The increased use of wireless technology causes a significant exposure increase for all living organisms to radio frequency electromagnetic fields (RF-EMF). This comprises bacteria, animals, and also plants. Unfortunately, our understanding of how RF-EMF influences plants and plant physiology remains inadequate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA general, easy-to-implement strategy for mapping the structure of organic phases integrated in mesoporous silica drug delivery devices is presented. The approach based on a few straightforward solid-state NMR techniques has no limitations regarding concentrations of the active compounds and enables straightforward discrimination of various organic phases. This way, among a range of typical arrangements of the active compounds and solvent molecules, a unique, previously unknown organogel phase of the self-assembled tapentadol in glucofurol as a solvent was unveiled and clearly identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA diolefin ether, trop2O (2), and a diolefin thioether, trop2S (3), have been investigated as ligand analogues of the well-established diolefin amine, trop2NH (1). Compounds 2 and 3 form different conformers in solution and in the solid state. Whereas 2 could be coordinated to Ni(0), 3 was found to be more suited for coordination to Rh(I).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA library of monodentate phosphane ligands, each bearing a guanidine receptor unit for carboxylates, was designed. Screening of the library gave some excellent catalysts for regioselective hydroformylation of beta,gamma-unsaturated carboxylic acids. A terminal alkene, but-3-enoic acid, was hydroformylated with a linear/branched (l/b) regioselectivity up to 41.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe six-dimensional exchange density Gamma(X)(r1,r2) is a measure of electron delocalization at the Hartree-Fock level. Fixation of r1 to a constant point results in a three-dimensional function, which displays electron delocalization that originates from r1 in position space. In this work, the dimensionality of Gamma(X)(r1,r2) is lowered from six to four by integration with regard to r2 over sphere surfaces of radius d, centered at r1 = r.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA convenient one-step synthesis for [Mn(CO)6]+ salts has been developed. The method involves the one-electron oxidation of Mn2(CO)10 by protons in solutions of Lewis acids (BF3, (CF3)3BCO) and anhydrous HF. The molecular structure of [Mn(CO)6][BF4].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTreatment of Cs[(CF3)3BNH2] with the aminating agent H2NOSO3H in aqueous solution allowed the isolation of pure Cs[(CF3)3BH], which is stable up to 300 degrees C. Due to the strong electron-withdrawing effect of the CF3 substituents, the [(CF3)3BH]- anion behaves as a very unreactive hydride. It is stable in concentrated hydrochloric acid for many days but reacts cleanly with F2, Cl2, and Br2 to the corresponding haloborates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Laplacian of the negative exchange-correlation density (with respect to coordinate r(2)), nabla<(r)2>(2)[-Gamma(sigma1)(sigma2)(XC) (r(1),r(2))] = nabla(r)2(2)X(sigma1)(sigma2)(r(1),r(2)), is proposed as an instrument for the analysis of electron delocalization in real space. It determines local concentrations in the amount of electrons that are delocalized from a reference point r(1) over space. Integration of the reference coordinate r(1) over an atomic basin Omega(n) gives the function nabla(2)X(sigma1)(sigma2)(Omega(n);r), which contains detailed information about the spatial shape of the delocalization that originates from an atom in a molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe benzophenone dianion [diphenyloxidomethanide, (Ph(2)CO)(2-)], which occurs in the well known deeply violet sodium/benzophenone tetrahydrofuran solutions, was crystallised with sodium cations in form of the two polymeric chain compounds [Na(2)(Ph(2)CO)(tetraglyme)](infinity) and [Na(2)(Ph(2)CO)(thf)(2)](infinity). It was found to aggregate with its conjugated acid, the alcoholate (Ph(2)CHO)(-), around a central unit of sodium hydroxide, resulting in the mixed cage compound [Na(13)(Ph(2)CO)(4)(Ph(2)CHO)(4)(OH)(mtbe)(4)].mtbe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal-stabilized phenoxyl radicals appear to be important intermediates in a variety of enzymatic oxidations. We report that transition metal coordination also supports an aminyl radical, resulting in a stable crystalline complex: [Rh(I)(trop2N.)(bipy)]+OTf- (where trop is 5-H-dibenzo[a,d]cycloheptene-5-yl, bipy is 2,2'-bipyridyl, OTf- is trifluorosulfonate).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new class of potent electrophilic "R(+)" alkylating agents has been developed using weakly nucleophilic carborane anions as leaving groups. These reagents, R(CHB(11)Me(5)X(6)) (R = Me, Et, and i-Pr; X = Cl, Br), are prepared via metathesis reactions with conventional alkylating agents such as alkyl triflates, using the high oxophilicity of silylium ion-like species, Et(3)Si(carborane), as the driving force to obtain increased alkyl electrophilicity. The crystal structure of the isopropyl reagent, i-Pr(CHB(11)Me(5)Br(6)), has been determined, revealing covalence in the alkyl-carborane bonding.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIridium(I) complexes containing a (5H-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5-yl)-phosphane (tropp(R); R = phosphorus-bound substituent = Ph, Cyc) as a rigid, concave-shaped, mixed phosphane olefin ligand were prepared and tested as catalyst precursors in the hydrogenation of imines. With the complex [Ir(tropp(Cyc))(cod)]OTf, turnover frequencies (TOFs) of >6000 h(-1) were reached in the hydrogenation of N-phenyl-benzylidenamine, PhN==CHPh. Lower activities (TOF>80 h(-1)) are observed with N-phenyl-(1-phenylethylidene)amine, PhN==CMePh.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF[Na11(OtBu)10(OH)], a hydroxide enclosing 21-vertex cage compound, was found to crystallize from mixtures of sodium tert.butanolate with sodium hydroxide. Its structure can be derived from the known (NaOtBu)6-hexaprismane by replacing one butanolate unit with OH- and capping the latter with five additional units of NaOtBu.
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