortho-and para-water spin isomers is tracked in real time. Our investigation reveals that the ground state of encapsulated ortho water has a lifted degeneracy, associated with symmetry-breaking of the water environment.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

Rotor in a cage: infrared spectroscopy of an endohedral hydrogen-fullerene complex

Salvatore Mamone; Min Ge; D. Hüvonen; Urmas Nagel; A. Danquigny; F. Cuda; Martin C. Grossel; Yasujiro Murata; Koichi Komatsu; Malcolm H. Levitt; T. Rõõm; Marina Carravetta

We report the observation of quantized translational and rotational motion of molecular hydrogen inside the cages of C(60). Narrow infrared absorption lines at the temperature of 6 K correspond to vibrational excitations in combination with translational and rotational excitations and show well-resolved splittings due to the coupling between translational and rotational modes of the endohedral H(2) molecule. A theoretical model shows that H(2) inside C(60) is a three-dimensional quantum rotor moving in a nearly spherical potential. The theory provides both the frequencies and the intensities of the observed infrared transitions. Good agreement with the experimental results is obtained by fitting a small number of empirical parameters to describe the confining potential, as well as the relative concentration of ortho- and para-H(2).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Interaction potential and infrared absorption of endohedral H2 in C60

Min Ge; Urmas Nagel; D. Hüvonen; Toomas Room; Salvatore Mamone; Malcolm H. Levitt; Marina Carravetta; Yasujiro Murata; Koichi Komatsu; Judy Y.-C. Chen; Nicholas J. Turro

We have measured the temperature dependence of the infrared spectra of a hydrogen molecule trapped inside a C(60) cage, H(2)@C(60), in the temperature range from 6 to 300 K and analyzed the excitation spectrum by using a five-dimensional model of a vibrating rotor in a spherical potential. The electric dipole moment is induced by the translational motion of endohedral H(2) and gives rise to an infrared absorption process where one translational quantum is created or annihilated, ΔN = ±1. Some fundamental transitions, ΔN = 0, are observed as well. The rotation of endohedral H(2) is unhindered but coupled to the translational motion. The isotropic and translation-rotation coupling part of the potential are anharmonic and different in the ground and excited vibrational states of H(2). The vibrational frequency and the rotational constant of endohedral H(2) are smaller than those of H(2) in the gas phase. The assignment of lines to ortho- and para-H(2) is confirmed by measuring spectra of a para enriched sample of H(2)@C(60) and is consistent with the earlier interpretation of the low temperature infrared spectra [Mamone et al., J. Chem. Phys. 130, 081103 (2009)].


Nature Chemistry | 2016

The dipolar endofullerene HF@C60

Andrea Krachmalnicoff; Richard Bounds; Salvatore Mamone; Shamim Alom; Maria Concistrè; Benno Meier; Karel Kouřil; Mark E. Light; Mark R. Johnson; S. Rols; A.J. Horsewill; Anna Shugai; Urmas Nagel; Toomas Room; Marina Carravetta; Malcolm H. Levitt; Richard J. Whitby

The cavity inside fullerenes provides a unique environment for the study of isolated atoms and molecules. We report the encapsulation of hydrogen fluoride inside C60 using molecular surgery to give the endohedral fullerene HF@C60. The key synthetic step is the closure of the open fullerene cage with the escape of HF minimized. The encapsulated HF molecule moves freely inside the cage and exhibits quantization of its translational and rotational degrees of freedom, as revealed by inelastic neutron scattering and infrared spectroscopy. The rotational and vibrational constants of the encapsulated HF molecules were found to be redshifted relative to free HF. The NMR spectra display a large (1)H-(19)F J coupling typical of an isolated species. The dipole moment of HF@C60 was estimated from the temperature dependence of the dielectric constant at cryogenic temperatures and showed that the cage shields around 75% of the HF dipole.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Long-Lived Nuclear Spin States in Methyl Groups and Quantum-Rotor-Induced Polarization

Benno Meier; Jean-Nicolas Dumez; Gabriele Stevanato; Joseph T. Hill-Cousins; Soumya Singha Roy; Pär Håkansson; Salvatore Mamone; Richard C. D. Brown; Giuseppe Pileio; Malcolm H. Levitt

Substances containing rapidly rotating methyl groups may exhibit long-lived states (LLSs) in solution, with relaxation times substantially longer than the conventional spin-lattice relaxation time T1. The states become long-lived through rapid internal rotation of the CH3 group, which imposes an approximate symmetry on the fluctuating nuclear spin interactions. In the case of very low CH3 rotational barriers, a hyperpolarized LLS is populated by thermal equilibration at liquid helium temperature. Following dissolution, cross-relaxation of the hyperpolarized LLS, induced by heteronuclear dipolar couplings, generates strongly enhanced antiphase NMR signals. This mechanism explains the NMR signal enhancements observed for (13)C-γ-picoline (Icker, M.; Berger, S. J. Magn. Reson. 2012, 219, 1-3).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Infrared spectroscopy of endohedral HD and D2 in C60

Min Ge; Urmas Nagel; D. Hüvonen; Toomas Room; Salvatore Mamone; Malcolm H. Levitt; Marina Carravetta; Yasujiro Murata; Koichi Komatsu; Xuegong Lei; Nicholas J. Turro

