Publications by authors named "Carlos Frontana"

The mediated oxidation of acetate and octanoate ions in acetonitrile was used to covalently modify carbon surfaces with films bearing saturated aliphatic chains of different length. Film thickness increases proportionally with the length of the aliphatic chain within the carboxylate precursor. The thickest film was obtained from octanoate oxidation and rectification occurs when ferrocene is used as redox probe in acetonitrile solution.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how hydrogen bonding competes with proton transfer in systems created from electrogenerated dianions from dinitrobenzene isomers and certain urea derivatives.
  • An ErCrCi mechanism was used to relate the voltammetric responses to both hydrogen bonding and proton transfer, revealing that increasing the urea concentration shifts the responses from being diffusion-controlled to irreversible due to proton transfer effects.
  • Results showed that among the dinitrobenzene isomers, 1,3-dinitrobenzene had the highest proton transfer rate (∼25 M(-1) s(-1)), followed by 1,2-dinitrobenzene (∼5 M(-1) s(-1
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Electron transfer controlled hydrogen bonding was studied for a series of nitrobenzene derivative radical anions, working as large guest anions, and substituted ureas, including dihomooxacalix[4]arene bidentate urea derivatives, in order to estimate binding constants (Kb) for the hydrogen-bonding process. Results showed enhanced Kb values for the interaction with phenyl-substituted bidentate urea, which is significantly larger than for the remaining compounds, e.g.

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A cylindrical Upflow Fixed Bed Reactor (UFB-BER) with granular activated carbon, steel mesh electrodes and anaerobic microorganisms, was constructed for analyzing how hydrodynamic parameters affect the reactions involved during wastewater treatment processes for azo dye degradation. Dye removal percentage was not compromised by decreasing HRTm (99-90% upon changing HRTm from 4 to 1h in single pass mode). Using the residence time distribution method for hydrodynamic characterization, it was found that a higher dispersion in the reactor occurs for HRTm=1h, than for HRTm=4h.

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An electrochemical and theoretical analysis of a series of shikonin derivatives in aprotic media is presented. Results showed that the first electrochemical reduction signal is a reversible monoelectronic transfer, generating a stable semiquinone intermediate; the corresponding E(I)⁰ values were correlated with calculated values of electroaccepting power (ω(+)) and adiabatic electron affinities (A(Ad)), obtained with BH and HLYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) and considering the solvent effect, revealing the influence of intramolecular hydrogen bonding and the substituting group at position C-2 in the experimental reduction potential. For the second reduction step, esterified compounds isobutyryl and isovalerylshikonin presented a coupled chemical reaction following dianion formation.

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Electrochemical, spectroelectrochemical, and theoretical studies of the reduction reactions in nor-β-lapachone derivatives including a nitro redox center showed that reduction of the compounds involves the formation of several radical intermediates, including a biradical dianion resultant from the separate reduction of the quinone and nitro groups in the molecules. Theoretical descriptions of the corresponding Fukui functions f(αα)⁺ and f(ββ)⁺(r) and LUMO densities considering finite differences and frozen core approximations for describing the changes in electron and spin densities of the system allowed us to confirm these results. A description of the potential relationship with the obtained results and biological activity selectivity indexes suggests that both the formation of stable biradical dianion species and the stability of the semiquinone intermediates during further reduction are determining factors in the description of their biological activity.

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In this work, experimental evidence of the influence of the electron transfer kinetics during electron transfer controlled hydrogen bonding between anion radicals of metronidazole and ornidazole, derivatives of 5-nitro-imidazole, and 1,3-diethylurea as the hydrogen bond donor, is presented. Analysis of the variations of voltammetric EpIcvs. log KB[DH], where KB is the binding constant, allowed us to determine the values of the binding constant and also the electron transfer rate k, confirmed by experiments obtained at different scan rates.

