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Engineered pavements cover a large fraction of cities and offer significant potential for urban heat island mitigation. Though rapidly increasing research efforts have been devoted to the study of pavement materials, thermal interactions between buildings and the ambient environment are mostly neglected. In this study, numerical models featuring a realistic representation of building-environment thermal interactions, were applied to quantify the effect of pavements on the urban thermal environment at multiple scales. It was found that performance of pavements inside the canyon was largely determined by the canyon geometry. In a high-density residential area, modifying pavements had insignificant effect on the wall temperature and building energy consumption. At a regional scale, various pavement types were also found to have a limited cooling effect on land surface temperature and 2-m air temperature for metropolitan Phoenix. In the context of global climate change, the effect of pavement was evaluated in terms of the equivalent CO2 emission. Equivalent CO2 emission offset by reflective pavements in urban canyons was only about 13.9e46.6% of that without building canopies, depending on the canyon geometry. This study revealed the importance of building-environment thermal interactions in determining thermal conditions inside the urban canopy.
Serial femtosecond crystallography requires reliable and efficient delivery of fresh crystals across the beam of an X-ray free-electron laser over the course of an experiment. We introduce a double-flow focusing nozzle to meet this challenge, with significantly reduced sample consumption, while improving jet stability over previous generations of nozzles. We demonstrate its use to determine the first room-temperature structure of RNA polymerase II at high resolution, revealing new structural details. Moreover, the double flow-focusing nozzles were successfully tested with three other protein samples and the first room temperature structure of an extradiol ring-cleaving dioxygenase was solved by utilizing the improved operation and characteristics of these devices.
X-ray free-electron lasers provide novel opportunities to conduct single particle analysis on nanoscale particles. Coherent diffractive imaging experiments were performed at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), SLAC National Laboratory, exposing single inorganic core-shell nanoparticles to femtosecond hard-X-ray pulses. Each facetted nanoparticle consisted of a crystalline gold core and a differently shaped palladium shell. Scattered intensities were observed up to about 7 nm resolution. Analysis of the scattering patterns revealed the size distribution of the samples, which is consistent with that obtained from direct real-space imaging by electron microscopy. Scattering patterns resulting from single particles were selected and compiled into a dataset which can be valuable for algorithm developments in single particle scattering research.
Single particle diffractive imaging data from Rice Dwarf Virus (RDV) were recorded using the Coherent X-ray Imaging (CXI) instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). RDV was chosen as it is a well-characterized model system, useful for proof-of-principle experiments, system optimization and algorithm development. RDV, an icosahedral virus of about 70 nm in diameter, was aerosolized and injected into the approximately 0.1 μm diameter focused hard X-ray beam at the CXI instrument of LCLS. Diffraction patterns from RDV with signal to 5.9 Ångström were recorded. The diffraction data are available through the Coherent X-ray Imaging Data Bank (CXIDB) as a resource for algorithm development, the contents of which are described here.
photosynthesis involves the harvesting of light energy from the sun by the antenna (made
of pigments) of the PSII trans-membrane complex. The harvested excitation energy is
transferred from the antenna complex to the reaction center of the PSII, which leads to a
light-driven charge separation event, from water to plastoquinone. This phenomenal
process has been producing the oxygen that maintains the oxygenic environment of our
planet for the past 2.5 billion years.
The oxygen molecule formation involves the light-driven extraction of 4 electrons
and protons from two water molecules through a multistep reaction, in which the Oxygen
Evolving Center (OEC) of PSII cycles through 5 different oxidation states, S0 to S4.
Unraveling the water-splitting mechanism remains as a grant challenge in the field of
photosynthesis research. This requires the development of an entirely new capability, the
ability to produce molecular movies. This dissertation advances a novel technique, Serial
Femtosecond X-ray crystallography (SFX), into a new realm whereby such time-resolved
molecular movies may be attained. The ultimate goal is to make a “molecular movie” that
reveals the dynamics of the water splitting mechanism using time-resolved SFX (TRSFX)
experiments and the uniquely enabling features of X-ray Free-Electron Laser
(XFEL) for the study of biological processes.
This thesis presents the development of SFX techniques, including development of
new methods to analyze millions of diffraction patterns (~100 terabytes of data per XFEL
experiment) with the goal of solving the X-ray structures in different transition states.
ii
The research comprises significant advancements to XFEL software packages (e.g.,
Cheetah and CrystFEL). Initially these programs could evaluate only 8-10% of all the
data acquired successfully. This research demonstrates that with manual optimizations,
the evaluation success rate was enhanced to 40-50%. These improvements have enabled
TR-SFX, for the first time, to examine the double excited state (S3) of PSII at 5.5-Å. This
breakthrough demonstrated the first indication of conformational changes between the
ground (S1) and the double-excited (S3) states, a result fully consistent with theoretical
predictions.
The power of the TR-SFX technique was further demonstrated with proof-of principle
experiments on Photoactive Yellow Protein (PYP) micro-crystals that high
temporal (10-ns) and spatial (1.5-Å) resolution structures could be achieved.
In summary, this dissertation research heralds the development of the TR-SFX
technique, protocols, and associated data analysis methods that will usher into practice a
new era in structural biology for the recording of ‘molecular movies’ of any biomolecular
process.