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  1. Japonica Humboldtiana, Band 12 (2008)
    Published: 2010
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Mori Ogai Gedenkstätte

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    Language: German
    Media type: Other
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    DDC Categories: 895
  2. Japonica Humboldtiana, Band 13 (2009-2010)

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  3. Nordeuropa Forum 1.2008
    Published: 2008
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

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    Language: English
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    DDC Categories: 839
  4. Athenäum 6. Jahrgang

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    DDC Categories: 800
    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  5. Athenäum 21. Jahrgang
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

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    Language: German
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    DDC Categories: 800
    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  6. Athenäum 4. Jahrgang

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    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  7. Athenäum 11. Jahrgang

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    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  8. Athenäum 10. Jahrgang

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    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  9. Athenäum 13. Jahrgang
    Published: 2003
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

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  10. Athenäum 19. Jahrgang
    Published: 2009
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

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    Subjects: Rhetorik; Literaturwissenschaft
  11. Japonica Humboldtiana, Band 8 (2004)
    Published: 2009
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Mori Ogai Gedenkstätte

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  12. Japonica Humboldtiana, Band 9 (2005)

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  13. Japonica Humboldtiana, Band 14 (2011)
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Mori Ogai Gedenkstätte

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  14. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 17.2011
  15. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 18.2012
  16. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 19.2013
  17. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 20.2014
  18. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 21.2015
  19. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 22.2016
  20. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 23.2017
  21. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 21.2015: Beiheft

    Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 21, 2015: Beiheft more

     

    Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 21, 2015: Beiheft

     

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    Language: German
    Media type: Other
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 490; 890
    Subjects: Slawische Sprachen; Zeitschrift; Literatur; Slawistik; Deutschland
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    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.de ; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  22. Bulletin der deutschen Slavistik 24.2018

    Jahrbuch der Deutschen Slavistik mit Forumsbeiträgen zu Digital Humanities, Rubriken zu Personen, Publikationen, Preisen, Wirkungsorten, wissenschaftlichen Abhandlungen. more

     

    Jahrbuch der Deutschen Slavistik mit Forumsbeiträgen zu Digital Humanities, Rubriken zu Personen, Publikationen, Preisen, Wirkungsorten, wissenschaftlichen Abhandlungen.

     

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    Language: German
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    DDC Categories: 490; 890
    Subjects: Slawische Sprachen; Zeitschrift; Literatur; Slawistik; Deutschland
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    creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.de ; info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

  23. Molecular modeling of the swelling properties and interlayer structure of Cs, Na, K-Montmorillonite: Effects of charge distribution in the clay layers
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  HAL CCSD

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear waste poses major scientific challenges to make the environmental footprint of nuclear energy as small as possible for very long periods of time. As many other countries, France is considering the deep... more

     

