Electron Spin-Polarization Dependent Damage to Chiral Amino Acid l-Histidine.
Micah J SchaibleRichard A RosenbergSramana KunduThomas M OrlandoPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2020)
The damage of approximately monolayer films of l-histidine by low-energy spin-polarized electrons (SPE) ejected from a magnetized cobalt substrate has been probed using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Average damage cross sections for N-containing motifs of l-histidine are 25-30 and 2-5 Mb for zwitterions and neutral molecules, respectively. The magnetization direction of the substrate, which controls the ejected SPE helicity, was reversed in situ, and statistically significant differences in the damage cross sections of 10-30% were measured between positive and negative electron helicities. This is the first measurement of spin dichroism (SD) in an amino acid. The differential cross sections suggest that inelastic scattering of SPE with chiral molecules could contribute to the persistence of one enantiomer vs the other under certain irradiation conditions, particularly for the zwitterionic species.
Keyphrases
- amino acid
- room temperature
- ms ms
- oxidative stress
- single molecule
- density functional theory
- high resolution
- ionic liquid
- solid phase extraction
- capillary electrophoresis
- molecular dynamics simulations
- computed tomography
- electron microscopy
- mass spectrometry
- transition metal
- reduced graphene oxide
- structural basis
- genetic diversity
- contrast enhanced
- dual energy