Directory: Faculty

William H. Breckenridge

William H. Breckenridge

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY

Professor

B.S. 1963, Kansas University (with Highest Distinction and Honors in Chemistry)
Ph.D., 1968, Stanford University
NATO Postdoctoral, 1969, Cambridge University.

Phone:(801)581-8024

Office:

Email: breck@chem.utah.edu

Research Group

Publications

Activities & Awards

W. H. Breckenridge Scholarship for Honors chemistry students was created by the Department of Chemistry in his honor, 2005. (Donations to this scholarship fund can be made by sending a check to the University of Utah, Department of Chemistry, W.H. B. Scholarship, 315 South 1400 East, Room 2020, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112

Research Interests

Professor Breckenridge has retired early and has shut down his experimental laboratories at the University of Utah. However, he still has active collaborations with experimental research groups in France (Benoit Soep, CEA, Saclay; Niloufahr Shafizadeh, University of Paris, Sud, Orsay) and England (Tim Wright, University of Nottingham).

The collaborative research at the University of Nottingham involves the application of the “Breckenridge” model potential to simulate and understand the bonding in M+Rg complexes (M = metal atom; Rg = rare-gas atom). For details of the model, see the Chemical Reviews publication below. The model has now been successfully applied to all of the Alk+Rg (Alk = alkali atom) potential curves calculated accurately ab initio by Wright and co-workers. The model potential represents these potential curves quite accurately, especially near their minima, showing that the bonding (as particularly expected for these filled-shell, filled shell simple species) is essentially “physical” in nature.

The model is currently being applied to accurate ab initio potential curves just calculated by Wright and co-workers of all the Rg complexes of Cu+, Ag+, and Au+, where in some cases (Au+Kr and Au+Xe, for example) "physical" bonding models apparently cannot account for the strong bonding observed, and it is suspected that Kr and Xe behave somewhat like chemical, electron-pair-donating “ligands” in the bonding. Similar analyses of many other M+Rg potential curves (to be accurately calculated) are planned. Several experiments planned include the synthesis of AuRg and Au+Rg complexes and accurate spectroscopic characterization of their potential curves.

The collaboration with Drs. Soep and Shafizideh in France continues a productive collaboration with Dr. Soep for over 20 years in many experimental areas. Of current interest is a collaborative attempt to examine in detail the role of charge-transfer in the bonding and dynamics of the interactions of ground-states and excited-states of single neutral metal atoms in the gas phase with other atoms and with molecules ranging all the way from diatomics to small biological molecules. A comprehensive review on this subject is being written.

topSelected Publications