Thomas Schultz

부교수

상관회전정렬분광학 연구실

Lab: AMRB (103) 401-4
Office: AMRB (103) 413
E-mail: schultz@unist.ac.kr
Phone: +82-52-217-5425

Thomas Schultz

부교수

상관회전정렬분광학 연구실

E-mail: schultz@unist.ac.kr
Lab: AMRB (103) 401-4
Office: AMRB (103) 413
Phone: +82-52-217-5425
연구분야
Physical Chemistry
연구내용

The Schultz group investigates the composition, structure, and reactions of molecules with short-pulse laser spectroscopy. Time-resolved experiments reveal the nuclear and electronic motions that we usually hide with the chemical reaction arrow in chemical equations. A novel multi-pulse experiment (Correlated Rotational Alignment Spectroscopy, CRASY) correlates photochemical and photophysical reactions with molecular structure. The combined information reveals how changes in chemical bonding and non-covalent interactions affect chemical reaction pathways. Biochemical systems are studies to identify how a local biological environment controls the outcome of biochemical reactions. The CRASY experiments offer a fundamentally new tool to investigate heterogeneous (impure) samples. This is exploited for the investigation of tautomeric samples, molecular isotopologues, and instable molecular matter.

학력

PhD, ETH Zurich (Physical Chemistry, 1999)
Post-Doc, NRC Canada (1999-2003)

주요경력

Max-Born Institute Berlin (Project Leader and Principal Investigator, 2003-2013)
Free University Berlin (Lecturer, 2011-2013)

대표논문
‘Efficient Deactivation of a Model Base Pair via Excited-State Hydrogen Transfer’,
T. Schultz, E. Samoylova, W. Radloff, I.V. Hertel, A.L. Sobolewski, and W. Domcke, Science 306, 1765 (2004).
‘Excited-State Dynamics of Cytosine Tautomers’,
K. Kosma, Christian Schröter, Elena Samoylova, I. V. Hertel, and T. Schultz, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131, 16939 (2009).
’Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of solvated electrons in aqueous NaI solution’,
A. Lübcke, F. Buchner, N. Heine, I.V. Hertel, and T. Schultz, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 12, 14629 (2010).
‘CRASY: Correlated Rotational Alignment Spectroscopy’,
C. Schröter, K. Kosma, T. Schultz, Science 333, 1011 (2011).
Research Highlights