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1.
J Chem Phys ; 159(20)2023 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38010336

ABSTRACT

This study investigates the effects of kinetic energy and projectile size on particle emission from a phenylalanine overlayer adsorbed on a graphene bilayer during argon projectile bombardment. Projectiles of various sizes (1-1000 atoms) and kinetic energies (0.5-40 keV) are used to study their impact on the ejection efficiency, mass distribution, and kinetic and angular spectra of the emitted substances. Particle ejection mechanisms are discussed in scenarios with and without sample perforation. Additionally, this study investigated the potential use of graphene in secondary ion mass spectrometry or neutral secondary mass spectrometry analyses.

2.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 13(2): 628-633, 2022 Jan 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35019649

ABSTRACT

Modeling chemical reactions in condensed phases is difficult. Interaction potentials (or force fields) like ReaxFF can perform this modeling with a high overall accuracy, but the disadvantage of ReaxFF is a low simulation speed arising from costly algorithms, in particular charge equilibration. Therefore, we reparametrized ReaxFF to incorporate Coulomb forces into other terms of the force field. Because of this change, our charge-implicit ReaxFF-CHO is >2 times faster than the original parametrization. Despite the lack of explicit electrostatic interactions, our potential can correctly model the reactions and densities of systems containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms. We have used the new potential to simulate bombardment of trehalose by water clusters. It has been observed experimentally that these water projectiles can increase the sensitivity of secondary ion mass spectrometry by more than an order of magnitude, but no explanation for this phenomenon was given. Our simulations show that the increase in the intensity of the recorded signal coincides with the emission of trehalose-water complexes.

3.
Anal Chem ; 92(20): 13785-13793, 2020 10 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32872776

ABSTRACT

Three-dimensional (3D) molecular imaging of biological structures is important for a wide range of research. In recent decades, secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) has been recognized as a powerful technique for both two-dimensional and 3D molecular imaging. Sample fixations (e.g., chemical fixation and cryogenic fixation methods) are necessary to adapt biological samples to the vacuum condition in the SIMS chamber, which has been demonstrated to be nontrivial and less controllable, thus limiting the wider application of SIMS on 3D molecular analysis of biological samples. Our group recently developed in situ liquid SIMS that offers great opportunities for the molecular study of various liquids and liquid interfaces. In this work, we demonstrate that a further development of the vacuum-compatible microfluidic device used in in situ liquid SIMS provides a convenient freeze-fixation of biological samples and leads to more controllable and convenient 3D molecular imaging. The special design of this new vacuum-compatible liquid chamber allows an easy determination of sputter rates of ice, which is critical for calibrating the depth scale of frozen biological samples. Sputter yield of a 20 keV Ar1800+ ion on ice has been determined as 1500 (±8%) water molecules per Ar1800+ ion, consistent with our results from molecular dynamics simulations. Moreover, using the information of ice sputter yield, we successfully conduct 3D molecular imaging of frozen homogenized milk and observe network structures of interesting organic and inorganic species. Taken together, our results will significantly benefit various research fields relying on 3D molecular imaging of biological structures.


Subject(s)
Imaging, Three-Dimensional/methods , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Spectrometry, Mass, Secondary Ion , Animals , Freezing , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/instrumentation , Ions/chemistry , Milk/chemistry , Vacuum , Water/chemistry
4.
Anal Chem ; 91(14): 9161-9167, 2019 07 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31194505

ABSTRACT

Molecular dynamics (MD) computer simulations are used to model ejection of particles from ß-carotene samples bombarded by 15 keV Ar2000. The effect of the incidence angle on the angular and kinetic energy distributions is investigated. It has been found that both of these distributions are sensitive to the variation of the incidence angle, particularly near the normal incidence. For impacts along the surface normal, material ejection is azimuthally symmetric, and a significant emission occurs along the surface normal. The kinetic energy distribution of intact molecules has a maximum near 1 eV and terminates below approximately 2 eV. An increase of the incidence angle breaks the azimuthal symmetry. Most of the intact molecules become ejected in the forward direction. The maximum in the polar angle distribution shifts toward large off-normal angles. In addition, the most probable kinetic energy of ejected molecules is significantly increased. The mechanisms of molecular emission responsible for the observed changes are delineated. The implications of the observed ejection characteristics for the utilization of large gas cluster projectiles in secondary neutral mass spectrometry are discussed.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 9(2): 359-363, 2018 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29291618

ABSTRACT

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations continue to make important contributions to understanding chemical and physical processes. Concomitant with the growth of MD simulations is the need to have interaction potentials that both represent the chemistry of the system and are computationally efficient. We propose a modification to the ReaxFF potential for carbon and hydrogen that eliminates the time-consuming charge equilibration, eliminates the acknowledged flaws of the electronegativity equalization method, includes an expanded training set for condensed phases, has a repulsive wall for simulations of energetic particle bombardment, and is compatible with the LAMMPS code. This charge-implicit ReaxFF potential is five times faster than the conventional ReaxFF potential for a simulation of keV particle bombardment with a sample size of over 800 000 atoms.

6.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 7(8): 1559-62, 2016 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27063023

ABSTRACT

Molecular dynamics computer simulations are used to model kiloelectronvolt cluster bombardment of pure hydrocarbon [polyethylene (PE) and polystyrene (PS)] and oxygen-containing [paraformaldehyde (PFA) and polylactic acid (PLA)] polymers by 20 keV C60 projectiles at a 45° impact angle to investigate the chemical effect of oxygen in the substrate material on the sputtering process. The simulations demonstrate that the presence of oxygen enhances the formation of small molecules such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, water, and various molecules containing C═O double bonds. The explanation for the enhanced small molecule formation is the stability of carbon and oxygen multiple bonds relative to multiple bonds with only carbon atoms. This chemistry is reflected in the fraction of the ejected material that has a mass not higher than 104 amu. For PFA and PLA, the fraction is approximately 90% of the total mass, whereas for PE and PS, it is less than half.

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