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1.
Photochem Photobiol Sci ; 5(10): 914-24, 2006 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17019469

RESUMEN

Tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) spontaneously forms a series of unusual charge-transfer complexes with various quinonoid acceptors such as o-chloranil (CA) that show pronounced near-IR absorption (lambda(CT) = 1100 nm). The successful isolation of the corresponding [1 : 1] donor-acceptor complex from solution and X-ray crystallographic analysis at low temperatures reveal the polarized charge-transfer state: [TTF(q+),CA(q-)] with high degree of charge-transfer (q = 0.6), which is spectrally and crystallographically distinguished from the separate redox (ion-pair) state: [TTF(+*) + CA(-*) ]. The unique interconversion of charge-transfer and electron-transfer states is theoretically well-accommodated by Mulliken theory using semi-empirical valence-bond and molecular-orbital methodologies. Mechanistic implications are discussed of both the thermally activated and the photochemically promoted processes via fast (intracomplex) electron transfer followed by collapse of the adiabatic and the non-adiabatic (vibrationally-excited) ion-pairs, respectively, to the [2 + 4] cycloadduct of tetrathiafulvalene and o-chloranil.

2.
J Org Chem ; 71(2): 520-6, 2006 Jan 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16408959

RESUMEN

[reaction: see text] Spontaneous self-associations of various tricyclic phenalenyl radicals lead reversibly to either pi- or sigma-dimers, depending on alkyl-substitution patterns at the alpha- and beta-positions. Thus, the sterically encumbered all-beta-substituted tri-tert-butylphenalenyl radical (2*) affords only the long-bonded pi-dimer in dichloromethane solutions, under conditions in which the parent phenalenyl radical (1*) leads to only the sigma-dimer. Further encumbrances of 1* with a pair of alpha, beta- or beta, beta- tert-butyl substituents and additional methyl and ethyl groups (as in sterically hindered phenalenyl radicals 3* - 6*) do not inhibit sigma-dimerization. ESR spectroscopy is successfully employed to monitor the formation of both diamagnetic (2-electron) dimers; and UV-vis spectroscopy specifically identifies the pi-dimer by its intense near-IR band. The different temperature-dependent spectral (ESR and UV-vis) behaviors of these phenalenyl radicals allow the quantitative evaluation of the bond enthalpy of 12 +/- 2 kcal mol(-1) for sigma-dimers, in which the unusually low value has been theoretically accounted for by the large loss of phenalenyl (aromatic) pi-resonance energy attendant upon such bond formation.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(51): 15950-63, 2003 Dec 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14677987

RESUMEN

Intervalence absorption bands appearing in the diagnostic near-IR region are consistently observed in the electronic spectra of mixed-valence systems containing a pair of aromatic redox centers (Ar(*)(+)/Ar) that are connected by two basically different types of molecular bridges. The through-space pathway for intramolecular electron transfer is dictated by an o-xylylene bridge in the mixed-valence cation radical 3(*)(+) with Ar = 2,5-dimethoxy-p-tolyl (T), in which conformational mobility allows the proximal syn disposition of planar T(*)(+)/T redox centers. Four independent experimental probes indicate the large through-space electronic interaction between such cofacial Ar(*)(+)/Ar redox centers from the measurements of (a) sizable potential splitting in the cyclic voltammogram, (b) quinonoidal distortion of T(*)(+)/T centers by X-ray crystallography, (c) "doubling" of the ESR hyperfine splittings, and (d) a pronounced intervalence charge-resonance band. The through (br)-bond pathway for intramolecular electron transfer is enforced in the mixed-valence cation radical 2a(*)(+) by the p-phenylene bridge which provides the structurally inflexible and linear connection between Ar(*)(+)/Ar redox centers. The direct comparison of intramolecular rates of electron transfer (k(ET)) between identical T(*)(+)/T centers in 3(*)(+) and 2a(*)(+)( )()indicates that through-space and through-bond mechanisms are equally effective, despite widely different separations between their redox centers. The same picture obtains for 3(*)(+) and 2a(*)(+)( )()from theoretical computations of the first-order rate constants for intramolecular electron transfer from Marcus-Hush theory using the electronic coupling elements evaluated from the diagnostic intervalence (charge-transfer) transitions. Such a strong coherence between theory and experiment also applies to the mixed-valence cation radical 7(*)(+), in which the aromatic redox S center is sterically encumbered by annulation.

4.
J Org Chem ; 68(10): 3947-57, 2003 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12737577

RESUMEN

Bridged diarenes form very strong [1:1] complexes with nitrosonium/nitric oxide in which the NO moiety is optimally sandwiched in the cleft between a pair of cofacial aromatic rings which act as a molecular "Venus flytrap". The spectral features of these associates are generally similar to those for [1:1] and [2:1] nitrosonium complexes with mononuclear alkyl-substituted benzenes, and they are appropriately described within the LCAO molecular-orbital methodology and the Mulliken (charge-transfer) formulation of donor/acceptor electronic transitions. The thermodynamics study indicates that the efficient binding is determined by (i) the close matching of the donor/acceptor redox potentials and (ii) the ability of bridged diarenes for multicentered interactions with a single NO moiety. The best fit of the electronic and structural parameters is provided by a calixarene host that allows the interacting centers to be arranged in a manner similar to those extant in [2:1] nitrosonium complexes with analogous (nonbridged) aromatic donors; this results in its very strong noncovalent binding with nitrosonium/nitric oxide with the formation constant of K(B) approximately 10(8) M(-)(1) and free-energy change of -DeltaG degrees = 45 kJ mol(-)(1). Such strong, selective, and reversible bindings of nitrosonium/nitric oxide by (cofacial) aromatic centers thus provide the basis for the development of efficient NO sensors/absorbents and also suggest their potential relevance to biochemical systems.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 123(37): 8985-99, 2001 Sep 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11552806

RESUMEN

Spontaneous formation of colored (1:1) complexes of various aromatic donors (ArH) with the nitrosonium acceptor (NO+) is accompanied by the appearance of two new (charge-transfer) absorption bands in the UV-vis spectrum. IR spectral and X-ray crystallographic analyses of the [ArH,NO+] complexes reveal their inner-sphere character by the ArH/NO+ separation that is substantially less than the van der Waals contact and by the significant enlargement of the aromatic chromophore. The reversible interchange between such an inner-sphere complex [ArH,NO+] and the redox product (ArH+.+ NO.) is quantitatively assessed for the first time to establish it as the critical intermediate in the overall electron-transfer process. Theoretical formulation of the NO+ binding to ArH is examined by LCAO-MO methodology sufficient to allow the unambiguous assignment of the pair of diagnostic (UV-vis) spectral bands. The MO treatment also provides quantitative insight into the high degree of charge-transfer extant in these inner-sphere complexes as a function of the HOMO-LUMO gap for the donor/acceptor pair. The relative stabilization of [ArH,NO+] is traced directly to the variation in the electronic coupling element H(AB), which is found to be substantially larger than the reorganization energy (lambda/2). In Sutin's development of Marcus-Hush theory, this inequality characterizes a completely delocalized Class III complex (which occupies a single potential well) according to the Robin-Day classification. The mechanistic relevance of such an unusual (precursor) complex to the inner-sphere mechanism for organic electron transfer is discussed.

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