Publications by authors named "Krunoslav UZarevic"

2,5-Dihydroxyterephthalic acid (H) is well-known for its use in the construction of functional metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). Among them, simple coordination polymers (CPs), such as lithium and sodium coordination polymers with H, have been used successfully to synthesize electrically conductive MOFs and have also demonstrated great potential as positive or negative electrode materials on their own. However, there has been little exploration of the structure and physicochemical properties of these and other alkali complexes of H.

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We report the first metal- and catalyst-free protocol for the facile cross-coupling of aryl halides towards C-B, C-P and C-S bonds under solid-state ball milling conditions via UV light irradiation. The reactions can be performed in the absence of bulk solvents at room temperature in a mixer mill, yielding up to 99 % and being tolerant towards various functionalized aryl halides (X=I or Br). Furthermore, we developed a novel photoreactor design increasing the light intensity.

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We show that the non-canonical nucleobase 2,6-diaminopurine (D) spontaneously base pairs with uracil (U) in water and the solid state without the need to be attached to the ribose-phosphate backbone. Depending on the reaction conditions, D and U assemble in thermodynamically stable hydrated and anhydrated D-U base-paired cocrystals. Under UV irradiation, an aqueous solution of D-U base-pair undergoes photochemical degradation, while a pure aqueous solution of U does not.

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Hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites (HOIPs) occupy a prominent position in the field of materials chemistry due to their attractive optoelectronic properties. While extensive work has been done on the crystalline materials over the past decades, the newly reported glasses formed from HOIPs open up a new avenue for perovskite research with their unique structures and functionalities. Melt-quenching is the predominant route to glass formation; however, the absence of a stable liquid state prior to thermal decomposition precludes this method for most HOIPs.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study utilized synchrotron powder X-ray diffraction alongside temperature monitoring to directly measure the temperatures at which polymorphic transitions occur under thermo-mechanochemical conditions.
  • It found that the transition temperature for 1-adamantyl-1-diamantyl ether is 31 °C lower than previously measured using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC).
  • These results emphasize the distinct characteristics of thermo-mechanochemical methods, suggesting new possibilities for screening different polymorphs in materials science.
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We present a solvent-free thermo-mechanochemical approach for the direct coupling of carboxylic acids and amines, which avoids activators and additives. Detailed analysis of the reactions by and monitoring methods led to the observation, isolation, and characterisation of multicomponent crystalline intermediates that precede the formation of amides. We applied our methodology for the quantitative synthesis of the active pharmaceutical ingredient moclobemide.

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Enlarging the quantum coherence times and gaining control over quantum effects in real systems are fundamental for developing quantum technologies. Molecular electron spin qubits are particularly promising candidates for realizing quantum information processing due to their modularity and tunability. Still, there is a constant search for tools to increase their quantum coherence times.

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Owing to its efficiency and unique reactivity, mechanochemical processing of bulk solids has developed into a powerful tool for the synthesis and transformation of various classes of materials. Nevertheless, mechanochemistry is primarily based on simple techniques, such as milling in comminution devices. Recently, mechanochemical reactivity has started being combined with other energy sources commonly used in solution-based chemistry.

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MOF-74 is an archetypal magnetic metal-organic framework (MOF) family, with metal nodes bridged by 2,5-dioxido-1,4-benzenedicarboxylic acid (Hdobdc) and arranged into one of the simplest representations of the 1D Ising magnetic model. Recently, a novel mechano-synthetic approach opened a pathway toward a series of bimetallic multivariate (1:1) M1M2-MOF-74 materials, with the uniform distribution of metal cations in the oxometallic chains, offering a unique opportunity to investigate low-dimensional magnetism in these heterometallic MOFs. We explore here how different mechanochemical procedures affect the interaction between the metal nodes of the model system of three multivariate copper(II)/zinc(II)-MOF-74 materials, two of which were obtained through a template-controlled procedure, and the third one was obtained by recently developed mechanical MOF-alloying combined with subsequent accelerated aging.

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The structure of a new ZIF-8 polymorph with quartz topology (qtz) is reported. This qtz-[Zn(mIm)2] phase was obtained by mechanically amorphising crystalline ZIF-8, before heating the resultant amorphous phase to between 282 and 316 °C. The high-temperature phase structure was obtained from powder X-ray diffraction, and its thermal behaviour, CO gas sorption properties and dye adsorption ability were investigated.

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Here we present efficient and scalable mechanochemical formation of hybrid organic-inorganic perovskites of the form [TPrA][M(dca)] (M = Mn, Co) and the subsequent formation of their bulk melt-quenched glasses. X-ray diffraction reveals direct, facile, and almost instantaneouos formation of both crystalline materials, while slow cooling limits recrystallisation in glasses. The glasses show good stability to acidic and basic aqueous solutions and display higher carbon dioxide uptakes than their crystalline precursors.

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In recent years, mechanochemistry has enriched the toolbox of synthetic chemists, enabling faster and more sustainable access to new materials and existing products, including active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs). However, molecular-level understanding of most mechanochemical reactions remains limited, delaying the implementation of mechanochemistry in industrial applications. Herein, we have applied in situ monitoring by Raman spectroscopy to the mechanosynthesis of phenytoin, a World Health Organization (WHO) Essential Medicine, enabling the observation, isolation, and characterization of key molecular-migration intermediates involved in the single-step transformation of benzil, urea, and KOH into phenytoin.

