Supramolecular assemblies form when silver nitrate is added to an aqueous solution of adenine (Ade) or 2-aminopurine (2AP) in a 2:1 mole ratio. Atomic force microscopy images reveal nanofibers that are ∼30 nm in diameter and micrometers in length in the dried film formed from a room-temperature solution. Femtosecond broadband transient absorption spectroscopy was used to investigate the dynamics of excited states formed by UV excitation of the nanofibers in room-temperature aqueous solutions in an effort to learn how nonradiative decay pathways of the uncomplexed nucleobases are altered in the silver-ion-mediated assemblies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate pump-repump-probe (PRP) transient hole burning as a spectroscopic tool for differentiating reactive from nonreactive deactivation of excited photochemical reactants observed by transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS). This method utilizes a time-delayed, wavelength-tunable ultrafast pulse to alter the excited reactant population, with the impact of "repumping" quantified through depletions in photoproduct absorption. We apply this approach to characterize dynamics affecting the nonadiabatic photocyclization efficiency to form S dihydrotriphenylene (DHT) following 266 nm excitation of ortho-terphenyl (OTP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoron-nitrogen doping of polyaromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) materials can be used to tune their electronic properties while preserving the structural characteristics of pure hydrocarbons. Many multicycle PAHs can be synthesized photochemically; in contrast, very little is known about the photochemistry of their BN-doped counterparts. We present results of fs, ns, and μs time-resolved spectroscopic studies on the photoinduced dynamics of hexaphenyl benzene and hexaphenyl borazine in order to examine how BN doping alters photochemical C-C bond formation via 6π electrocyclization as well as the stability of resulting cyclized structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBoron-nitrogen doping of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), such as borazine-core hexabenzocoronene, presents possibilities for tuning the properties of organic electronics and nanographene materials while preserving structural characteristics of pure hydrocarbons. Previous photochemical studies have demonstrated extension of a borazine-core PAH network (1,2:3,4:5,6-tris(o,o'-biphenylylene)borazine, 1) by photoinduced cyclodehydrogenation. We present steady-state and femtosecond-to-microsecond resolved spectroscopic studies of the photophysics of 1 and a related borazine-core PAH in order to characterize competing excited-state relaxation pathways that determine the efficacy of bond formation by photocyclization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding how molecular structure impacts the shapes of potential energy surfaces and prospects for nonadiabatic photochemical dynamics is critical for predicting and controlling the chemistry of molecular excited states. Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy was used to interrogate photoinduced, nonadiabatic 6π cyclization of a collection of ortho-terphenyls (OTP) modified with alkyl substituents of different sizes and electron-donating/withdrawing character positioned on its central and pendant phenyl rings. OTP alkylated at the 4,4″ and 4',5' positions of the pendant and central rings, respectively, exhibiting biphasic excited-state relaxation; this is qualitatively similar to relaxation of OTP itself, including a fast decrease in excited-state absorption (τ1 = 1-4 ps) followed by formation of metastable cyclized photoproducts (τ2 = 3-47 ps) that share common characteristic spectroscopic features for all substitutions despite variations in chemical nature of the substituents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have discovered a highly regioselective aminofluorination of cyclopropanes. Remarkably, four unique sets of conditions-two photochemical, two purely chemical-generated the same aminofluorinated adducts in good to excellent yields. The multiple, diverse ways in which the reaction could be initiated provided valuable clues that led to the proposal of a "unifying" chain propagation mechanism beyond initiation, tied by a common intermediate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonadiabatic photocyclization makes bonds and is the first step in the photoinduced cyclodehydrogenation of ortho-arenes to yield polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. How molecular structure alters potential-energy landscapes, excited-state dynamics, and stabilities of reactants and intermediates underlies the feasibility of desirable photochemistry. In order to gain insight into these structure-dynamics relationships, we have used femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) to examine photoinduced dynamics of 1,2,3-triphenylbenzene (TPB) and ortho-quaterphenyl (OQTP), phenyl-subsituted analogues of ortho-terphenyl (OTP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElucidating the molecular dynamics that underlie photoinduced electrocyclization is a critical step toward controlling nonadiabatic photochemistry that enables bond formation. Here we present a comprehensive examination of the photochemical dynamics of o-terphenyl (OTP) in solution. Ultrafast transient absorption measurements demonstrate that OTP cyclizes upon 266 nm photoexcitation to form 4a,4b-dihydrotriphenylene (DHT) on a solvent-dependent time scale of 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonadiabatic photocyclization is the fundamental step underlying photoswitching and light-assisted bond formation within diarylethylenes, yet the details of the nuclear dynamics leading to cyclization remain unclear. We have examined the ultrafast excited-state dynamics of o-terphenyl (OTP) and 1,2-diphenylcyclohexene (DPCH) in solution to determine how variation in structural constraints impacts the course of nonadiabatic photocyclization specifically in stilbenoids. Measured spectral dynamics reflect cyclization through a S1-to-S0 transition for both systems on picosecond time scales, with excited-state decay appreciably faster for DPCH versus OTP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe previously demonstrated that in utero exposure to the bacteriotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) led to the birth of rat pups with fewer than normal dopamine (DA) neurons. These animals exhibited significant neuroinflammation in the nigrostriatal pathway creating the possibility that they could exhibit further, progressive DA neuron loss over their lives. To study this possibility, we injected gravid female rats i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxin-induced animal models of Parkinson's disease (PD) exhibit many of the same neuroinflammatory changes seen in patients suggesting a role for inflammation in DA neuron loss. Yet, despite this inflammation, the progressive loss of DA neurons that characterizes PD is rarely seen in animals. We infused lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or saline into 7-month-old rats that had been exposed to LPS or saline prenatally and assessed them for DA neuron loss and inflammatory measures (interleukin 1 beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, glutathione, and activated microglia) over a period of 84 days to examine the role of pre-existing inflammation in progressive DA neuron loss.
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