


Physical chemistry focuses on understanding the physical basis of chemical phenomena. This goal is pursued through the concerted efforts of experimentalists and theorists. While experimentalists design and carry out laboratory investigations of chemical systems, theorists conceive and develop theoretical tools to explain and predict system properties. Physical chemistry provides the fundamental scientific tools to investigate systems of interest in a wide range of disciplines, including engineering and biology.
At the University of Oregon, research in physical chemistry focuses on a variety of topics. Research in spectroscopy comprises theoretical quantum mechanical approaches as well as experimental techniques. On the theoretical front, studies in semiclassical and quantum mechanics include the dynamics of highly excited molecules (Kellman) to interpret experimental spectra and unravel mechanisms to model internal molecular energy flow and investigate fundamental issues in reaction dynamics, such as the nature of the reaction coordinate and transition state; the development of a formal description of wavepacket interferometry (Cina) to gain direct experimental information at the level of time-dependent quantum mechanical wave functions; and the elucidation of molecular structure through theoretical studies of electronic potential energy surfaces (Herrick).
Experimental spectroscopy includes pulsed laser techniques to probe the molecular structure at wet interfaces involving a liquid in contact with air, solids, or other immiscible liquids (Richmond); the development of new optical techniques including FICS to study the motions of intracellular species in cellular compartments as well as macromolecules in liquids; and novel ultra-fast non-linear spectroscopic methods to study the dynamics of excited states in molecules and how they interact with their local environments (Marcus).
A new focus area is quantum control where we investigate theoretically (Cina) how wavepacket interferometry can be used as a form of analogue computation to the experimentally determined (Marcus, Dyke) evolution of nuclear wave functions of molecules, as driven by a short laser pulse of arbitrary temporal shape.
Theoretical (Guenza) and experimental (Marcus) studies in statistical mechanics of soft condensed matter and complex fluids focus on the investigation of structure and dynamics of complex molecular systems in the liquid phase (macromolecules and colloids). Understanding and predicting the behavior of these systems is of interest for engineers (plastics, fibers, and other viscoelastic materials) as well as for biologists for whom complex systems of interest include proteins, nucleic acids, and protein-protein aggregates such as cellular filaments. For those systems physical chemistry extends into the realm of biophysics including different levels of coarse graining: from the submicroscopic electronic energy transfer studies of the photophysical processes underlying biochemical energy-generation in photosynthesis (Cina), to the correlation between conformational structure and biological activity in signal transduction proteins and molecular motors (Guenza), to the dynamics of intracellular species in living cells (Marcus).
The physics of chemical systems at interfaces includes spectroscopic studies of organic, inorganic, and biomolecules at surfaces and interfaces (Richmond) as well as electrochemical and electrical investigations of charge transfer at molecular or nanoparticle-based semiconducting interfaces (Lonergan). Research on semiconductor interfaces aims at identifying and controlling novel systems that enhance and/or mimic the behavior of conventional semiconductor interfaces. The focus is to understand how the unique chemistry of “new” materials manifests itself in interfacial charge transfer processes.
Jeff A. Cina
Thomas R. Dyke
Paul C.Engelking
Marina G. Guenza
David R. Herrick
Michael E. Kellman
Mark C. Lonergan
Andrew H. Marcus
Geraldine L. Richmond
Biochemistry/Molecular Biology
Biophysics Bioorganic/Medicinal
Chemistry Environmental Chemistry
Inorganic/Organometallic Chemistry Materials
Chemistry Optics & Spectroscopy
Organic Synthesis
Polymer Chemistry Physical
Chemistry Solid-State Chemistry
Surfaces & Interfaces Theoretical
Chemical Physics
WEBMASTER
lynde@uoregon.edu