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Jan Jadżyn

Other affiliations: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Bio: Jan Jadżyn is an academic researcher from Polish Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Liquid crystal & Dielectric. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 234 publications receiving 2453 citations. Previous affiliations of Jan Jadżyn include Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.


Papers
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TL;DR: Nonlinear dielectric spectroscopy was used for studies of the reorientational dynamics of the pseudonematic domains in the isotropic phase of the mesogenic substance in the vicinity of the isotropy to nematic phase transition.
Abstract: Nonlinear dielectric spectroscopy was used for studies of the reorientational dynamics of the pseudonematic domains in the isotropic phase of the mesogenic substance in the vicinity of the isotropic to nematic phase transition. The results were interpreted in the frame of the Landau--de Gennes theory.

16 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the frequency dependence of the Langevin dipolar saturation effect caused by dilute benzene solutions has been studied for 4,4′-n-hexylcyanobiphenyl and 4-(trans-4′)-nhexylcyclohexyl)isothiocyanatobenzene.

16 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the dielectric relaxation in the nematic and isotropic phases of 4-cyanophenyl 4-n-heptylbenzoate has been performed in the frequency range from 1 kHz to 1 GHz.
Abstract: Experimental studies of the dielectric relaxation in the nematic and isotropic phases of 4-cyanophenyl 4-n-heptylbenzoate have been performed in the frequency range from 1 kHz to 1 GHz. In the nematic phase, measurements of the complex dielectric permittivity for two orientations of the director n, parallel and perpendicular to the measuring electric field E, have been carried out. It has been found that for E n, as well as in the isotropic phase, the dielectric spectra consist of two elementary domains, described by the Cole-Cole equation, whereas for E n three Cole-Cole-type domains can be distinguished. The possible molecular reorientational movements corresponding to these domains are discussed and comparison with the theoretical predictions is made.

15 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the phase transition temperature from isotropic to nematic phase in external magnetic fields up to 12 T was monitored by precise capacitance measurements in capacitance cells filled with the prepared ferronematic samples.
Abstract: In this work the thermotropic liquid crystal 4-(trans-4'-n-hexylcyclohexyl)-isothiocyanato-benzene (6CHBT) was doped with differently shaped magnetic nanoparticles with the aim to increase the sensitivity of the liquid crystal on the external magnetic field. The volume concentration of the magnetic particles was 2×10-4. The phase transition temperature from isotropic to nematic phase in external magnetic fields up to 12 T was monitored by precise capacitance measurements in capacitance cells filled with the prepared ferronematic samples. The shift in the temperature from isotropic to nematic phase was observed in the liquid crystal doped with rodlike particles. To our knowledge, this is the first observation of such a magnetic-field induced transition in ferronematics based on a calamitic liquid crystal.

15 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, electric modulus spectra were used for the analysis of the static dielectric properties of liquid cycloalkanones, and odd-even effects with respect to the number of carbon atoms in the molecular ring of the compounds were found.
Abstract: Electric modulus spectra were used for the analysis of the static dielectric properties of liquid cycloalkanones: cyclobutanone, cyclopentanone, cyclohexanone, and cycloheptanone, studied in the temperature range from (243 to 313) K, and cyclooctanone, studied from (303 to 343) K. Odd–even effects with respect to the number of carbon atoms in the molecular ring of the compounds were found in the static dielectric permittivity value and in the dipolar aggregation ability, represented by the Kirkwood correlation factor.

15 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fractional dynamics has experienced a firm upswing during the past few years, having been forged into a mature framework in the theory of stochastic processes as mentioned in this paper, and a large number of research papers developing fractional dynamics further, or applying it to various systems have appeared since our first review article on the fractional Fokker-Planck equation.
Abstract: Fractional dynamics has experienced a firm upswing during the past few years, having been forged into a mature framework in the theory of stochastic processes. A large number of research papers developing fractional dynamics further, or applying it to various systems have appeared since our first review article on the fractional Fokker–Planck equation (Metzler R and Klafter J 2000a, Phys. Rep. 339 1–77). It therefore appears timely to put these new works in a cohesive perspective. In this review we cover both the theoretical modelling of sub- and superdiffusive processes, placing emphasis on superdiffusion, and the discussion of applications such as the correct formulation of boundary value problems to obtain the first passage time density function. We also discuss extensively the occurrence of anomalous dynamics in various fields ranging from nanoscale over biological to geophysical and environmental systems.

