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Dive into the research topics where Soren N. Eustis is active.

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Featured researches published by Soren N. Eustis.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Quenching of excited triplet states by dissolved natural organic matter

Jannis Wenk; Soren N. Eustis; Kristopher McNeill; Silvio Canonica

Excited triplet states of aromatic ketones and quinones are used as proxies to assess the reactivity of excited triplet states of the dissolved organic matter ((3)DOM*) in natural waters. (3)DOM* are crucial transients in environmental photochemistry responsible for contaminant transformation, production of reactive oxygen species, and potentially photobleaching of DOM. In recent photochemical studies aimed at clarifying the role of DOM as an inhibitor of triplet-induced oxidations of organic contaminants, aromatic ketones have been used in the presence of DOM, and the question of a possible interaction between their excited triplet states and DOM has emerged. To clarify this issue, time-resolved laser spectroscopy was applied to measure the excited triplet state quenching of four different model triplet photosensitizers induced by a suite of DOM from various aquatic and terrestrial sources. While no quenching for the anionic triplet sensitizers 4-carboxybenzophenone (CBBP) and 9,10-anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonic acid (2,6-AQDS) was detected, second-order quenching rate constants with DOM for the triplets of 2-acetonaphthone (2AN) and 3-methoxyacetophenone (3MAP) in the range of 1.30-3.85 × 10(7) L mol(C)(-1) s(-1) were determined. On the basis of the average molecular weight of DOM molecules, the quenching for these uncharged excited triplet molecules is nearly diffusion-controlled, but significant quenching (>10%) in aerated water is not expected to occur below DOM concentrations of 22-72 mg(C) L(-1).


Science | 2008

Electron-Driven Acid-Base Chemistry : Proton Transfer from Hydrogen Chloride to Ammonia

Soren N. Eustis; Dunja Radisic; Kit H. Bowen; Rafał A. Bachorz; Maciej Haranczyk; Gregory K. Schenter; Maciej Gutowski

In contrast to widely familiar acid-base behavior in solution, single molecules of NH3 and HCl do not react to form the ionic salt, NH+4Cl–, in isolation. We applied anion photoelectron spectroscopy and ab initio theory to investigate the interaction of an excess electron with the hydrogen-bonded complex NH3···HCl. Our results show that an excess electron induces this complex to form the ionic salt. We propose a mechanism that proceeds through a dipole-bound state to form the negative ion of ionic ammonium chloride, a species that can also be characterized as a deformed Rydberg radical, NH4, polarized by a chloride anion, Cl–.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

Aqueous oxidation of sulfonamide antibiotics: Aromatic nucleophilic substitution of an aniline radical cation

Peter R. Tentscher; Soren N. Eustis; Kristopher McNeill; J. Samuel Arey

Sulfonamide antibiotics are an important class of organic micropollutants in the aquatic environment. For several, sulfur dioxide extrusion products have been previously reported upon photochemical or dark oxidation. Using quantum chemical modeling calculations and transient absorption spectroscopy, it is shown that single-electron oxidation from sulfadiazine produces the corresponding aniline radical cation. Density functional theory calculations indicate that this intermediate can exist in four protonation states. One species exhibits a low barrier for an intramolecular nucleophilic attack at the para position of the oxidized aniline ring, in which a pyrimidine nitrogen acts as a nucleophile. This attack can lead to a rearranged structure, which exhibits the same connectivity as the SO2 -extruded oxidation product that was previously observed in the aquatic environment and characterized by NMR spectroscopy. We report a detailed reaction mechanism for this intramolecular aromatic nucleophilic substitution, and we discuss the possibility of this reaction pathway for other sulfonamide drugs.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Photoelectron spectroscopy of hydrated adenine anions.

Soren N. Eustis; Di Wang; Svetlana A. Lyapustina; Kit H. Bowen

We report the observation of hydrated adenine anions, A(-)(H(2)O)(n), n=1-7, and their study by anion photoelectron spectroscopy. Values for photoelectron threshold energies, E(T), and vertical detachment energies are tabulated for A(-)(H(2)O)(n) along with those for hydrated uracil anions, U(-)(H(2)O)(n), which are presented for comparison. Analysis of these and previously measured photoelectron spectra of hydrated nucleobase anions leads to the conclusion that threshold energies significantly overstate electron affinity values in these cases, and that extrapolation of hydrated nucleobase anion threshold values to n=0 leads to incorrect electron affinity values for the nucleobases themselves. Sequential shifts between spectra, however, lead to the conclusion that A(-)(H(2)O)(3) is likely to be the smallest adiabatically stable, hydrated adenine anion.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen isotope fractionation associated with oxidative transformation of substituted aromatic N-alkyl amines.

