Publications by authors named "Viviana Mollica Nardo"

The Aeolian cultural heritage preserves hundreds of testimonies of the past that have passed through six millennia of history. Among these, the Archeological Park of the Aeolian Islands with the Museum Luigi Bernabò Brea (Italy) preserves a valuable set of artworks, which are related to a little-known 'popular' figurative heritage. It is an assemblage of small glass foils decorated using the technique of reverse painting, datable to between the end of the 17 century and the end of the 18 century, and actually under investigation by historians.

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Spectral preprocessing data and chemometric tools are analytical methods widely applied in several scientific contexts i.e., in archaeometric applications.

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Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy is commonly used as analytical improvement to conventional Raman spectroscopy, able to respond to qualitative diagnostic enquiries, which involve low-concentrated molecular species in complex matrix. In this paper, we described fabrication, characterization and testing of a type of SERS-active substrates realized specifically to detect pigments in work of art. In particular, we detailed the SERS activity of nanostructured noble metal films deposited by pulsed laser ablation onto glass and polishing sheets substrates.

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Intense static electric fields can strongly perturb chemical bonds and induce frequency shifts of the molecular vibrations in the so-called vibrational Stark effect. Based on a density functional theory (DFT) approach, here, we report a detailed investigation of the influence of oriented external electric fields (OEEFs) on the dipole moment and infrared (IR) spectrum of the nonpolar centrosymmetric indigo molecule. When an OEEF as intense as ∼0.

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Albeit arsenic As(iii) is a well-known carcinogenic contaminant, the modalities by which it interacts with living organisms are still elusive. Details pertaining to the binding properties of As(iii) by common nucleotides such as AMP, ADP and ATP are indeed mostly unknown. Here we present an investigation, conducted via experimental and quantum-based computational approaches, on the stability of the complexes formed by arsenic with those nucleotides.

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The Tomb of the Diver has been subject for many decades of fierce debate among archaeologists and classicists. Since its discovery in 1968, some scholars have considered it a unique example of the lost tradition of Greek painting, others have emphasized Etruscan or Italic parallels. More recently, a possible local production has been suggested.

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Arsenic is one of the inorganic pollutants typically found in natural waters, and its toxic effects on the human body are currently of great concern. For this reason, the search for detoxifying agents that can be used in a so-called "chelation therapy" is of primary importance. However, to the aim of finding the thermodynamic behavior of efficient chelating agents, extensive speciation studies, capable of reproducing physiological conditions in terms of pH, temperature, and ionic strength, are in order.

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Albeit arsenic compounds are ubiquitous in aqueous solutions, the speciation of such a pollutant in natural water mainly depends on its binding capabilities with specific molecules. The features of most of the interactions of arsenic complexes can be established in solution, but the data related to the stability of the formed species, essentially depending on the concentration of the ligands, are elusive. For this reason, here, we report on a series of investigations where diverse approaches are combined together in order to characterize the behavior of As(III) species in aqueous solutions where simple chelating agents, such as thiolactic and thiomalic acids, are solvated.

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Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy has emerged as a widely used tool in the identification of organic dyes in works of art. Indigo is among the most used organic pigment, its identification can therefore give important information about the provenience and the making of the investigated work of art. In this work, we combine Surface Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (SERS) experiments with density functional theory (DFT) computations of the Raman frequencies of indigo and an indigo molecule adsorbed onto a silver surface made of 16 silver atoms.

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The copper(II) complex of 1,2,4-triazine derivatives, [Cu(dppt)2(H2O)](PF6)2(dppt is 5,6-diphenyl-3-(2-pyridyl)-1,2,4-triazine), has been synthesized and fully characterized by spectroscopic methods and single crystal X-ray diffraction. The in vitro DNA-binding studies of the complex have been investigated by several methods. The results showed that the complex intercalates into the base pairs of DNA.

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The 9-(bromoalkyl)-1,4-dimethyl-9H-carbazole (2a-d) derivatives, characterized by the presence of five or seven methylenic spacer groups bonded to the carbazole nitrogen, have been synthesized from the corresponding 1,4- dimethyl-9H-carbazole and appropriate dibromoalkane following a general synthetic method. All the prepared species have been fully characterized by means of IR, and (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, GC-MS and Elemental analysis. Good crystals of the 2c have been obtained and the crystal structure has been solved by means of X-ray diffractometry.

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A new tetracobalt(III) cubane 1, carrying functionalized peripheral ethynyl groups, was prepared. Cubane 1 catalyses photoinduced water oxidation, indicating that the ethynyl groups do not negatively affect the catalytic properties of the Co cubane assembly. In contrast, the quantum yield for water oxidation (0.

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The first water oxidation catalyst containing only vanadium atoms as metal centers is reported. The compound is the mixed-valence [(V(IV)5V(V)1)O7(OCH3)12](-) species, 1. Photoinduced water oxidation catalyzed by 1, in the presence of Ru(bpy)3(2+) (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) and Na2S2O8, in acetonitrile/aqueous phosphate buffer takes place with a quantum yield of 0.

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In the title compound, [Co(C10H16O4)] n , the Co(II) atom is bonded in a slightly distorted tetra-hedral environment by four O atoms from the bridging sebacate dications, comprising two separate half-ligands which lie across crystallographic inversion centres. In the three-dimensional network coordination polymer, there are two different spatial extensions of Co(II) atoms, one with the Co(II) atoms lying parallel to (100) [Co⋯Co = 4.653 (1) Å], the other lying parallel to (010) [Co⋯Co = 4.

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The title compound, [Pd(C3H5)(C17H15N3S2)]PF6, is built up by a [(η(3)-all-yl)Pd](2+) fragment coordinated by a 2,6-bis-[(pyridin-2-yl)sulfanylmeth-yl]pyridine ligand coordinated through the N atoms. One of the S atoms is at a close distance to the metal centeratom [3.2930 (8) Å].

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In the centrosymmetric dinuclear title Cu(II) complex, [Cu2(C7H4ClO2)(C2H5OH)2], the Cu-Cu distance is 2.5905 (4) Å. The two metal atoms are bridged by four 4-chloro-benzoate ligands and each has an ethanol mol-ecule in the axial position of the overall octahedral coordination environment.

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