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1.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(7): 1453-1465, 2023 Jul 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37521801

RESUMO

Chemical and molecular-based computers may be promising alternatives to modern silicon-based computers. In particular, hybrid systems, where tasks are split between a chemical medium and traditional silicon components, may provide access and demonstration of chemical advantages such as scalability, low power dissipation, and genuine randomness. This work describes the development of a hybrid classical-molecular computer (HCMC) featuring an electrochemical reaction on top of an array of discrete electrodes with a fluorescent readout. The chemical medium, optical readout, and electrode interface combined with a classical computer generate a feedback loop to solve several canonical optimization problems in computer science such as number partitioning and prime factorization. Importantly, the HCMC makes constructive use of experimental noise in the optical readout, a milestone for molecular systems, to solve these optimization problems, as opposed to in silico random number generation. Specifically, we show calculations stranded in local minima can consistently converge on a global minimum in the presence of experimental noise. Scalability of the hybrid computer is demonstrated by expanding the number of variables from 4 to 7, increasing the number of possible solutions by 1 order of magnitude. This work provides a stepping stone to fully molecular approaches to solving complex computational problems using chemistry.

2.
Nat Rev Phys ; 4(12): 761-769, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36247217

RESUMO

An oracle that correctly predicts the outcome of every particle physics experiment, the products of every possible chemical reaction or the function of every protein would revolutionize science and technology. However, scientists would not be entirely satisfied because they would want to comprehend how the oracle made these predictions. This is scientific understanding, one of the main aims of science. With the increase in the available computational power and advances in artificial intelligence, a natural question arises: how can advanced computational systems, and specifically artificial intelligence, contribute to new scientific understanding or gain it autonomously? Trying to answer this question, we adopted a definition of 'scientific understanding' from the philosophy of science that enabled us to overview the scattered literature on the topic and, combined with dozens of anecdotes from scientists, map out three dimensions of computer-assisted scientific understanding. For each dimension, we review the existing state of the art and discuss future developments. We hope that this Perspective will inspire and focus research directions in this multidisciplinary emerging field.

3.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 33(47)2021 Sep 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34407523

RESUMO

The electron-induced dissociation of chemisorbed HS to give recoiling H-atoms was investigated on a Si(111)-7 × 7 surface at 270 K by scanning tunnelling microscopy and modelled by density functional theory. Two different H-atom migratory pathways were identified: 'short-range' (S-R; 37%) and 'long-range' (L-R; 42%). In S-R reaction the H-atom recoiled by only 4 Å whereas in L-R the average H-recoil distance was 17 Å extending up to 72 Å. Chemisorbed H-atoms were not detected in the remaining 22% of dissociative events. Excitation involved three successive events, e-+ HS. Molecular dynamics calculations of S-R and L-R recoil of H-atoms were performed using a model based on electron-induced H ⋅ S repulsion. In S-R the repulsion gave the H-atom sufficient energy to dissociate HS, but not enough to result in capture of the H-atom by the adjacent rest Si-atom. In L-R a higher translational energy of the recoiling H, above 0.2 eV, caused the H-atom to 'bounce' off surface atoms and migrate L-R. The finding that H-atom L-R migration followed the ballistics and 'bounce' mechanism is indicative of the generality of this mode of L-R recoil.

4.
Chem Sci ; 11(10): 2647-2656, 2020 Feb 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34084323

RESUMO

The ability to optically monitor a chemical reaction and generate an in situ readout is an important enabling technology, with applications ranging from the monitoring of reactions in flow, to the critical assessment step for combinatorial screening, to mechanistic studies on single reactant and catalyst molecules. Ideally, such a method would be applicable to many polymers and not require only a specific monomer for readout. It should also be applicable if the reactions are carried out in microdroplet chemical reactors, which offer a route to massive scalability in combinatorial searches. We describe a convenient optical method for monitoring polymerization reactions, fluorescence polarization anisotropy monitoring, and show that it can be applied in a robotically generated microdroplet. Further, we compare our method to an established optical reaction monitoring scheme, the use of Aggregation-Induced Emission (AIE) dyes, and find the two monitoring schemes offer sensitivity to different temporal regimes of the polymerization, meaning that the combination of the two provides an increased temporal dynamic range. Anisotropy is sensitive at early times, suggesting it will be useful for detecting new polymerization "hits" in searches for new reactivity, while the AIE dye responds at longer times, suggesting it will be useful for detecting reactions capable of reaching higher molecular weights.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 6(20): 4093-8, 2015 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26722783

RESUMO

The motion of adsorbate molecules across surfaces is fundamental to self-assembly, material growth, and heterogeneous catalysis. Recent Scanning Tunneling Microscopy studies have demonstrated the electron-induced long-range surface-migration of ethylene, benzene, and related molecules, moving tens of Angstroms across Si(100). We present a model of the previously unexplained long-range recoil of chemisorbed ethylene across the surface of silicon. The molecular dynamics reveal two key elements for directed long-range migration: first 'ballistic' motion that causes the molecule to leave the ab initio slab of the surface traveling 3-8 Å above it out of range of its roughness, and thereafter skipping-stone 'bounces' that transport it further to the observed long distances. Using a previously tested Impulsive Two-State model, we predict comparable long-range recoil of atomic chlorine following electron-induced dissociation of chlorophenyl chemisorbed at Cu(110).

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