Publications by authors named "Joe B Gilroy"

Fluorophores that respond to external stimuli, such as changes in pH, have utility in bio-imaging and sensing applications. Almost all pH-responsive fluorophores rely on complex syntheses and the use of pH-responsive functional groups that are peripheral to the fluorophore framework. In this work, pH-responsive boron-containing heterocycles based on tridentate acyl pyridylhydrazone ligands were prepared.

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Article Synopsis
  • ????-Conjugated polymers, particularly those with acetylenic units, have narrow optical band gaps and adjustable energy levels, making them suitable for organic electronics.
  • This study explores the structure-property relationships of these polymers by synthesizing Glaser-Hay-coupled model compounds and random copolymers with BF formazanate, fluorene, and bis(alkoxy)benzene units.
  • The resulting materials demonstrate notable redox activity and broad absorption profiles, indicating their potential use in photovoltaics and light-harvesting technologies.
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Emissive organic materials are predominantly fluorescent and there is significant interest in realizing and understanding examples that defy this paradigm and exhibit phosphorescence under ambient conditions. Organic room temperature phosphorescence (ORTP) offers the long-lived excited states and bathochromically-shifted emission maxima of phosphorescence without the use of potentially toxic and expensive transition metals. Most ORTP materials rely on well-studied structural motifs that include aryl carbonyls, sulfones, and heavy main group elements.

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Since the Nobel prize winning discovery that polyacetylene could act as a semiconductor, there has been tremendous efforts dedicated to understanding and harnessing the unusual properties of π-conjugated polymers. Much of this research has focused on the preparation of oligoynes and polyynes with well-defined numbers of repeating alkyne units as models for carbyne. These studies are usually hampered by a structure-property relationship where the stability of the resulting materials decrease with the incorporation of additional alkyne units.

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Heterocycles that pair main group elements and nitrogen are extremely important within the π-conjugated heterocycles research community. Compared to the vast number of boron-nitrogen heterocycles, those that include phosphorus are less common. Furthermore, the use of phosphorus-nitrogen triple bonds of any type to prepare such compounds is unprecedented.

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  • Dye-dye conjugates are gaining traction for their use in bioimaging, theranostics, and light-harvesting, but previous structures have been limited to small chromophores, which restricts optoelectronic enhancements.
  • The authors introduce novel dye-dye conjugates made from boron difluoride complexes with formazanate and dipyrromethene ligands, showcasing dual photoluminescence in the near-infrared range and indicating the presence of anti-Kasha processes.
  • Cyclic voltammetry experiments indicate these conjugates can generate polyanionic species that can reversibly accept up to 6 electrons, positioning BF formazanates as a promising foundation for developing new types of dye-dye
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Multicomponent reactions of primary phosphines (R-PH), diimines (R'-N═C(H)-R-(H)C═N-R'), and chalcogens (O, S) generate poly(α-aminophosphine chalcogenide)s (-) through step-growth polymerization. Characterization of the linear polymers using P{H} diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy (DOSY) experiments aided in determining the molecular weight () of the material. Subjecting the polyphosphine oxide or sulfide to reducing conditions in the presence of a Lewis acid resulted in complete depolymerization of the polymers, quantitatively releasing the 1° phosphine and diimine () starting materials, with concomitant reduction of diimine to diamine ().

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While they are often encountered as reaction intermediates, phosphenium cations are not commonly incorporated into π-conjugated systems. We report the synthesis and characterization of donor-stabilized phosphenium cations supported by pyridylhydrazonide ligands. The preparation of these cations relies on precise control of ligand - isomerism.

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Molecular materials with π-conjugated donor-acceptor (D-A) and acceptor-donor-acceptor (A-D-A) electronic structures have received significant attention due to their usage in organic photovoltaic materials, in organic light-emitting diodes, and as biological imaging agents. Boron-containing molecular materials have been explored as electron-accepting units in compounds with D-A and A-D-A properties as they often exhibit unique and tunable optoelectronic and redox properties. Here, we utilize Stille cross-coupling chemistry to prepare a series of compounds with boron difluoride hydrazones (BODIHYs) as acceptors and benzene, thiophene, or 9,9-dihexylfluorene as donors.

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Article Synopsis
  • Primary phosphines react with imines to create bis-α-aminophosphines, which can be oxidized to stable bis-α-aminophosphine sulfides.
  • To understand how this reaction works, researchers used various analysis methods, including Hammett analysis and kinetic isotope effects.
  • The process involves a transformation between P(V) and P(III) forms, leading to a nucleophilic attack that produces the final products.
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  • Researchers used bulky redox-active BF formazanate dyes as end-caps to create stable symmetric and asymmetric oligoynes with up to 10 alkyne units.
  • The resulting oligoynes exhibit unique optical and redox properties, making them potentially useful for applications in organic electronics, and this method can be adapted for other functional end-caps.
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Lewis acids are highly sought after for their applications in sensing, small-molecule activation, and catalysis. When combined with π-conjugated molecular frameworks, Lewis acids with unique optoelectronic properties can be realized. Here, we use a tridentate formazanate ligand to create a planar, redox-active, fluorescent, and strongly Lewis-acidic borenium cation.

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π-Conjugated molecules with acceptor-donor-acceptor (A-D-A) electronic structures make up an important class of materials due to their tunable optoelectronic properties and applications in, for example, organic light-emitting diodes, nonlinear optical devices, and organic solar cells. The frontier molecular orbital energies, and thus band gaps, of these materials can be tuned by varying the donor and acceptor traits and π-electron counts of the structural components. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of a series of A-D-A compounds consisting of BF formazanates as electron acceptors bridged by a variety of π-conjugated donors.

