Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Field Assisted Bonding

Ming, Q.S. and Sexual, J., Joining mechanism of field-assisted bonding of electrolytes to metals, J. Meehan. Eng. 18 (2002) 1-5. [Pg.223]

Field assisted bonding Electrostatic bonding Definition... [Pg.50]

In parallel processes, c.g., field-assisted diffusion and sliding, the bond between the surface and the adatom is never completely broken. Field-assisted diffusion of an adatom on the surface occurs due to the presence of the intense, inhomogeneous electric field between the probe tip and the surface, which gives rise to a potential gradient. [Pg.1046]

Assisted model building with energy refinement (AMBER) is the name of both a force field and a molecular mechanics program. It was parameterized specifically for proteins and nucleic acids. AMBER uses only five bonding and nonbonding terms along with a sophisticated electrostatic treatment. No cross terms are included. Results are very good for proteins and nucleic acids, but can be somewhat erratic for other systems. [Pg.53]

Complex ions used for electroplating are anions. The cathode tends to repel them, and their transport is entirely by diffusion. Conversely, the field near the cathode assists cation transport. Complex cyanides deserve some elaboration in view of their commercial importance. It is improbable that those used are covalent co-ordination compounds, and the covalent bond breaks too slowly to accommodate the speed of electrode reactions. The electronic structure of the cyanide ion is ... [Pg.345]

Easy availability of ultrafast high intensity lasers has fuelled the dream of their use as molecular scissors to cleave selected bonds (1-3). Theoretical approaches to laser assisted control of chemical reactions have kept pace and demonstrated remarkable success (4,5) with experimental results (6-9) buttressing the theoretical claims. The different tablished theoretical approaches to control have been reviewed recently (10). While the focus of these theoretical approaches has been on field design, the photodissociation yield has also been found to be extremely sensitive to the initial vibrational state from which photolysis is induced and results for (11), HI (12,13), HCl (14) and HOD (2,3,15,16) reveal a crucial role for the initial state of the system in product selectivity and enhancement. This critical dependence on initial vibrational state indicates that a suitably optimized linear superposition of the field free vibrational states may be another route to selective control of photodissociation. [Pg.263]

The reactant R2 can also be considered to be a solvent molecule. The global kinetics become pseudo first order in Rl. For a SNl mechanism, the bond breaking in R1 can be solvent assisted in the sense that the ionic fluctuation state is stabilized by solvent polarization effects and the probability of having an interconversion via heterolytic decomposition is facilitated by the solvent. This is actually found when external and/or reaction field effects are introduced in the quantum chemical calculation of the energy of such species [2]. The kinetics, however, may depend on the process moving the system from the contact ionic-pair to a solvent-separated ionic pair, but the interconversion step takes place inside the contact ion-pair following the quantum mechanical mechanism described in section 4.1. Solvation then should ensure quantum resonance conditions. [Pg.326]


See other pages where Field Assisted Bonding is mentioned: [Pg.207]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.1178]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.1178]    [Pg.284]    [Pg.407]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.655]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.220]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.207 ]




SEARCH



Anodic Field-Assisted Bonding

Field-assisted thermal bonding

© 2024 chempedia.info