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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(48): 26472-26476, 2023 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37975588

ABSTRACT

The selection and design of charge integration methods remain an outstanding challenge in materials chemistry. In complex materials like electrides, this challenge is amplified by the small charge and complex shape of electride wave functions. For these reasons, popular integration methods, such as the Bader method, usually fail to assign any charge to the bare electrons in an electride. To address this challenge, we developed an algorithm that instead partitions the charge based on the electron localization function (ELF), a popular scheme for visualizing chemically important features in molecules and solids. The algorithm uses Bader segmentation of the ELF to find the electride electrons and Voronoi segmentation of the ELF to identify atoms. We apply this method, "BadELF", to the quantification of atomic radii and oxidation states in both ionic compounds and electrides. For ionic compounds, we find that the BadELF method yields radii that agree closely with Shannon crystal radii, while the oxidation states agree closely with the Bader method. When they are applied to electrides, however, only the BadELF algorithm yields chemically meaningful charges. We argue that the BadELF method provides a useful strategy to identify electrides and obtain new insight into their most essential property: the quantity of electrons within them.

2.
Sci Data ; 10(1): 90, 2023 02 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36774371

ABSTRACT

Although lithium-ion batteries have transformed energy storage, there is a need to develop battery technologies with improved performance. Fluoride-ion batteries (FIBs) may be promising alternatives in part due to their high theoretical energy density and natural elemental abundance. However, electrode materials for FIBs, particularly cathodes, have not been systematically evaluated, limiting rapid progress. Here, we evaluate ternary fluorides from the Materials Project crystal structure database to identify promising cathode materials for FIBs. Structures are further assessed based on stability and whether fluorination/defluorination occurs without unwanted disproportionation reactions. Properties are presented for pairs of fluorinated/defluorinated materials including theoretical energy densities, cost approximations, and bandgaps. We aim to supply a dataset for extracting property and structural trends of ternary fluoride materials that may aid in the discovery of next-generation battery materials.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(24): 10862-10869, 2022 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35675664

ABSTRACT

Electrides are exotic materials that typically have electrons present in well-defined lattice sites rather than within atoms. Although all known electrides have an electropositive metal cation adjacent to the electride site, the effect of cation electronegativity on the properties of electrides is not yet known. Here, we examine trivalent metal carbides with varying degrees of electronegativity and experimentally synthesize Sc2C. Our studies identify the material as a two-dimensional (2D) electride, even though Sc is more electronegative than any metal previously found adjacent to an electride site. Further, by exploring Sc2C and Al2C computationally, we find that higher electronegativity of the cation drives greater hybridization between metal and electride orbitals, which opens a band gap in these materials. Sc2C is the first 2D electride semiconductor, and we propose a design rule that cation electronegativity drives the change in its band structure.

4.
J Chem Inf Model ; 61(1): 324-334, 2021 01 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33378183

ABSTRACT

Recent experiments indicate that the C-Jun amino-terminal kinase-interacting protein 1 (JIP1) binds to and activates the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) protein. JNK is an integral part of cell apoptosis, and misregulation of this process is a causative factor in diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), obesity, and cancer. It has also been shown that JIP1 may increase the phosphorylation of tau by facilitating the interaction between the tau protein and JNK, which could also be a causative factor in AD. Very little is known about the structure and dynamics of JIP1; however, the amino acid composition of the first 350 residues suggests that it contains an intrinsically disordered region. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using AMBER 14 were used to study the structure and dynamics of a functionally active JIP1 10mer fragment to better understand the solution behavior of the fragment. Two microseconds of unbiased MD was performed on the JIP1 10mer fragment in 10 different seeds for a total of 20 µs of simulation time, and from this, seven structurally stable conformations of the 10mer fragment were identified via classical clustering. The 10mer ensemble was also used to build a Markov state model (MSM) that identified four metastable states that encompassed six of the seven conformational families identified by classical dimensional reduction. Based on this MSM, conformational interconversions between the four states occur via two dominant pathways with probability fluxes of 55 and 44% for each individual pathway. Transitions between the initial and final states occur with mean first passage times of 31 (forward) and 16 (reverse) µs.


Subject(s)
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing , Alzheimer Disease , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism , Apoptosis , Humans , JNK Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism , Phosphorylation
5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(21): 9210-9214, 2020 Nov 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33058726

ABSTRACT

It is widely assumed that the gain or loss of electrons in a material must be accompanied by its reduction or oxidation. Here, we report a system in which the insertion/deinsertion of an electron occurs without any reduction or oxidation. Using first-principles methods, we demonstrate this effect in the Y2CF2-[Y2C]2+(e-)2 material system, where (e-) indicates a lattice site containing a bare electron. We present a model in which Y2CF2 is in contact with a fluoride-containing electrolyte and the application of a positive voltage drives fluorination while a negative voltage reverses the process. We show that this chemistry does not change the oxidation states of the host lattice, causes no significant volume expansion, and occurs rapidly at room temperature. Finally, we demonstrate that this mechanism of ion insertion may enable a broad class of anion shuttle battery electrodes, some with gravimetric capacities nearly double those employed in intercalation-type Li-ion batteries.

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