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Chemistry

“Rewriting Chemistry with Light: A Breakthrough in Fossil Fuel Transformation”

Researchers at Colorado State University have developed a new photoredox catalysis system that uses visible light mimicking photosynthesis to drive energy-intensive chemical reactions at room temperature. This groundbreaking process could significantly reduce the energy required in chemical manufacturing, especially in industries reliant on fossil fuels.

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The world is on the cusp of a revolutionary change in the way we transform fossil fuels into useful modern chemicals. Researchers at Colorado State University have made a groundbreaking discovery that uses light to rewrite the chemistry of fossil fuels, reducing energy demands and associated pollution. This breakthrough, published in Science, could be a game-changer for industries reliant on chemical manufacturing.

At the forefront of this research are professors Garret Miyake and Robert Paton from the Department of Chemistry and the Center for Sustainable Photoredox Catalysis (SuPRCat). Inspired by photosynthesis, their organic photoredox catalysis system harnesses visible light to gently alter the properties of chemical compounds. By exposing them to two separate photons, the team’s system generates energy needed for desired reactions, performing super-reducing reactions that are normally difficult and energy-intensive.

The research has shown remarkable results on aromatic hydrocarbons – resistant compounds like benzene in fossil fuels. Miyake boasts that their technology is “the most efficient system currently available” for reducing these compounds, paving the way for the production of chemicals needed for plastics and medicine.

This work continues the efforts of the U.S. National Science Foundation Center for Sustainable Photoredox Catalysis at CSU, led by Miyake as its director. This multi-institution research effort aims to transform chemical synthesis processes across various uses, making synthetic and computational chemists team up to understand the fundamental chemical nature of photoredox catalysis.

Katharine Covert, program director for the NSF Centers for Chemical Innovation program, highlights the importance of photoredox catalysis in pharmaceutical development and other industries. Through the NSF Center for Sustainable Photoredox Catalysis, researchers are developing catalysis systems similar to the one described in this paper to support energy-efficient production of ammonia for fertilizers, the breakdown of PFAS forever chemicals, and the upcycling of plastics.

Miyake emphasizes the urgency of meeting these challenges and making a more sustainable future for our world. He concludes that “the world has a timeclock that is expiring,” and we must develop sustainable technologies before it’s too late.

This breakthrough has far-reaching implications, not just in chemical manufacturing but also in addressing pressing environmental concerns. As researchers continue to push the boundaries of what’s possible with light-based chemistry, one thing is certain – the future of fossil fuel transformation has never looked brighter.

Chemistry

Scientists Stunned by Record-Breaking, Watermelon-Shaped Nucleus: Breakthrough Discovery in Nuclear Physics

Scientists in Finland have measured the heaviest known nucleus to undergo proton emission, discovering the rare isotope 188-astatine. It exhibits a unique shape and may reveal a new kind of nuclear interaction.

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Scientists have made a groundbreaking discovery in nuclear physics, measuring the heaviest nucleus ever recorded to decay via proton emission. This achievement marks the first time such a feat has been accomplished in over 30 years, with the previous record set in 1996.

The research team from the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, successfully produced and measured the lightest known isotope of astatine, 188At, consisting of 85 protons and 103 neutrons. This exotic nucleus was created through a complex process involving a fusion-evaporation reaction and identified using a sophisticated detector setup.

“The properties of this nucleus reveal a trend change in the binding energy of the valence proton,” explains Doctoral Researcher Henna Kokkonen, who led the study. “This could be explained by an interaction unprecedented in heavy nuclei.”

The research team’s findings have significant implications for our understanding of atomic nuclei and their behavior. By expanding a theoretical model to interpret the measured data, scientists can now better comprehend the intricate mechanisms governing these complex systems.

Kokkonen notes that studying such exotic nuclei is extremely challenging due to their short lifetimes and low production cross sections. However, precise techniques like those employed in this study have made it possible to unlock new insights into the fundamental nature of matter.

The research article was published in Nature Communications as part of an international collaboration involving experts in theoretical nuclear physics. This breakthrough discovery not only pushes the boundaries of human knowledge but also has far-reaching implications for our understanding of the universe and its mysteries.

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Chemistry

Tiny Gold “Super Atoms” Could Spark a Quantum Revolution

Scientists have found that microscopic gold clusters can act like the world’s most accurate quantum systems, while being far easier to scale up. With tunable spin properties and mass production potential, they could transform quantum computing and sensing.