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear waste poses major scientific challenges to make the environmental footprint of nuclear energy as small as possible for very long periods of time. As many other countries, France is considering the deep geological disposal (in the Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) argillite formations of the Paris basin) as a reliable way of storing high-level radioactive waste in order to provide adequate protection for humans and the environment. In addition to being proven geologically stable for million years, the natural and engineered clay barriers can benefit from many favorable properties, such as low permeability, high sorption capacity, etc. The mineralogical composition of the Callovo-Oxfordian argillite shows about 41% of clay minerals (23% of interstratified illite/smectite, 14% of illite-type minerals, 2% kaolinite and 2% chlorite) [1,2]. A non-negligible amount of organic matter is also present (~1%) [3], and it is known that the interaction of natural organic matter (NOM) with radionuclides and clays can affect the solubility and toxicity of trace elements in natural aqueous environments [4,5]. Reliable prediction of the behaviour of radionuclides and their transport and retention in clayey formations at nuclear waste repositories requires detailed molecular scale understanding of these complex multicomponent systems. Computational molecular modelling has already become an important tool in the study of thermodynamic, structural and transport properties of hydrated clays (e.g., [6-8]). As the first step in our study of the effects of organic molecules on the adsorption and transport of radionuclides in hydrated clay systems we have investigated the effects of the ordering in charge distributions on the swelling behavior of simulated clays. Montmorillonite was chosen as a model of smectite clay. Montmorillonite structure consists of aluminum-oxygen octahedral sheet sandwiched between two opposing silicon-oxygen tetrahedral sheets giving rise to a 2:1 clay mineral. Isomorphic substitutions in the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets are responsible of the negative layer charge of montmorillonite clay minerals having the chemical composition (Si8-xXx)(Al4-yYy)O20(OH)4 where X = Al, Y = Mg, Fe.[9]. The montmorillonite models for our study are based on a pyrophillite unit cell structure (5.16Å×8.966Å×9.347Å) obtained from the crystallographic data of Lee et al. [10]. The 4×4×2 simulation supercells were built and substitutions were made in the pyrophillite structure in order to approximate as close as possible the chemical composition of Wyoming montmorillonite M24(Si248Al8)(Al112Mg16)O640(OH)128, where M is either Cs+, Na+, or K+ [9]. We explored three different models of substitution distributions. In the first model, the substitutions were uniformly and orderly distributed within the tetrahedral and octahedral sheets. In the second model, the substituted positions were kept ordered in the octahedral sheets but made disordered in the tetrahedral one. In the third model, the substituted positions of the octahedral sites were additionally made disordered. In order to study the swelling behavior of these montmorillonites, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were run in the NPzT statistical ensemble (T = 298 K, Pz = 1 bar) for each of the three different substitution models and with 22 different hydration states ranging from 0 to 700 mgwater/gclay (from 0 to 42 H2O molecules per one monovalent cation). All MD runs were performed for a total of 2 ns using the CLAYFF force field [11]. At the beginning of the simulations, the cations were placed at the midplane of the clay interlayer space and water molecules were added randomly. After the system reached equilibrium, the last 1ns of each MD trajectory was used to compute the clay basal spacing and the swelling thermodynamic properties: hydration energy, immersion energy, isosteric heat of adsorption. The MD simulation results indicate that in addition to the commonly observed 1-layer and 2-layer hydrates, stable hydration states corresponding to 3-layer and 4-layer hydrates can also be distinguished. The stable states corresponding to the minima of hydration energy were then selected to run further 500 ps NVT-ensemble MD simulations at the same temperature and with the volume fixed at the average value resulting from the corresponding previous NPzT simulation. The equilibrium parts of these NVT-simulated trajectories were then used to calculate the structural (radial distribution functions, atomic density profiles) and dynamical (diffusion coefficient) properties of the hydrated montmorillonite. References [1] ERM (1997) Echantillons d'argiles du forage EST104 : Etude minéralogique approfondie. Rapport ANDRA n° D.RP.0ERM.97.008 [2] ERM (1996b) Caractérisation d'échantillons d'argiles du forage EST103. Rapport ANDRA n° B.RP.0ERM.96.003 [3] ANDRA (2005) Dossier 2005 Argile, Référentiel du site de Meuse Haute Marne. C.R.P.ADS.04.0022 Andra : Paris [4] Buffle, J. (1988) Complexation Reactions in Aquatic Systems: An Analytical Approach; Ellis Horwood Ltd.:Chichester, p 692. [5] Tipping, E. (2002) Cation Binding by Humic Substances, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, p 434. [6] Smith, D.E., Langmuir, 14, 5959-5967 (1998). [7] Rotenberg, B., Marry, V., Vuilleumier, R., Malikova, N., Simon, C., Turq, P., Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 71, 5089-5101 (2007). [8] Liu, X.D., Lu, X.C., Wang, R.C., Zhou, H.Q. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 72, 1837-1847 (2008). [9] Tsipursky, S.I., Drits, V.A. Clay Minerals, 19, 177-193 (1984). [10] Lee, J.H. and Guggenheim, S. American Mineralogist, 66, 350-357 (1981). [11] Cygan, R.T., Liang, J.J., Kalinichev, A.G. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 108, 1255-1266 (2004).