Marita Skarpeli-Liati; Sarah G. Pati; Jakov Bolotin; Soren N. Eustis; Thomas B. Hofstetter

We investigated the mechanisms and isotope effects associated with the N-dealkylation and N-atom oxidation of substituted N-methyl- and N,N-dimethylanilines to identify isotope fractionation trends for the assessment of oxidations of aromatic N-alkyl moieties by compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA). In laboratory batch model systems, we determined the C, H, and N isotope enrichment factors for the oxidation by MnO(2) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP), derived apparent (13)C-, (2)H-, and (15)N-kinetic isotope effects (AKIEs), and characterized reaction products. The N-atom oxidation pathway leading to radical coupling products typically exhibited inverse (15)N-AKIEs (up to 0.991) and only minor (13)C- and (2)H-AKIEs. Oxidative N-dealkylation, in contrast, was subject to large normal (13)C- and (2)H-AKIEs (up to 1.019 and 3.1, respectively) and small (15)N-AKIEs. Subtle changes of the compounds electronic properties due to different types of aromatic and/or N-alkyl substituents resulted in changes of reaction mechanisms, rate-limiting step(s), and thus isotope fractionation trends. The complex sequence of electron and proton transfers during the oxidative transformation of substituted aromatic N-alkyl amines suggests highly compound- and mechanism-dependent isotope effects precluding extrapolations to other organic micropollutants reacting along the same degradation pathways.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2012

Carbon and Nitrogen Isotope Effects Associated with the Dioxygenation of Aniline and Diphenylamine

Sarah G. Pati; Kwanghee Shin; Marita Skarpeli-Liati; Jakov Bolotin; Soren N. Eustis; Jim C. Spain; Thomas B. Hofstetter

Dioxygenation of aromatic rings is frequently the initial step of biodegradation of organic subsurface pollutants. This process can be tracked by compound-specific isotope analysis to assess the extent of contaminant transformation, but the corresponding isotope effects, especially for dioxygenation of N-substituted, aromatic contaminants, are not well understood. We investigated the C and N isotope fractionation associated with the biodegradation of aniline and diphenylamine using pure cultures of Burkholderia sp. strain JS667, which can biodegrade both compounds, each by a distinct dioxygenase enzyme. For diphenylamine, the C and N isotope enrichment was normal with ε(C)- and ε(N)-values of -0.6 ± 0.1‰ and -1.0 ± 0.1‰, respectively. In contrast, N isotopes of aniline were subject to substantial inverse fractionation (ε(N) of +13 ± 0.5‰), whereas the ε(C)-value was identical to that of diphenylamine. A comparison of the apparent kinetic isotope effects for aniline and diphenylamine dioxygenation with those from abiotic oxidation by manganese oxide (MnO(2)) suggest that the oxidation of a diarylamine system leads to distinct C-N bonding changes compared to aniline regardless of reaction mechanism and oxidant involved. Combined evaluation of the C and N isotope signatures of the contaminants reveals characteristic Δδ(15)N/Δδ(13)C-trends for the identification of diphenylamine and aniline oxidation in contaminated subsurfaces and for the distinction of aniline oxidation from its formation by microbial and/or abiotic reduction of nitrobenzene.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Photoelectron spectroscopic and theoretical studies of Fem−(coronene)n (m=1,2, n=1,2) complexes

Xiang Li; Soren N. Eustis; Kit H. Bowen; Anil K. Kandalam; Puru Jena

Fe(m)(coronene)(n) (m=1,2, n=1,2) cluster anions were generated by a laser vaporization source and studied by anion photoelectron spectroscopy. Density functional theory was used to calculate the structures and the spin multiplicities of those clusters as well as the electron affinities and photodetachment transitions. The calculated magnetic moments of Fe(1)(coronene)(1) and Fe(2)(coronene)(1) clusters suggest that coronene could be a suitable template on which to deposit small iron clusters and that these in turn might form the basis of an iron cluster-based magnetic material. Fe(1)(coronene)(2) and Fe(2)(coronene)(2) cluster anions and their corresponding neutrals prefer the sandwich-type structures, and the ground state structures of these clusters are all staggered sandwiches.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Controlling Factors in the Rates of Oxidation of Anilines and Phenols by Triplet Methylene Blue in Aqueous Solution

