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    • Image courtesy of filmfed.com

      filmfed.com

      • Molecular movies are made by sending X-rays or electrons through a sample and detecting what comes out on the other side. Computer models reconstruct the detector data into snapshots of the sample molecules in action.
      www6.slac.stanford.edu/news/2019-10-07-what-molecular-movie
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  2. Molecular Film. Interfacial molecular films refer to adsorbed, self-assembled, or functionally grafted molecular systems that form, through physical and chemical processes, near or on a surface. From: Encyclopedia of Interfacial Chemistry, 2018

  3. Oct 7, 2019 · Molecular movies are made by sending X-rays or electrons through a sample and detecting what comes out on the other side. Computer models reconstruct the detector data into snapshots of the sample molecules in action.

  4. The films are composed of two kinds of monolayers, octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS) and (3-Aminopropyl) – triethoxysilane (APTES), distributed in striped ( Fig. 4 (a)) and dotted ( Fig. 4 (b)) patterns. The development creates a new technology, known as the patterned lubrication.

  5. Tribological properties of the molecular films play a crucial role in controlling friction and wear between interacting surfaces at the boundary lubrication regime. Significant advances in experimental methods have made it possible to probe surfaces at the molecular-length scales.

  6. Oct 7, 2020 · We explore how the universe works at the biggest, smallest and fastest scales and invent powerful tools used by scientists around the globe. One of modern science’s most important quests is to understand how the world works at the tiniest and fastest scales – the realm of atoms and molecules.

  7. Features. Seeing is believing. By Rachel Brazil 9 February 2018. Rachel Brazil goes behind the scenes of molecular film sets. Chemists have devised many ways to illustrate molecules as they ...

  8. May 1, 2017 · New movies of drug proteins or photosynthesis in action, shot in millionths of a billionth of a second, show how the molecules work—or fail. By Petra Fromme & John C. H. Spence. Bryan Christie.

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