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Vincent A. Spata

Researcher at Temple University

Publications -  10
Citations -  350

Vincent A. Spata is an academic researcher from Temple University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface plasmon resonance & Plasmon. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications receiving 253 citations. Previous affiliations of Vincent A. Spata include Princeton University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmon damping depends on the chemical nature of the nanoparticle interface

TL;DR: This work is able to isolate the contribution of surface adsorbates to the plasmon resonance by carefully selecting adsorbate isomers, using single-particle spectroscopy to obtain homogeneous linewidths, and comparing experimental results to high-level quantum mechanical calculations based on embedded correlated wavefunction theory.
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Mechanistic Insights into Photocatalyzed Hydrogen Desorption from Palladium Surfaces Assisted by Localized Surface Plasmon Resonances

Vincent A. Spata, +1 more
- 20 Mar 2018 - 
TL;DR: The results of these calculations reveal that the photodesorption mechanism does not create a frequently invoked transient negative ion species but instead enhances population of available excited-state, low-barrier pathways that exhibit negligible charge-transfer character.
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Substituent Effects on the Absorption and Fluorescence Properties of Anthracene

TL;DR: The results of quadruply substituted geometries reveal symmetric substitution at the 1,4,5,8 positions significantly increases the oscillator strength and can lower the band gap compared to that of the unsubstituted anthracene molecule by up to 0.5 eV.
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Excimers and Exciplexes in Photoinitiated Processes of Oligonucleotides

TL;DR: The role of π stacking in photophysical and photochemical processes in oligonucleotides and the importance of excimers and exciplexes is highlighted and special types ofexcimers/exciplexes are found to be important.
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Role of Excitonic Coupling and Charge-Transfer States in the Absorption and CD Spectra of Adenine-Based Oligonucleotides Investigated through QM/MM Simulations

TL;DR: It is found that the experimentally observed red-shifted shoulder in the absorption spectrum is due to excitonic interactions, while charge-transfer states are present within the absorption band at the higher-energy end of the spectrum, suggesting that mixing between charge- transfer and excite states plays an important role in the photophysics of oligonucleotides.