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Polymers that exhibit aggregation-induced emission (AIE) find use, for example, as cell-imaging agents and as fluorometric sensors due to their unique optical properties. However, the structural diversity of AIE-active polymers has not necessarily advanced at the same rate as their applications. In this work, ring-opening metathesis polymerization is used to synthesize the first example of a polymer (M  = 61,600 g mol , Đ = 1.

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Incorporation of cationic boron atoms into molecular frameworks is an established strategy for creating chemical species with unusual bonding and reactivity but is rarely thought of as a way of enhancing molecular optoelectronic properties. Using boron formazanate dyes as examples, we demonstrate that the wavelengths, intensities, and type of the first electronic transitions in BN heterocycles can be modulated by varying the charge, coordination number, and supporting ligands at the cationic boron atom. UV-vis absorption spectroscopy measurements and density-functional (DFT) calculations show that these modulations are caused by changes in the geometry and extent of π-conjugation of the boron formazanate ring.

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Near-infrared (NIR) dyes are sought after for their utility in light harvesting, bioimaging, and light-mediated therapies. Since long-wavelength photoluminescence typically involves extensive π-conjugated systems of double bonds and aromatic rings, it is often assumed that NIR dyes have to be large molecules that require complex syntheses. We challenge this assumption by demonstrating that facile incorporation of tertiary amine groups into readily available 3-cyanoformazans affords efficient production of relatively simple NIR-active BF formazanate dyes (λ =691-760 nm, λ =834-904 nm in toluene).

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  • Two new fluorescence imaging probes have been created by combining a boron difluoride formazanate precursor with peptides using a copper-catalyzed chemical reaction.
  • The formazanate dye was linked to a specific part of the ghrelin peptide to visualize the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR-1a).
  • Additionally, the dye was also attached to bombesin to target the gastrin releasing peptide receptor (GRPR), showcasing a novel approach in labeling biomolecules with these new dyes.
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The creation of dimeric boron difluoride complexes of chelating N-donor ligands is a proven strategy for the enhancement of the optoelectronic properties of fluorescent dyes. We report dimers based on the boron difluoride hydrazone (BODIHY) framework, which offer unique and sometimes unexpected substituent-dependent absorption, emission, and electrochemical properties. BODIHY dimers have low-energy absorption bands (λ =421 to 479 nm, ϵ=17 200 to 39 900 m  cm ) that are red-shifted relative to monomeric analogues.

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Formazans (Ar1-NH-N[double bond, length as m-dash]CR3-N[double bond, length as m-dash]N-Ar5), a class of nitrogen-rich and highly colored compounds, have been known since the late 1800s and studied more closely since the early 1940s. Their intense color has led to their widespread use as dyes, especially in cell biology where they are most often used to quantitatively assess cell-viability. Despite structural similarities to well-known ligand classes such as β-diketiminates, the deprotonated form of formazans, formazanates, have received relatively little attention in the transition metal and main group coordination chemistry arenas.

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The combination of π-conjugated organic compounds and Pt(ii)-acetylides is a powerful strategy for the production of functional optoelectronic materials. The presence of the heavy element, Pt, in these compounds enhances electronic delocalization generally resulting in low-energy absorption and emission maxima and often leads to intersystem crossing, resulting in phosphorescence. When boron complexes of N-donor ligands, such as boron dipyrromethenes (BODIPYs), are involved the molecular and polymeric materials produced have properties that are advantageous for their use as oxygen-sensors, in triplet-triplet annihilation, and as the functional components of photovoltaics.

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Boron difluoride (BF ) formazanate dyes are contenders for molecular species that exhibit a large Stokes shift and bright red emission. Excitation of 3-cyanoformazanate complexes with 10 μs wide pulses of specific wavelengths resulted in strong luminescence at 663 nm at both room temperature in solution and at 77 K in a frozen solution. Analysis of the short-lived excitation spectrum from this luminescence shows that it arises from a vibronic manifold of a higher-lying excited state.

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The synthesis of compounds containing multiple bonds to boron has challenged main-group chemists for decades. Despite significant progress, the possibility that the formation of such bonds can turn on photoluminescence has received minimal attention. We report an oxoborane (B=O) complex that is electronically stabilized by a formazanate ligand in the absence of significant steric bulk and, unlike the common BX (X=F, Cl) formazanate adducts, exhibits intense photoluminescence.

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We develop the chemistry of boron difluoride hydrazone dyes (BODIHYs) bearing two aryl substituents and explore their properties. The low-energy absorption bands (λ =427-464 nm) of these dyes depend on the nature of the N-aryl groups appended to the BODIHY framework. Electron-donating and extended π-conjugated groups cause a redshift, whereas electron-withdrawing groups result in a blueshift.

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The electronic structure of 1,3,5-triphenyl-6-oxoverdazyl, a heteroatom-rich stable organic radical, and its diamagnetic 1,3,5-triphenyl-6-oxotetrazane precursor are probed using X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. The N K-edge XANES spectra of the 6-oxoverdazyl radical contain strong N 1s → π* resonances for each set of equivalent nitrogen atoms. The fact that these resonances are absent from the analogous spectra of the 6-oxotetrazane, whereas the O K-edge and C K-edge XANES spectra of both species are very similar, demonstrates that the unpaired electron of the radical is localized primarily on the N atoms of the 6-oxoverdazyl heterocycle.

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Dialkynylborane complexes of N-donor ligands have received significant attention because of their application in biological imaging, as light-harvesting materials, and as the functional component of organic photovoltaics. Despite these advances, relatively few types of N-donor ligands have been explored in this context. To this end, we prepared a series of dialkynylborane complexes of formazanate ligands and explored their electronic properties and reactivity.

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