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Solid-state milling has emerged as an alternative, sustainable approach for preparing virtually all classes of compounds and materials. In situ reaction monitoring is essential to understanding the kinetics and mechanisms of these reactions, but it has proved difficult to use standard analytical techniques to analyze the contents of the closed, rapidly moving reaction chamber (jar). Monitoring by Raman spectroscopy is an attractive choice, because it allows uninterrupted data collection from the outside of a translucent milling jar.

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The presence of amino acids on the prebiotic Earth, either stemming from endogenous chemical routes or delivered by meteorites, is consensually accepted. Prebiotically plausible pathways to peptides from inactivated amino acids are still unclear as most oligomerization approaches rely on thermodynamically disfavored reactions in solution. Now, a combination of prebiotically plausible minerals and mechanochemical activation enables the oligomerization of glycine at ambient temperature in the absence of water.

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Selective catalytic reduction of CO to methanol has tremendous importance in the chemical industry. It mitigates two critical issues in the modern society, the overwhelming climate change and the dependence on fossil fuels. The most used catalysts are currently based on mixed copper and zinc phases, where the high surface of active copper species is a critical factor for the catalyst performance.

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Nucleobases methylated at the glycosidic nitrogen atom achieve DNA-specific self-assembly upon heating in the solid state. We report formation and characterisation of the elusive cocrystal of methylated guanine and methylated cytosine, exhibiting Watson-Crick-type hydrogen bonding, and the crystal structure of 9-methylguanine.

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Recent progress in the field of mechanochemistry has expanded the discovery of mechanically induced chemical transformations to several areas of science. However, a general fundamental understanding of how mechanochemical reactions by ball milling occur has remained unreached. For this, we have now implemented in situ monitoring of a mechanochemically induced molecular rearrangement by synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, and real-time temperature sensing.

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Tetratopic porphyrin-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) represent a particularly interesting subclass of zirconium MOFs due to the occurrence of several divergent topologies. Control over the target topology is a demanding task, and reports often show products containing phase contamination. We demonstrate how mechanochemistry can be exploited for controlling the polymorphism in 12-coordinated porphyrinic zirconium MOFs, obtaining pure hexagonal PCN-223 and cubic MOF-525 phases in 20-60 min of milling.

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In this article, we present the novel application of the nuclear spin bath model and the cluster correlation expansion method on studying the matrix material structure via embedded electron spin decoherence. Profiles of embedded electron spin decoherence under the Carr-Purcell-Meiboom-Gill dynamical decoupling pulse series in a model system for organic solids (malonic acid) are calculated for different structures. Resulting decay profiles exhibit a strong correlation to the variations of an adjacent proton environment among them.

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A series of aromatic bis-urea derivatives was prepared and their proton dissociation, as well as anion binding properties in DMSO were investigated. To this end, UV/Vis and H NMR spectroscopies and computational methods were employed. The synthesized molecules differed in the relative position of the urea moieties (ortho- and meta-derivatives) and in the functional groups (-H, -CH , -OCH , -NO ) in the para-position of the pendant phenyl groups.

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Using tandem in situ monitoring and isotope-labeled solids, we reveal that mechanochemical ball-milling overcomes inherently slow solid-state diffusion through continuous comminution and growth of milled particles. This process occurs with or without a net chemical reaction and also occurs between solids and liquid additives that can be practically used for highly efficient deuterium labeling of solids. The presented findings reveal a fundamental aspect of milling reactions and also delineate a methodology that should be considered in the study of mechanochemical reaction mechanisms.

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We report the first cocrystal as an intermediate in a solid-state organic reaction wherein molecules of barbituric acid and vanillin assume a favorable orientation for the subsequent Knoevenagel condensation.

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Mechanism of C-H bond activation by various Pd catalysts under milling conditions has been studied by in situ Raman spectroscopy. Common Pd precursors, that is PdCl , [Pd(OAc) ] , PdCl (MeCN) and [Pd(MeCN) ][BF ] , have been employed for the activation of one or two C-H bonds in an unsymmetrical azobenzene substrate. The C-H activation was achieved by all used Pd precursors and their reactivity increases in the order [Pd(OAc) ] View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The use of a dodecanuclear zirconium acetate cluster as a precursor enables the rapid, clean mechanochemical synthesis of high-microporosity metal-organic frameworks NU-901 and UiO-67, with surface areas up to 2250 m2 g-1. Real-time X-ray diffraction monitoring reveals that mechanochemical reactions involving the conventional hexanuclear zirconium methacrylate precursor are hindered by the formation of an inert intermediate, which does not appear when using the dodecanuclear acetate cluster as a reactant.

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Mechanochemical reactions by ball milling are becoming increasingly popular across a wide range of chemical sciences, but understanding and evaluation of temperature during such processes remains a persistent challenge, especially for organic and metal-organic materials. Here, we describe the first methodology for precise real-time measurement of sample temperature during mechanochemical transformations. Using this technique coupled with real-time reaction monitoring by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and numerical simulations of heat flow, we have shown that the temperature profiles of mechanochemical reactions are dominantly determined by the energy dissipated through friction between the sample and the moving milling assembly, while the reaction enthalpy will usually be comparatively insignificant.

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