Visual Data Exploration and Analysis -- Report of theVisualization Breakout Session at the 2003 SCaLeS Workshop - VolumeII (open access)

Visual Data Exploration and Analysis -- Report of theVisualization Breakout Session at the 2003 SCaLeS Workshop - VolumeII

This article describes the role of scientific visualizationin computational and experimental sciences with emphasis upon futureresearch challenges.
Date: January 12, 2004
Creator: Bethel, W.; Frank, R.; Fulcomer, S.; Hansen, C.; Joy, k.; Kohl, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CARBON DIOXIDE FIXATION. (open access)

CARBON DIOXIDE FIXATION.

Solar carbon dioxide fixation offers the possibility of a renewable source of chemicals and fuels in the future. Its realization rests on future advances in the efficiency of solar energy collection and development of suitable catalysts for CO{sub 2} conversion. Recent achievements in the efficiency of solar energy conversion and in catalysis suggest that this approach holds a great deal of promise for contributing to future needs for fuels and chemicals.
Date: January 12, 2000
Creator: Fujita, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CARBON DIOXIDE (REDUCTION) (open access)

CARBON DIOXIDE (REDUCTION)

None
Date: January 12, 2000
Creator: Fujita, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
REFLECTIONS ON THE TWO-STATE ELECTRON TRANSFER MODEL. (open access)

REFLECTIONS ON THE TWO-STATE ELECTRON TRANSFER MODEL.

There is general agreement that the two most important factors determining electron transfer rates in solution are the degree of electronic interaction between the donor and acceptor sites, and the changes in the nuclear configurations of the donor, acceptor, and surrounding medium that occur upon the gain or loss of an electron Ll-51. The electronic interaction of the sites will be very weak, and the electron transfer slow, when the sites are far apart or their interaction is symmetry or spin forbidden. Since electron motion is much faster than nuclear motion, energy conservation requires that, prior to the actual electron transfer, the nuclear configurations of the reactants and the surrounding medium adjust from their equilibrium values to a configuration (generally) intermediate between that of the reactants and products. In the case of electron transfer between , two metal complexes in a polar solvent, the nuclear configuration changes involve adjustments in the metal-ligand and intraligand bond lengths and angles, and changes in the orientations of the surrounding solvent molecules. In common with ordinary chemical reactions, an electron transfer reaction can then be described in terms of the motion of the system on an energy surface from the reactant equilibrium configuration (initial …
Date: January 12, 2000
Creator: Brunschwig, B. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library