     

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    Parent title: 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement" ; http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00769152 ; 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement", Oct 2012, Montpellier, France
    Subjects: [CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistry; [CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry; [SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering; [SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry; [SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes; [SDU.STU.MI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Mineralogy
  24. Effects of surface cations on the structure and dynamics of the hydrogen-bonding network at the illite-water interface: A molecular dynamics simulation study
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  HAL CCSD

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear energy poses major scientific and engineering challenges, one of which is the necessity to make the environmental impacts of the long-term nuclear waste storage as small as possible. This requires detailed... more

     

    Safe and sustainable management of nuclear energy poses major scientific and engineering challenges, one of which is the necessity to make the environmental impacts of the long-term nuclear waste storage as small as possible. This requires detailed understanding and prediction of the behaviour of radionuclides and their migration and retention properties in the geological formations of nuclear waste repositories. The Callovo-Oxfordien rock formation of the French nuclear repository site is mainly composed of clay minerals (illite, smectite and interstratified illite/smectite), quartz, calcite, with some non-negligible amount of organic matter. The adsorption of water can change the properties of mineral surfaces, including protonation state, surface charge, structure, and reactivity [1]. Similarly, the properties of interfacial water are strongly affected by the mineral substrate structure and composition. Recent advances in experimental techniques such as FTIR [2], ellipsometry [3], synchrotron X-ray scattering [4], sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy [5] are capable of probing the properties of mineral-water interfaces at different levels of hydration. However, the surface-specific results of these experiments are often difficult to quantitatively interpret without having a reliable molecular scale picture of the underlying physical and chemical processes. Molecular computer simulations have become one of the most important tools in the study of such interfacial systems and phenomena by providing invaluable atomistic information on the underlying chemical and physical processes. The present study is aimed at investigating the structural and dynamics effects of three different cations (K+, NH4+, and H3O+) exchanged at the hydrated surface of muscovite mica, which is taken here as a model illite. Molecular dynamics computer simulations were performed using the CLAYFF force field [6] to investigate the important differences of the H-bonding configurations formed by the sorbed species, including H2O, H3O+, and NH4+, in contrast to the behavior of spherical metal ions, such as K+. At the muscovite (001) surface, H2O can donate 2 H-bonds (to other H2O and/or to the surface O atoms) and accept 2 H-bonds (from other H2O), but it can also partially replace surface K+, because the hydrogens of H2O bear some positive charge. This behavior was observed in previous MD simulations of the mica surface [7]. Such surface-adsorbed H2O molecules have their negatively charged oxygen atoms exposed to the fluid phase and accessible for either H-bond acceptance from other H2Os or hydration of metal cations in outer-sphere coordination. For surface H3O+, the charges on the hydrogens are slightly