Publications by authors named "Benjamin B Noble"

Article Synopsis
  • Flexible metal-organic materials are becoming popular due to their ability to change structure based on external conditions.
  • The study presents flexible metal-phenolic networks (MPNs) that adapt to different solute guests, like glucose, by rearranging their metal-organic structures.
  • This research enhances the understanding of how these materials interact with solute guests, paving the way for designing new responsive materials for various practical uses.
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Coordination states of metal-organic materials are known to dictate their physicochemical properties and applications in various fields. However, understanding and controlling coordination sites in metal-organic systems is challenging. Herein, we report the synthesis of site-selective coordinated metal-phenolic networks (MPNs) using flavonoids as coordination modulators.

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Electromagnetic bioeffects remain an enigma from both the experimental and theoretical perspectives despite the ubiquitous presence of related technologies in contemporary life. Multiscale computational modelling can provide valuable insights into biochemical systems and predict how they will be perturbed by external stimuli. At a microscopic level, it can be used to determine what (sub)molecular scale reactions various stimuli might induce; at a macroscopic level, it can be used to examine how these changes affect dynamic behaviour of essential molecules within the crowded biomolecular milieu in living tissues.

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Metal-phenolic networks (MPNs) are amorphous materials that can be used to engineer functional films and particles. A fundamental understanding of the heat-driven structural reorganization of MPNs can offer opportunities to rationally tune their properties (..

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Predicting the conversion and selectivity of a photochemical experiment is a conceptually different challenge compared to thermally induced reactivity. Photochemical transformations do not currently have the same level of generalized analytical treatment due to the nature of light interaction with a photoreactive substrate. Herein, we bridge this critical gap by introducing a framework for the quantitative prediction of the time-dependent progress of photoreactions via common LEDs.

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Computational chemistry at the G3(MP2)-RAD//M06-2X/6-31+G(d,p)//SMD level of theory was used to study the oxidation of a test set of methyl adducts of nitroxide radicals and methyl adducts of Blatter's radical, a Kuhn verdazyl and two oxo-verdazyls. The barriers and the reaction energies of the S2 reactions of the oxidized species with pyridine were also studied with a view to identify species with both low oxidation potentials and low S2 barriers, so as to broaden the functional group tolerance of in situ electrochemical methylation compared with TEMPO-Me (1-methoxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine). Within the alkoxyamines, the oxidation potentials covered a range of 0.

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Photoactivation of tetrazoles to form nitrile imines primed for 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions is of widespread utility in chemistry. In contrast, the corresponding thermal reactions usually possess prohibitively high barriers and have garnered significantly less attention. Here, computational chemistry at the M06-2X/6-31+G(d,p) level of theory with SMD solvent corrections is used to show that these thermal activation barriers can be significantly reduced through the use of nonconjugated charged functional groups (CFGs).

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Controlled degradation of polypropylene (PP) is used industrially to improve the properties of crude PP. While this degradation is traditionally initiated by organic peroxides, -acyloxyamines are now preferred due to their greater stability. However, their mechanism of action remains unclear.

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Oriented electrostatic fields can exert catalytic effects upon both the kinetics and the thermodynamics of chemical reactions; however, the vast majority of studies thus far have focused upon ground-state chemistry and rarely consider any more than a single class of reaction. In the present study, we first use density functional theory (DFT) calculations to clarify the mechanism of CO storage via photochemical carboxylation of -alkylphenyl ketones, originally proposed by Murakami et al. ( , , 14063); we then demonstrate that oriented internal electrostatic fields arising from remote charged functional groups (CFGs) can selectively and cooperatively promote both ground- and excited-state chemical reactivity at all points along the revised mechanism, in a manner otherwise difficult to access via classical substituent effects.

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Atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) is the most commonly utilized technique in controlled radical polymerization. However, the identification of more active catalysts could further increase its scope, both for polymerization and small-molecule synthesis more generally. To this end, a series of novel ligands were designed on the basis of two strategies: replacing nitrogen-based ligands with their phosphorus equivalents and rigidifying the ligand cap of nitrogen-based ligands so as to enforce short Cu-cap distances.

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Bench- and air-stable 1-methoxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine (TEMPO-Me) is relatively unreactive at ambient temperature in the absence of an electrochemical stimulus. In this report, we demonstrate that the one-electron electrochemical oxidation of TEMPO-Me produces a powerful electrophilic methylating agent in situ. Our computational and experimental studies are consistent with methylation proceeding via a S2 mechanism, with a strength comparable to the trimethyloxonium cation.

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Natural biopolymers, such as DNA and proteins, have uniform microstructures with defined molecular weight, precise monomer sequence, and stereoregularity along the polymer main chain that affords them unique biological functions. To reproduce such structurally perfect polymers and understand the mechanism of specific functions through chemical approaches, researchers have proposed using synthetic polymers as an alternative due to their broad chemical diversity and relatively simple manipulation. Herein, we report a new methodology to prepare sequence-controlled and stereospecific oligomers using alternating radical chain growth and sequential photoinduced RAFT single unit monomer insertion (photo-RAFT SUMI).

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The oxidation potential of a test set of 21 nitroxide radicals, including a number of novel compounds, has been studied experimentally in acetonitrile and correlated with theoretical calculations. It was found that both Hammett constants (σ) of the substituents on the nitroxide radicals and hyperfine splitting constants of the respective nitrogen atoms (α) were well correlated to their experimental oxidation potentials. Theoretical calculations, carried out at the G3(MP2,CC)(+)//M06-2X/6-31+G(d,p) level of theory with PCM solvation corrections, were shown to reproduce experiments to within a mean absolute deviation of 33 mV, with a maximum deviation of 64 mV.

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Alkoxyamines are heat-labile molecules, widely used as an in situ source of nitroxides in polymer and materials sciences. Here we show that the one-electron oxidation of an alkoxyamine leads to a cation radical intermediate that even at room temperature rapidly fragments, releasing a nitroxide and carbocation. Digital simulations of experimental voltammetry and current-time transients suggest that the unimolecular decomposition which yields the "unmasked" nitroxide (TEMPO) is exceedingly rapid and irreversible.

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The wavelength-dependent conversion of two rapid photoinduced ligation reactions, i.e., the light activation of o-methylbenzaldehydes, leading to the formation of reactive o-quinodimethanes (photoenols), and the photolysis of 2,5-diphenyltetrazoles, affording highly reactive nitrile imines, is probed via a monochromatic wavelength scan at constant photon count.

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This work demonstrates the effect of electrostatic interactions on the electroactivity of a persistent organic free radical. This was achieved by chemisorption of molecules of 4-azido-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperdinyloxy (4-azido-TEMPO) onto monolayer-modified Si(100) electrodes using a two-step chemical procedure to preserve the open-shell state and hence the electroactivity of the nitroxide radical. Kinetic and thermodynamic parameters for the surface electrochemical reaction are investigated experimentally and analyzed with the aid of electrochemical digital simulations and quantum-chemical calculations of a theoretical model of the tethered TEMPO system.

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