Paul R. Erickson; Nicolas Walpen; Jennifer J. Guerard; Soren N. Eustis; J. Samuel Arey; Kristopher McNeill

Anilines and phenols are structurally similar compound classes that both are susceptible to oxidation by excited state triplet sensitizers but undergo oxidation by different mechanisms. To gain an understanding of the factors that control the rate of oxidation of anilines and phenols by triplet excited states, a kinetic study was performed on the oxidation of substituted anilines and phenols by methylene blue. The rate constants of one-electron transfer from anilines to triplet state methylene blue and their dependence on the reaction free energy are well fit to a Sandros-Boltzmann model. The observed rate constants are also well modeled when aniline oxidation potentials derived computationally are used. For phenols, the proton-coupled electron transfer rate constants were found to correlate primarily with O-H bond dissociation free energy and secondarily with phenol pKa. Rate constants for phenols could be modeled using computed bond dissociation free energies. These results provide a basis for predicting aniline and phenol oxidation rates, which could be valuable, for example, in assessing the likely persistence and fate of aniline- and phenol-based aqueous environmental pollutants.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Ammonia-hydrogen bromide and ammonia-hydrogen iodide complexes: Anion photoelectron and ab initio studies

Soren N. Eustis; Alexander Whiteside; Dongxia Wang; Maciej Gutowski; Kit H. Bowen

The ammonia-hydrogen bromide and ammonia-hydrogen iodide, anionic heterodimers were studied by anion photoelectron spectroscopy. In complementary studies, these anions and their neutral counterparts were also investigated via ab initio theory at the coupled cluster level. In both systems, neutral NH(3)...HX dimers were predicted to be linear, hydrogen-bonded complexes, whereas their anionic dimers were found to be proton-transferred species of the form, (NH(4)(+)X(-))(-). Both experimentally measured and theoretically predicted vertical detachment energies (VDE) are in excellent agreement for both systems, with values for (NH(4)(+)Br(-))(-) being 0.65 and 0.67 eV, respectively, and values for (NH(4)(+)I(-))(-) being 0.77 and 0.81 eV, respectively. These systems are discussed in terms of our previous study of (NH(4)(+)Cl(-))(-).


Archive | 2008

STABLE VALENCE ANIONS OF NUCLEIC ACID BASES AND DNA STRAND BREAKS INDUCED BY LOW ENERGY ELECTRONS

Janusz Rak; Kamil Mazurkiewicz; Monika Kobyłecka; Piotr Storoniak; Maciej Haranczyk; Iwona Dąbkowska; Rafał A. Bachorz; Maciej Gutowski; Dunja Radisic; Sarah T. Stokes; Soren N. Eustis; Di Wang; Xiang Li; Yeon Jae Ko; Kit H. Bowen

The last decade has witnessed immense advances in our understanding of the effects of ionizing radiation on biological systems. As the genetic information carrier in biological systems, DNA is the most important species which is prone to damage by high energy photons. Ionizing radiations destroy DNA indirectly by forming low energy electrons (LEEs) as secondary products of the interaction between ionizing radiation and water. An understanding of the mechanism that leads to the formation of single and double strand breaks may be important in guiding the further development of anticancer radiation therapy. In this article we demonstrate the likely involvement of stable nucleobases anions in the formation of DNA strand breaks – a concept which the radiation research community has not focused on so far. In Section refch21:sec21.1 we discuss the current status of studies related to the interaction between DNA and LEEs. The next section is devoted to the description of proton transfer induced by electron attachment to the complexes between nucleobases and various proton donors – a process leading to the strong stabilization of nucleobases anions. Then, we review our results concerning the anionic binary complexes of nucleobases with particular emphasize on the GC and AT systems. Next, the possible consequences of interactions between DNA and proteins in the context of electron attachment are briefly discussed. Further, we focus on existing proposal of single strand break formation in DNA. Ultimately, open questions as well perspectives of studies on electron induced DNA damage are discussed

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Kit H. Bowen

Johns Hopkins University

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Xiang Li

Johns Hopkins University

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Di Wang

Johns Hopkins University

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Dunja Radisic

Johns Hopkins University

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Yeon Jae Ko

Johns Hopkins University

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