higher than those of H2O, but the oxygen atom of hydronium is now almost hydrophobic, and cannot participate in a H-bond network (e.g., [8]). In contrast, NH4+ can equally well donate H-bonds to the surface O atoms and to the neighboring H2O molecules, but it cannot participate in the hydration shell of a displaced metal cation. Thus, three similar species (H2O - two HB donors and 2 HB acceptors; H3O+ - 3 HB donors and no acceptors; NH4+ - 4 HB donors, no acceptors) can provide for three greatly different structural, energetic, and dynamical situations at the muscovite-water interface. Since the hydrogen-bonding network in any aqueous media provides a natural mechanism of forming low-barrier reaction paths for proton transfer in such systems, it is also an important phenomenon controlling the surface reactivity under various pH conditions. In addition, a detailed study of the structural characteristics of surface-adsorbed NH4+ provides a way for better understanding of the mechanisms of adsorption for organic molecules having amino-groups in their structure, which is quite common for natural organic matter (e.g., [9]). Each of the three systems was simulated at 7 different hydration states providing information on the structure and dynamics of the adsorbed water film in a wide range of relative humidity conditions. The atomic density profiles of water show significant layering at all hydration levels and the layering strongly depends upon the nature of the ionic species present on the surface. Our studies support the fact that the H3O+ ion is less strongly bound when compared to K+ on the muscovite surface as observed in earlier studies [7]. At muscovite surfaces, both NH4+ and H3O+ cations establish strong hydrogen bonds with the surface bridging oxygen atoms and also with the neighbouring H2O molecules at all hydration levels. However, we observed that the interactions are different for both species at low hydration levels (<< molecular monolayer). At low hydration levels, H3O+ prefers to strongly bind as 3-cordinated species to the surface than with the neighbouring waters molecules. However, as the hydration levels increase, H3O+ binds as 2-cordinated species with the surface as is indicated by hydrogen bonding analysis (Figure 1). In contrast, irrespective of the hydration levels, NH4+ ion strongly interacts with the surface as 3-cordinated species because of its tetrahedral geometry. At the same time, we observe from hydrogen bond analysis that the hydrogen bonding network of water has been strongly influenced by the nature of the surface cations present at the mineral-water interface. The dynamics of water molecules were examined by self-diffusion coefficients from the mean square displacement of water oxygen. The diffusion mechanism is similar for K+ and NH4+ but was different for H3O+, in particular at the low hydration states. Furthermore, the spatial and orientation distributions of H2O and ions at the muscovite-water surface are analyzed in quantitative detail. All the simulation results are compared with available experimental data and the results of previous molecular simulations to provide reliable molecular view of the ions and water at the muscovite surface. References [1] Henderson, M. A. Surf. Sci. Rep. 2002, 46, 5-308. [2] Cantrell and G. E. Ewing. J. Phys. Chem. B, 2001, 105, 5434-5439. [3] Beaglehole, D and Christenson, H. K. J. Phys. Chem, 1992, 96, 3395-3403. [4] Fenter, P. and Sturchio, N. C. Progress in Surface Science, 2004, 77, 171-258. [5] Shen, Y. R. and Ostroverkhov, V. Chem. Rev., 2006, 106, 1140-1154. [6] Cygan, R.T., Liang, J.J., and Kalinichev, A.G. J. Phys. Chem. B, 2004, 108, 1255-1266. [7] Wang, J., Kalinichev, A., Kirkpatrick, R., Cygan, R. J. Phys. Chem B., 2005, 109, 15893-15905. [8] Petersen, P.B. and Saykally, R.J. J. Phys. Chem. B, 2005, 109, 7976-7980. [9] Leenheer, J.A. Annals of Environmental Science, 2009, 3, 1-130.

