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Vincenzo Aquilanti

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Vincenzo Aquilanti
Born
Vincenzo Aquilanti

(1939-12-12) December 12, 1939 (age 84)
Rome, Italy
NationalityItalian
Alma materSapienza University of Rome
Known forMolecular dynamics
Scientific career
FieldsChemistry
InstitutionsUniversity of Perugia
Federal University of Bahia
National Research Council (Italy)
Doctoral advisorVincenzo Caglioti

Vincenzo Aquilanti (born December 12, 1939) is an Italian chemist, emeritus professor at the University of Perugia.

Career

He graduated in Chemistry with Vincenzo Caglioti and Giangualberto Volpi at Sapienza University of Rome in 1963, where he started his career of scientist. In 1967–1968 he had been working in Dudley Herschbach's group at Harvard University. At the University of Perugia from 1968, he became full professor of general and inorganic chemistry in 1980. He is emeritus professor at the Università degli Studi di Perugia since 2010. He had been invited professor at the Federal University of Bahia from 2012 to 2016. Currently, he is associated to the Matter Structure Institute of the National Research Council [1]

Research

The scientific activity, documented by more than 430 papers (h-index 50), concerns experimental and theoretical aspects in the fields of radiation chemistry, of the ionic reactions in the gas phase, of elastic, inelastic and reactive collisions, between atoms and simple molecules of atmospheric and astrophysical interest, of quantum and semi-classical physical chemistry.

His experimental activity was initiated in Rome in the Sixties, with the study of the role of the reactions involving ions in radiation chemistry and of the mechanisms of ion-molecule reactions. The construction in Perugia in the Seventies of an original experimental apparatus, where coupling the technique of crossed atomic and molecular beams with the spectroscopic emission detection has led to the discovery of phenomena of polarization and interference in atomic and molecular collisions. A variant of such an apparatus is still operative in Barcelona. In the 80s, through an original technique of magnetic analysis of type Stern-Gerlach for the orbital states of polarization of spin and electronic angular momentum of atoms, such as halogens (F and Cl), oxygen, sulphur, he has obtained an ample phenomenology on the interactions of these species by molecular-beams scattering. These interactions provide remarkable information on the initial phases of chemical reactions, that involve long range forces determined by their open shell structure. From the Nineties, following the discovery of effects of rotational alignment in molecules in supersonic expansions, he has established a technology for the study of collisions of aligned molecules, obtaining the characterization of intermolecular forces and of their anisotropy. In the last years, he is developing, in the Perugia, Trieste, Taipei and Osaka laboratories, experimental instrumentations for the study of the collisional origin of molecular chirality.[citation needed]

The theoretical activity is being developed in parallel to the experimental one, a fundamental theme being the quantum treatment of phenomena such asthose observed in the study of elementary chemical processes, where the motion of nuclei enters into play: their behaviour is at the borderline of classical mechanics (semi-classical regime). On this theme (quantum mechanics in the short-wave limit) he has studied non-adiabatic processes, the role of singularities (catastrophes), the chaotic regime, and has also contributed to the historical – epistemological debate. His major theoretical effort has concerned the formulation and implementation of the treatment of the dynamics of processes involving few bodies, that encounter as a quantum mechanical principal obstacle the necessity to explicitly treat the coupling of angular momenta and spin, with electronic, rotational and orbital momenta. He has contributed in this area to the introduction of hyperspherical coordinates and harmonics, developing analytical tools and original algorithms. In the last years, he has also focused on the stuy of the deviations from the Arrhenius law.

Academies and memberships

1985–91 – Italian Chemical Society (President, Section Umbria, 1985–1991). 

1995–98 – European Physical Society (deputy-chair, Atomic and Molecular Physics Division.

2005–10 – INTAS Council of Scientists, Bruxelles.

Italian Physical Society.

Italian Society of Logic and Philosophy of Science.

Awards and honors

In 2005 he was elected to the Accademia Nazionale delle Scienze detta dei XL and in 2009 to the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei.

In 2009 a special issue of the Journal of Physical Chemistry is dedicated to him by the American Chemical Society.[2] He was awarded the 2014 R.B. Bernstein Medal in Stereodynamics.[3]

Publications

  • Aquilanti, V.; Grossi, G.; Laganà, A. (1982). "On hyperspherical mapping and harmonic expansions for potential energy surfaces". J. Chem. Phys. 76 (3): 1587–88. Bibcode:1982JChPh..76.1587A. doi:10.1063/1.443121.
  • Aquilanti, V.; Ascenzi, D.; Cappelletti, D.; Pirani, F. (1994). "Velocity dependence of collisional alignment of oxygen molecules in gaseous expansions". Nature. 371 (6496): 399–402. Bibcode:1994Natur.371..399A. doi:10.1038/371399a0.
  • Aquilanti, V.; Ascenzi, D.; Bartolomei, M.; Cappelletti, D.; Cavalli, S.; de Castro Vitores, M.; Pirani, F. (1999). "Quantum interference scattering of aligned molecules: Bonding in O4 and Role of Spin Coupling" (PDF). Phys. Rev. Lett. 82 (1): 69–72. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..82...69A. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.69. hdl:10261/100467.
  • Aquilanti, V.; Ascenzi, D.; Bartolomei, M.; Cappelletti, D.; Cavalli, S.; de Castro Vitores, M.; Pirani, F. (1999). "Molecular beam scattering of aligned oxygen molecules. The nature of the Bond in the O2−O2 Dimer". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121 (46): 10794–802. doi:10.1021/ja9917215. hdl:10261/100013.
  • Aquilanti, V.; Cornicchi, E.; Teixidor, M. M.; Saendig, N.; Pirani, F.; Cappelletti, D. (2005). "Glory scattering measurement of water−noble-gas interactions: the birth of the hydrogen bond". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 44 (16): 2356–59. doi:10.1002/anie.200462704. PMID 15806609.; Angew. Chem. 117, 2408–12 (2005).

References

  1. ^ Aquilanti, Vincenzo (2009). "Vincenzo Aquilanti's Autobiography: A Narrative of My Voyages in Science". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 113 (52): 14184–14190. Bibcode:2009JPCA..11314184A. doi:10.1021/jp9097759. PMID 20028151.
  2. ^ http://pubs.acs.org/toc/jpcafh/113/52
  3. ^ "Stereodynamics 2014".