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Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Andrei Tokmakoff

Andrei Tokmakoff

Verified

University of Chicago · Department of Chemistry

Active 1983–2024

h-index78
Citations24.6k
Papers410104 last 5y
Funding$6.2M1 active
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Research topics

  • Chemistry
  • Molecular physics
  • Physical chemistry
  • Materials science
  • Composite material
  • Nanotechnology
  • Quantum mechanics
  • Computational chemistry
  • Biological system
  • Chemical physics
  • Organic chemistry

Selected publications

  • Vibrational Spectroscopic Map, Vibrational Spectroscopy, and Intermolecular Interaction

    Chemical Reviews · 2020 · 396 citations

    • Chemistry
    • Chemical physics
    • Computational chemistry

    Vibrational spectroscopy is an essential tool in chemical analyses, biological assays, and studies of functional materials. Over the past decade, various coherent nonlinear vibrational spectroscopic techniques have been developed and enabled researchers to study time-correlations of the fluctuating frequencies that are directly related to solute-solvent dynamics, dynamical changes in molecular conformations and local electrostatic environments, chemical and biochemical reactions, protein structural dynamics and functions, characteristic processes of functional materials, and so on. In order to gain incisive and quantitative information on the local electrostatic environment, molecular conformation, protein structure and interprotein contacts, ligand binding kinetics, and electric and optical properties of functional materials, a variety of vibrational probes have been developed and site-specifically incorporated into molecular, biological, and material systems for time-resolved vibrational spectroscopic investigation. However, still, an all-encompassing theory that describes the vibrational solvatochromism, electrochromism, and dynamic fluctuation of vibrational frequencies has not been completely established mainly due to the intrinsic complexity of intermolecular interactions in condensed phases. In particular, the amount of data obtained from the linear and nonlinear vibrational spectroscopic experiments has been rapidly increasing, but the lack of a quantitative method to interpret these measurements has been one major obstacle in broadening the applications of these methods. Among various theoretical models, one of the most successful approaches is a semiempirical model generally referred to as the vibrational spectroscopic map that is based on a rigorous theory of intermolecular interactions. Recently, genetic algorithm, neural network, and machine learning approaches have been applied to the development of vibrational solvatochromism theory. In this review, we provide comprehensive descriptions of the theoretical foundation and various examples showing its extraordinary successes in the interpretations of experimental observations. In addition, a brief introduction to a newly created repository Web site (http://frequencymap.org) for vibrational spectroscopic maps is presented. We anticipate that a combination of the vibrational frequency map approach and state-of-the-art multidimensional vibrational spectroscopy will be one of the most fruitful ways to study the structure and dynamics of chemical, biological, and functional molecular systems in the future.

  • Dynamic and Programmable Cellular-Scale Granules Enable Tissue-like Materials

    Matter · 2020 · 44 citations

    • Materials science
    • Nanotechnology
    • Biological system

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Nicholas H. C. Lewis

    University of Chicago

    158 shared
  • William Benjamin Carpenter

    Stanford University

    60 shared
  • Bogdan Dereka

    University of Zurich

    58 shared
  • Brennan Ashwood

    40 shared
  • Yong Zhang

    37 shared
  • Edward J. Maginn

    University of Notre Dame

    37 shared
  • Sean T. Roberts

    The University of Texas at Austin

    34 shared
  • Gregory A. Voth

    Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis

    34 shared
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