     

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    Parent title: 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement" ; http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00769153 ; 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement", Oct 2012, Montpellier, France
    Subjects: [CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistry; [CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry; [SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering; [SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry; [SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes; [SDU.STU.MI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Mineralogy
  25. Ethylene glycol intercalation in smectites. Molecular dynamics simulation studies
    Published: 2012
    Publisher:  HAL CCSD

    Intercalation of ethylene glycol in smectites (glycolation) is widely used to discriminate smectites and vermiculites from other clays and among themselves. During this process, ethylene glycol molecules enter into the interlayer spaces of the... more

     

    Intercalation of ethylene glycol in smectites (glycolation) is widely used to discriminate smectites and vermiculites from other clays and among themselves. During this process, ethylene glycol molecules enter into the interlayer spaces of the swelling clays, leading to the formation of two-layer structure (~17 Å) in the case of smectites, or one-layer structure (~14 Å) in the case of vermiculites. In spite of the relatively broad literature on the understanding/characterization of ethylene glycol/water-clays complexes, the simplified structure of this complex presented by Reynolds (1965) is still used in the contemporary X-ray diffraction computer programs, which simulate structures of smectite and illite-smectite. The monolayer structure is only approximated using the assumption of the interlayer cation and ethylene glycol molecules lying in the middle of interlayer spaces. This study was therefore undertaken to investigate the structure of ethylene glycol/water-clays complex in more detail using molecular dynamics simulation. The structural models of smectites were built on the basis of pyrophyllite crystal structure (Lee and Guggenheim, 1981), with substitution of particular atoms. In most of simulations, the structural model assumed the following composition, considered as the most common in the mixed layer illite-smectites (Środoń et al. 2009): EXCH0.4(Si3.96Al0.04)(Al1.46Fe0.17Mg0.37)O10(OH)2 Atoms of the smectites were described with CLAYFF force field (Cygan et al., 2004), while atoms of water and ethylene glycol with flexible SPC (Berendsen et al., 1981) and OPLS (Jorgensen et al., 1996) force fields, respectively. Ewald summation was used to calculate long range Coulombic interactions and the cutoff was set at 8.5 Å. Results of the simulations show that in the two-layer glycolate the content of water is relatively small: up to 0.8 H2O per half of the smectite unit cell (thereafter phuc). Clear thermodynamic preference of mono- or two-layer structure of the complex is observed for typical smectite. Based on the calculated radial distribution functions, it was confirmed that water and ethylene glycol molecules compete for the coordination sites of the calcium ions in the clay interlayers. It was also found that the differences in the smectite layer charge, charge location, and the type of the interlayer cation affect the ethylene glycol and water packing in the interlayer space and as result have strong influence on the basal spacing and on the structure of complex. Varying amounts and ratio of both ethylene glycol and water are, however, the most important factor influencing the extent of the smectite expansion. Comparison of two-layer structure obtained from molecular dynamics simulations with previous models leads to the conclusion that the arrangement of ethylene glycol molecules in the interlayers, used in simulations of X-ray diffractograms of clays, should be modified. In contrast to the Reynolds (1965) model, the main difference is that, for different location of the clay charge, interlayer ions tend to change their positions. In the case of montmorillonite, calcium ions are located in the middle of the interlayer space, while for beidellite they are located much closer to the clay surface. Water in these structures does not form distinct layers but is distributed rather broadly with a tendency to be concentrated close to the smectite surface. One-layer structure of ethylene glycol/water-smectite complex, characteristic of vermiculite was also proposed. References Berendsen, H.J.C., Postma, J.P.M., van Gunsteren, W.F., Hermans, J. (1981) Interaction models for water in relation to protein hydration. In Intermolecular Forces; Pullman, B., Ed.; D. Reidel: Amsterdam, pp 331. Cygan, R. T., Liang, J. J., and Kalinichev, A. G. (2004) Molecular models of hydroxide, oxyhydroxide, and clay phases and the development of a general force field. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 108, 1255-1266. Jorgensen,W.L., Maxwell, D.S., Tirado-Rives, J. (1996) Development and testing of the OPLS all-atom force field on conformational energetics and properties of organic liquids. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 118, 11225-11236. Lee J.H., Guggenheim S. (1981) Single crystal X-ray refinement of pyrophyllite-1Tc. American Mineralogist, 66, 350-357 Reynolds R. C. (1965) An X-ray study of an ethylene glycol-montmorillonite complex. American Mineralogist, 50, 990-1001 Środoń J., Zeelmaekers E., Derkowski A. (2009) The charge of component layers of illite-smectite in bentonites and the nature of end-member illite. Clays and Clay Minerals, 57, 650-672

     

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    Parent title: 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement" ; http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00769154 ; 5th International meeting "Clays in Natural and Engineered Barriers for Radioactive Waste Confinement", Dec 2012, Montpellier, France
    Subjects: [CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistry; [CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry; [SDE.IE]Environmental Sciences/Environmental Engineering; [SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistry; [SDE.MCG]Environmental Sciences/Global Changes; [SDU.STU.MI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Mineralogy