We report on the dynamics of two hydrogen isotopomers, D(2) and HD, trapped in the molecular cages of a fullerene C(60) molecule. We measured the infrared spectra and analyzed them using a spherical potential for a vibrating rotor. The potential, vibration-rotation Hamiltonian, and dipole moment parameters are compared with previously studied H(2)@C(60) parameters [M. Ge, U. Nagel, D. Hüvonen, T. Rõõm, S. Mamone, M. H. Levitt, M. Carravetta, Y. Murata, K. Komatsu, J. Y.-C. Chen, and N. J. Turro, J. Chem. Phys. 134, 054507 (2011)]. The isotropic part of the potential is similar for all three isotopomers. In HD@C(60), we observe mixing of the rotational states and an interference effect of the dipole moment terms due to the displacement of the HD rotation center from the fullerene cage center.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2009

Supercycled homonuclear dipolar decoupling sequences in solid-state NMR

Subhradip Paul; Rajendra Singh Thakur; Mithun Goswami; Andrea C. Sauerwein; Salvatore Mamone; Maria Concistrè; Hans Förster; Malcolm H. Levitt; P.K. Madhu

We compare the performance of the windowed phase-modulated Lee-Goldburg (wPMLG) and the windowed decoupling using mind boggling optimisation (wDUMBO) sequences at various magic-angle spinning rates and nutation frequencies of the pulses. Additionally, we introduce a supercycled version of wDUMBO and compare its efficiency with that of the non-supercycled implementation of wDUMBO. The efficiency of the supercycled version of wPMLG, denoted wPMLG-S2, is compared with a new supercycled version of wPMLG that we notate as wPMLG-S3. The interaction between the supercycled homonuclear dipolar decoupling sequences and the sample rotation is analysed using symmetry-based selection rules.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Nuclear spin conversion of water inside fullerene cages detected by low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance

Salvatore Mamone; Maria Concistrè; Elisa Carignani; Benno Meier; Andrea Krachmalnicoff; Ole G. Johannessen; Xuegong Lei; Yongjun Li; Mark Denning; Marina Carravetta; Kelvin S. K. Goh; A.J. Horsewill; Richard J. Whitby; Malcolm H. Levitt

The water-endofullerene H2O@C60 provides a unique chemical system in which freely rotating water molecules are confined inside homogeneous and symmetrical carbon cages. The spin conversion between the ortho and para species of the endohedral H2O was studied in the solid phase by low-temperature nuclear magnetic resonance. The experimental data are consistent with a second-order kinetics, indicating a bimolecular spin conversion process. Numerical simulations suggest the simultaneous presence of a spin diffusion process allowing neighbouring ortho and para molecules to exchange their angular momenta. Cross-polarization experiments found no evidence that the spin conversion of the endohedral H2O molecules is catalysed by (13)C nuclei present in the cages.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Theory of long-lived nuclear spin states in methyl groups and quantum-rotor induced polarisation

Jean-Nicolas Dumez; Pär Håkansson; Salvatore Mamone; Benno Meier; Gabriele Stevanato; Joseph T. Hill-Cousins; Soumya Singha Roy; Richard C. D. Brown; Giuseppe Pileio; Malcolm H. Levitt

Long-lived nuclear spin states have a relaxation time much longer than the longitudinal relaxation time T1. Long-lived states extend significantly the time scales that may be probed with magnetic resonance, with possible applications to transport and binding studies, and to hyperpolarised imaging. Rapidly rotating methyl groups in solution may support a long-lived state, consisting of a population imbalance between states of different spin exchange symmetries. Here, we expand the formalism for describing the behaviour of long-lived nuclear spin states in methyl groups, with special attention to the hyperpolarisation effects observed in (13)CH3 groups upon rapidly converting a material with low-barrier methyl rotation from the cryogenic solid state to a room-temperature solution [M. Icker and S. Berger, J. Magn. Reson. 219, 1 (2012)]. We analyse the relaxation properties of methyl long-lived states using semi-classical relaxation theory. Numerical simulations are supplemented with a spherical-tensor analysis, which captures the essential properties of methyl long-lived states.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2013

Quantum rotation and translation of hydrogen molecules encapsulated inside C60: temperature dependence of inelastic neutron scattering spectra

A.J. Horsewill; Kelvin S. K. Goh; S. Rols; Jacques Ollivier; Mark R. Johnson; Malcolm H. Levitt; Marina Carravetta; Salvatore Mamone; Yasujiro Murata; Judy Y.-C. Chen; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Xuegong Lei; Nicholas J. Turro

The quantum dynamics of a hydrogen molecule encapsulated inside the cage of a C60 fullerene molecule is investigated using inelastic neutron scattering (INS). The emphasis is on the temperature dependence of the INS spectra which were recorded using time-of-flight spectrometers. The hydrogen endofullerene system is highly quantum mechanical, exhibiting both translational and rotational quantization. The profound influence of the Pauli exclusion principle is revealed through nuclear spin isomerism. INS is shown to be exceptionally able to drive transitions between ortho-hydrogen and para-hydrogen which are spin-forbidden to photon spectroscopies. Spectra in the temperature range 1.6≤T≤280 K are presented, and examples are given which demonstrate how the temperature dependence of the INS peak amplitudes can provide an effective tool for assigning the transitions. It is also shown in a preliminary investigation how the temperature dependence may conceivably be used to probe crystal field effects and inter-fullerene interactions.

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A.J. Horsewill

University of Nottingham

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Urmas Nagel

National Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics

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S. Rols

University of Montpellier

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