191 research outputs found
Selective colorimetric NO(g) detection based on the use of modified gold nanoparticles using click chemistry
[EN] A new colorimetric system for NO(g) detection is described. The detection method is based on the aggregation of modified AuNPs through a Cu(I) catalyzed click reaction promoted by the in situ
reduction of Cu(II) by NOWe acknowledge the Spanish Government (MAT2009-14564-C04-03 and MAT2012-38429-C04-02) for financial support. A. M. is grateful to the Spanish Government for a fellowship. SCSIE (Universidad de Valencia) is gratefully acknowledged for all the equipment employed.Marti, A.; Costero Nieto, AM.; Gaviña Costero, P.; Parra Álvarez, M. (2015). Selective colorimetric NO(g) detection based on the use of modified gold nanoparticles using click chemistry. Chemical Communications. 51(15):3077-3079. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4cc10149aS307730795115Nagano, T. (1999). Practical methods for detection of nitric oxide. Luminescence, 14(6), 283-290. doi:10.1002/(sici)1522-7243(199911/12)14:63.0.co;2-gL. J. Ignarro , Nitric Oxide: Biology and Pathobiology, Academic Press, San Diego, 2010Ma, S., Fang, D.-C., Ning, B., Li, M., He, L., & Gong, B. (2014). The rational design of a highly sensitive and selective fluorogenic probe for detecting nitric oxide. Chem. Commun., 50(49), 6475-6478. doi:10.1039/c4cc01142bKojima, H., Nakatsubo, N., Kikuchi, K., Kawahara, S., Kirino, Y., Nagoshi, H., … Nagano, T. (1998). Detection and Imaging of Nitric Oxide with Novel Fluorescent Indicators: Diaminofluoresceins. Analytical Chemistry, 70(13), 2446-2453. doi:10.1021/ac9801723Chen, X., Tian, X., Shin, I., & Yoon, J. (2011). Fluorescent and luminescent probes for detection of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Chemical Society Reviews, 40(9), 4783. doi:10.1039/c1cs15037eBeltrán, A., Isabel Burguete, M., Abánades, D. R., Pérez-Sala, D., Luis, S. V., & Galindo, F. (2014). Turn-on fluorescent probes for nitric oxide sensing based on the ortho-hydroxyamino structure showing no interference with dehydroascorbic acid. Chemical Communications, 50(27), 3579. doi:10.1039/c3cc49555hLv, X., Wang, Y., Zhang, S., Liu, Y., Zhang, J., & Guo, W. (2014). A specific fluorescent probe for NO based on a new NO-binding group. Chem. Commun., 50(56), 7499-7502. doi:10.1039/c4cc03540bSaha, K., Agasti, S. S., Kim, C., Li, X., & Rotello, V. M. (2012). Gold Nanoparticles in Chemical and Biological Sensing. Chemical Reviews, 112(5), 2739-2779. doi:10.1021/cr2001178Mayer, K. M., & Hafner, J. H. (2011). Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance Sensors. Chemical Reviews, 111(6), 3828-3857. doi:10.1021/cr100313vMartí, A., Costero, A. M., Gaviña, P., Gil, S., Parra, M., Brotons-Gisbert, M., & Sánchez-Royo, J. F. (2013). Functionalized Gold Nanoparticles as an Approach to the Direct Colorimetric Detection of DCNP Nerve Agent Simulant. European Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2013(22), 4770-4779. doi:10.1002/ejoc.201300339Zhou, Y., Wang, S., Zhang, K., & Jiang, X. (2008). Visual Detection of Copper(II) by Azide- and Alkyne-Functionalized Gold Nanoparticles Using Click Chemistry. Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 47(39), 7454-7456. doi:10.1002/anie.200802317Hua, C., Zhang, W. H., De Almeida, S. R. M., Ciampi, S., Gloria, D., Liu, G., … Gooding, J. J. (2012). A novel route to copper(ii) detection using ‘click’ chemistry-induced aggregation of gold nanoparticles. The Analyst, 137(1), 82-86. doi:10.1039/c1an15693dZhang, Y., Li, B., & Xu, C. (2010). Visual detection of ascorbic acid via alkyne–azide click reaction using gold nanoparticles as a colorimetric probe. The Analyst, 135(7), 1579. doi:10.1039/c0an00056fTran, D., & Ford, P. C. (1996). Nitric Oxide Reduction of the Copper(II) Complex Cu(dmp)22+(dmp = 2,9-Dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline). Inorganic Chemistry, 35(9), 2411-2412. doi:10.1021/ic9511175Tsuge, K., DeRosa, F., Lim, M. D., & Ford, P. C. (2004). Intramolecular Reductive Nitrosylation: Reaction of Nitric Oxide and a Copper(II) Complex of a Cyclam Derivative with Pendant Luminescent Chromophores. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 126(21), 6564-6565. doi:10.1021/ja049444bLim, M. H., & Lippard, S. J. (2005). Copper Complexes for Fluorescence-Based NO Detection in Aqueous Solution. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 127(35), 12170-12171. doi:10.1021/ja053150oApfel, U.-P., Buccella, D., Wilson, J. J., & Lippard, S. J. (2013). Detection of Nitric Oxide and Nitroxyl with Benzoresorufin-Based Fluorescent Sensors. Inorganic Chemistry, 52(6), 3285-3294. doi:10.1021/ic302793wHaiss, W., Thanh, N. T. K., Aveyard, J., & Fernig, D. G. (2007). Determination of Size and Concentration of Gold Nanoparticles from UV−Vis Spectra. Analytical Chemistry, 79(11), 4215-4221. doi:10.1021/ac0702084Lin, S.-Y., Tsai, Y.-T., Chen, C.-C., Lin, C.-M., & Chen, C. (2004). Two-Step Functionalization of Neutral and Positively Charged Thiols onto Citrate-Stabilized Au Nanoparticles. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 108(7), 2134-2139. doi:10.1021/jp036310wLiu, X., Atwater, M., Wang, J., & Huo, Q. (2007). Extinction coefficient of gold nanoparticles with different sizes and different capping ligands. Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces, 58(1), 3-7. doi:10.1016/j.colsurfb.2006.08.005Brotherton, W. S., Michaels, H. A., Simmons, J. T., Clark, R. J., Dalal, N. S., & Zhu, L. (2009). Apparent Copper(II)-Accelerated Azide−Alkyne Cycloaddition. Organic Letters, 11(21), 4954-4957. doi:10.1021/ol902111
A New Simple Chromo-fluorogenic Probe for NO2 Detection in Air
[EN] A new chromo-fluorogenic probe, consisting of a biphenyl derivative containing both a silylbenzyl ether and a N,N-dimethylamino group, for NO2 detection in the gas phase has been developed. A clear colour change from colourless to yellow together with an emission
quenching was observed when the probe reacted with NO2. A limit of detection to the naked eye of about 0.1 ppm was determined and the system was successfully applied to the detection of NO2 in realistic atmospheric conditions.We thank the Spanish Government (MAT2012‐38429‐C04) and Generalitat Valenciana (PROMETEOII/2014/047) for support. SCSIE (Universidad de Valencia) is gratefully acknowledged for all the equipment employed. We thank Dr. A. Múñoz from the CEAM (Valencia‐Spain) for her help for the development of the measures in real environment.Juarez, LA.; Costero, AM.; Sancenón Galarza, F.; Martínez-Máñez, R.; Parra Álvarez, M.; Gaviña Costero, P. (2015). A New Simple Chromo-fluorogenic Probe for NO2 Detection in Air. Chemistry - A European Journal. 21(24):8720-8722. doi:10.1002/chem.201500608S87208722212
G 112-29 (=NLTT 18149), a Very Wide Companion to GJ 282 AB with a Common Proper Motion, Common Parallax, Common Radial Velocity and Common Age
We have made a search for common proper motion (CPM) companions to the wide
binaries in the solar vicinity. We found that the binary GJ 282AB has a very
distant CPM companion (NLTT 18149) at a separation s=1.09 \arcdeg. Improved
spectral types and radial velocities are obtained, and ages determined for the
three components. The Hipparcos trigonometric parallaxes and the new radial
velocities and ages turn out to be very similar for the three stars, and
provide strong evidence that they form a physical system. At a projected
separation of 55733AU from GJ 282AB, NLTT 18149 ranks among the widest physical
companions known.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, submmited to Ap
Composite Accretion Disk and White Dwarf Photosphere Analyses of the FUSE and HST Observations of EY Cygni
We explore the origin of FUSE and HST STIS far UV spectra of the dwarf nova,
EY Cyg, during its quiescence using \emph{combined} high gravity photosphere
and accretion disk models as well as model accretion belts. The best-fitting
single temperature white dwarf model to the FUSE plus HST STIS spectrum of EY
Cygni has TK, log , with an Si abundance of 0.1 x