2,119 citations

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TL;DR: This article compile and review the literature on molecular interactions as it pertains to medicinal chemistry through a combination of careful statistical analysis of the large body of publicly available X-ray structure data and experimental and theoretical studies of specific model systems.
Abstract: Molecular recognition in biological systems relies on the existence of specific attractive interactions between two partner molecules. Structure-based drug design seeks to identify and optimize such interactions between ligands and their host molecules, typically proteins, given their three-dimensional structures. This optimization process requires knowledge about interaction geometries and approximate affinity contributions of attractive interactions that can be gleaned from crystal structure and associated affinity data. Here we compile and review the literature on molecular interactions as it pertains to medicinal chemistry through a combination of careful statistical analysis of the large body of publicly available X-ray structure data and experimental and theoretical studies of specific model systems. We attempt to extract key messages of practical value and complement references with our own searches of the CSDa,(1) and PDB databases.(2) The focus is on direct contacts between ligand and protein functional groups, and we restrict ourselves to those interactions that are most frequent in medicinal chemistry applications. Examples from supramolecular chemistry and quantum mechanical or molecular mechanics calculations are cited where they illustrate a specific point. The application of automated design processes is not covered nor is design of physicochemical properties of molecules such as permeability or solubility. Throughout this article, we wish to raise the readers’ awareness that formulating rules for molecular interactions is only possible within certain boundaries. The combination of 3D structure analysis with binding free energies does not yield a complete understanding of the energetic contributions of individual interactions. The reasons for this are widely known but not always fully appreciated. While it would be desirable to associate observed interactions with energy terms, we have to accept that molecular interactions behave in a highly nonadditive fashion.3,4 The same interaction may be worth different amounts of free energy in different contexts, and it is very hard to find an objective frame of reference for an interaction, since any change of a molecular structure will have multiple effects. One can easily fall victim to confirmation bias, focusing on what one has observed before and building causal relationships on too few observations. In reality, the multiplicity of interactions present in a single protein−ligand complex is a compromise of attractive and repulsive interactions that is almost impossible to deconvolute. By focusing on observed interactions, one neglects a large part of the thermodynamic cycle represented by a binding free energy: solvation processes, long-range interactions, conformational changes. Also, crystal structure coordinates give misleadingly static views of interactions. In reality a macromolecular complex is not characterized by a single structure but by an ensemble of structures. Changes in the degrees of freedom of both partners during the binding event have a large impact on binding free energy. The text is organized in the following way. The first section treats general aspects of molecular design: enthalpic and entropic components of binding free energy, flexibility, solvation, and the treatment of individual water molecules, as well as repulsive interactions. The second half of the article is devoted to specific types of interactions, beginning with hydrogen bonds, moving on to weaker polar interactions, and ending with lipophilic interactions between aliphatic and aromatic systems. We show many examples of structure−activity relationships; these are meant as helpful illustrations but individually can never confirm a rule.

1,162 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the mechanisms underlying the relaxation properties of glass-forming liquids and polymers is provided, with an emphasis in the insight provided into the mechanism underlying the glass relaxation properties.
Abstract: An intriguing problem in condensed matter physics is understanding the glass transition, in particular the dynamics in the equilibrium liquid close to vitrification Recent advances have been made by using hydrostatic pressure as an experimental variable These results are reviewed, with an emphasis in the insight provided into the mechanisms underlying the relaxation properties of glass-forming liquids and polymers

638 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the physics aspects of the new research thrusts, in which liquid crystals often meet other types of soft condensed matter, such as polymers and colloidal nano- or microparticle dispersions.

587 citations

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TL;DR: The discussion is focused on low molar mass and dendrimeric thermotropic ionic mesogens, as well as selected metal-containing compounds (metallomesogens), but some references to polymeric and/or lyotropic ionIC liquid crystals and particularly to ionic liquids will also be provided.
Abstract: This Review covers the recent developments (2005-2015) in the design, synthesis, characterization, and application of thermotropic ionic liquid crystals. It was designed to give a comprehensive overview of the "state-of-the-art" in the field. The discussion is focused on low molar mass and dendrimeric thermotropic ionic mesogens, as well as selected metal-containing compounds (metallomesogens), but some references to polymeric and/or lyotropic ionic liquid crystals and particularly to ionic liquids will also be provided. Although zwitterionic and mesoionic mesogens are also treated to some extent, emphasis will be directed toward liquid-crystalline materials consisting of organic cations and organic/inorganic anions that are not covalently bound but interact via electrostatic and other noncovalent interactions.

563 citations