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Evaluation of the substituent effect in reaction series is an issue of interest, as it is fundamental for controlling chemical reactivity in molecules. Within the framework of density functional theory, employment of the chemical potential, μ, and the chemical hardness, η, leads to the calculation of properties of common use, such as the electrodonating (ω(-)) and electroaccepting (ω(+)) powers, in many chemical systems. In order to examine the predictive character of the substituent effect by these indexes, a comparison between these and experimental binding constants (Kb) for binding of a series of radical anions from para- and ortho-substituted nitrobenzenes with 1,3-diethylurea in acetonitrile was performed, and fair correlations were obtained; furthermore, this strategy was suitable for all of the studied compounds, even those for which empirical approximations, such as Hammett's model, are not valid.

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A microbial bioelectrochemical reactor (BER) was employed for the degradation of azo dyes without the use of an external electron donor, using activated carbon (GAC) as a redox mediator. Contribution of pH values, open circuit potential (OCP), dye concentration and applied current were individually studied. A batch system and an upflow fixed bed bioreactor were built for analyzing the effect of the applied current on biodegradation of the azo dye Reactive Red 272.

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Spectroscopic, thermal, and electrochemical characterization results are presented for the redox active polymer poly(2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperinidyloxy-4-yl methacrylate) or PTMA, synthesized by group transfer polymerization (GTP), and its precursors 4-hydroxy-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (HO-TEMPO) and 4-methacryloyloxy-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl (MO-TEMPO). DSC analysis of synthesized PTMA showed that the glass transition temperature (T(g)) of the polymer structure occurs at 155 °C, corroborated by dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), which is higher when compared with T(g) data for PTMA synthesized by other methods. Also, the amount of radical species present in PTMA synthesized by GTP reactions (100%) is higher than the values typically upon synthesizing PTMA by radical polymerization.

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An electrochemical and spectroelectrochemical strategy is presented for evaluating reactivity differences in the semiquinone anions from naturally occurring quinones juglone (5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone) and plumbagin (2-methyl-5-hydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone). By employing cyclic voltammetry and in situ spectroelectrochemical electron spin resonance measurements, it was found that while semiquinone species generated from plumbagin are stable radical anions in DMSO solution, the species generated from juglone are more reactive. These latter species are involved in a self-protonation process involving a slow rate of protonation (1.

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In this work, the electrochemical behaviour of an antitumoral nitro o-quinone derivative obtained from 3-bromo-nor-beta-lapachone was studied. Cyclic voltammetric experiments, in acetonitrile solution, revealed that both quinone and nitro functions are reduced independently as quasi-reversible one-electron transfer processes in this order. Depending on the reduction potential, a radical anion or a biradical dianion is obtained.

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A voltammetric and spectroelectrochemical ESR study of the reduction processes of five substituted 4-R-2-nitrophenols (R = -H, -OCH(3), -CH(3), -CN, -CF(3)) in acetonitrile was performed. In the potential range considered here (-0.2 to -2.

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Article Synopsis
  • Quinoid rings with electron-rich olefins show changes in their redox potential, influenced by lateral chain flexibility and its interaction with proteins and substrates, which is crucial for biological activity.
  • New techniques, including electrochemical-electron spin resonance (EC-ESR) and theoretical calculations, have demonstrated that weak pi-pi interactions play a key role in determining the conformation, diffusion, and electrochemical properties of compounds like perezone.
  • Nuclear magnetic resonance has provided direct evidence of different perezone conformers in solution and explained their transformation into pipitzols upon heating, highlighting the importance of conformer interaction in influencing the redox potential during biological processes.
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In this work a comparison between redox potentials, obtained by constructing current-potential plots from chronoamperometric measurements, and the parameter sigma(x), as proposed by Zuman in terms of the Hammett substituent parameters, was performed for several quinone compounds. This study shows the limitations of this approach and proves that methods based on quantum chemistry can be used to study the substituent effect in quinone systems. By using the Density Functional Theory, in the Kohn-Sham context with three exchange-correlation functionals, BLYP, B3LYP, and BHLYP, it was found that the electron affinity is good enough to give a useful relationship with experimental redox potentials of quinone systems.

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