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Article title
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Abstracts
Hydrogen bond has dual property, classical (electrostatic interaction based on Coulomb's law) and quantum (wave function based on Schrödinger equation). Since Planck's constant is one of the main criteria for decision which process is quantum, or how much is close to be quantum, we use electrical and magnetic forces of valence electrons, as point of departure, to develop method for opto-magnetic fingerprint of matter. During the study of different type of matter we observed phenomena from spectral convolution data of digital images which characterize matter from both covalent and non-covalent bonding. Since water is matter that is most abundant with hydrogen bonds, we present results of 18.2 MΩ water investigation on different temperature and under influence of constant and variable magnetic fields by opto-magnetic method. Bearing in mind that Linus Pauling, in his book Nature of the Chemical Bond (Cornel University Press, 1939), for the first time presented the systematic concept of the hydrogen bond to the molecular world and its machinery, this paper is written in honor to him and 70th anniversary of one of the most important scientific paradigm.
Discipline
- 33.57.+c: Magneto-optical and electro-optical spectra and effects(for electro- and magneto-optical effects in condensed matter spectroscopy, see 78.20.Jq, and 78.20.Ls, respectively)
- 33.20.Kf: Visible spectra
- 42.50.Ex: Optical implementations of quantum information processing and transfer
- 42.25.Ja: Polarization
- 42.30.-d: Imaging and optical processing
Journal
Year
Volume
Issue
Pages
777-781
Physical description
Dates
published
2010-05
Contributors
author
- NanoLab, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Kraljice Marije 16, 11120 Belgrade, Serbia
author
- Galenika Institute, Batajnički drum bb, 11080 Belgrade, Serbia
author
- NanoLab, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Kraljice Marije 16, 11120 Belgrade, Serbia
author
- NanoLab, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Kraljice Marije 16, 11120 Belgrade, Serbia
author
- NanoLab, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, University of Belgrade, Kraljice Marije 16, 11120 Belgrade, Serbia
References
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- 2. L. Pauling, The Nature of the Chemical Bond, Cornel University Press, Ithaca NY 1939
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Document Type
Publication order reference
Identifiers
YADDA identifier
bwmeta1.element.bwnjournal-article-appv117n512kz