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As researchers from Penn State and Colorado State have demonstrated, tiny gold “super atoms” could revolutionize the field of quantum computing. These clusters, which have a core of gold surrounded by other molecules called ligands, can mimic the properties of trapped atomic ions in a gas, allowing scientists to take advantage of these spin properties in a system that can be easily scaled up.

The researchers found that gold clusters can exhibit spin polarization, a property that is usually fixed in a material. This means that electrons in the cluster can be aligned with each other, making it possible to maintain their correlation for a longer time and remain accurate for much longer periods. The current state-of-the-art system for high accuracy and low error in quantum information systems involve trapped atomic ions — atoms with an electric charge — in a gaseous state.

The gold clusters, which can be synthesized relatively large amounts at one time, have the key properties needed to carry out spin-based operations. They can mimic the super-positions that are done in the trapped, gas-phase dilute ions, and have been identified as having 19 distinguishable and unique Rydberg-like spin-polarized states.

The researchers determined the spin polarization of the gold clusters using a similar method used with traditional atoms. While one type of gold cluster had 7% spin polarization, a cluster with different ligands approached 40% spin polarization, which is competitive with some of the leading two-dimensional quantum materials.

This research has opened up new possibilities for chemists to use their synthesis skills to design materials with tunable results, and could lead to breakthroughs in quantum computing and other fields. The researchers plan to explore how different structures within the ligands impact spin polarization and how they could be manipulated to fine tune spin properties.

In conclusion, tiny gold “super atoms” have the potential to revolutionize the field of quantum computing and could lead to breakthroughs in various fields.

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Chemistry

From Lead to Gold in a Fraction of a Second at the Large Hadron Collider

At the Large Hadron Collider, scientists from the University of Kansas achieved a fleeting form of modern-day alchemy — turning lead into gold for just a fraction of a second. Using ultra-peripheral collisions, where ions nearly miss but interact through powerful photon exchanges, they managed to knock protons out of nuclei, creating new, short-lived elements. This breakthrough not only grabbed global attention but could help design safer, more advanced particle accelerators of the future.

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The Large Hadron Collider (LHC), a 17-mile particle accelerator buried under the French-Swiss border, has achieved the centuries-old dream of alchemists: transforming lead into gold. However, this accomplishment was not without its limitations – it happened within a fraction of a second. The scientists reported their results in Physical Reviews.

The achievement was made possible by the sophisticated and sensitive detector called ALICE, which is roughly the size of a McMansion. It was scientists from the University of Kansas, working on the ALICE experiment, who developed the technique that tracked “ultra-peripheral” collisions between protons and ions that resulted in gold creation at the LHC.

According to Daniel Tapia Takaki, professor of physics and leader of KU’s group at ALICE, these ultra-peripheral collisions involve near misses between particles. The ions racing around the LHC tunnel are heavy nuclei with many protons, each generating powerful electric fields. When accelerated, these charged ions emit photons – they shine light.

“When you accelerate an electric charge to near light speeds, it starts shining,” Tapia Takaki said. “One ion can shine light that essentially takes a picture of the other. When that light is energetic enough, it can probe deep inside the other nucleus, like a high-energy flashbulb.”

During these ultra-peripheral collisions, surprising interactions can occur, including the creation of gold through photon-photon collisions. These events are incredibly clean, with almost nothing else produced. They contrast with typical collisions where sprays of particles flying everywhere.

However, the ALICE detector and the LHC were designed to collect data on head-on collisions that result in messy sprays of particles. These clean interactions were hard to detect with earlier setups.

Tapia Takaki’s KU co-authors on the paper are graduate student Anna Binoy; graduate student Amrit Gautam; postdoctoral researcher Tommaso Isidori; postdoctoral research assistant Anisa Khatun; and research scientist Nicola Minafra. The KU team at the LHC ALICE experiment plans to continue studying the ultra-peripheral collisions.

Tapia Takaki said that while the creation of gold fascinated the public, the potential of understanding the interactions goes deeper. This light is so energetic, it can knock protons out of the nucleus, sometimes one, sometimes two, three or even four protons. We can see these ejected protons directly with our detectors.

Each proton removed changes the elements: One gives thallium, two gives mercury, three gives gold. These new nuclei are very short-lived, they decay quickly, but not always immediately. Sometimes they travel along the beamline and hit parts of the collider – triggering safety systems.

That’s why this research matters beyond the headlines. With proposals for future colliders even larger than the LHC – some up to 100 kilometers in Europe and China – you need to understand these nuclear byproducts. This ‘alchemy’ may be crucial for designing the next generation of machines.

This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics.

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