solar and C abundance of 0.2 x solar but the distance is only 301 pc. The
best-fitting composite model consists of white dwarf with TK,
log , plus an accretion belt with TK covering 27% of
the white dwarf surface with V km/s. The accretion belt
contributes 63% of the FUV light and the cooler white dwarf latitudes
contribute 37%. This fit yields a distance of 351 pc which is within 100 pc of
our adopted distance of 450 pc. EY Cyg has very weak C {\sc iv} emission and
very strong N {\sc v} emission, which is atypical of the majority of dwarf
novae in quiescence. We also conducted a morphological study of the
surroundings of EY Cyg using direct imaging in narrow nebular filters from
ground-based telescopes. We report the possible detection of nebular material^M
associated with EY Cygni. Possible origins of the apparently large N {\scv}/C
{\sc iv} emission ratio are discussed in the context of nova explosions,
contamination of the secondary star and accretion of nova abundance-enriched
matter back to the white dwarf via the accretion disk or as a descendant of a
precursor binary that survived thermal timescale mass transfer. The scenario
involving pollution of the secondary by past novae may be supported by the
possible presence of a nova remnant-like nebula around EY Cyg.Comment: To appear in AJ, Oct. 2004. 5 figures, including 2 color ones (2D
pictures
The Expanding Nebular Remnant of the Recurrent Nova RS Ophiuchi (2006): II. Modeling of Combined Hubble Space Telescope Imaging and Ground-based Spectroscopy
We report Hubble Space Telescope imaging, obtained 155 and 449 days after the
2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi, together with ground-based
spectroscopic observations, obtained from the Observatorio Astron\'omico
Nacional en San Pedro M\'artir, Baja California, M\'exico and at the
Observatorio Astrof\'isico Guillermo Haro, at Cananea, Sonora, M\'exico. The
observations at the first epoch were used as inputs to model the geometry and
kinematic structure of the evolving RS Oph nebular remnant. We find that the
modeled remnant comprises two distinct co-aligned bipolar components; a
low-velocity, high-density innermost (hour glass) region and a more extended,
high-velocity (dumbbell) structure. This overall structure is in agreement with
that deduced from radio observations and optical interferometry at earlier
epochs. We find that the asymmetry observed in the west lobe is an instrumental
effect caused by the profile of the HST filter and hence demonstrate that this
lobe is approaching the observer. We then conclude that the system has an
inclination to the line of sight of 39 degrees. This is in
agreement with the inclination of the binary orbit and lends support to the
proposal that this morphology is due to the interaction of the outburst ejecta
with either an accretion disk around the central white dwarf and/or a
pre-existing red giant wind that is significantly denser in the equatorial
regions of the binary than at the poles. The second epoch HST observation was
also modeled. However, as no spectra were taken at this epoch, it is more
difficult to constrain any model. Nevertheless, we demonstrate that between the
two HST epochs the outer dumbbell structure seems to have expanded linearly.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
Unconventional OFF–ON Response of a Mono(calix[4]arene)-Substituted BODIPY Sensor for Hg2+ through Dimerization Reversion
A new selective fluorogenic chemosensor for Hg2+, which combines a calixarene derivative with a BODIPY core as a fluorescent reporter, is described. The remarkable change in its fluorogenic properties in DMSO and CHCl3 has been analyzed. A study of its spectral properties on dilution, along with molecular modeling studies, allowed us to explain that this behavior involves the formation of a J-dimer, as well as how the sensing mechanism of Hg2+ proceeds
The Initial Mass Function of the Orion Nebula Cluster across the H-burning limit
We present a new census of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) over a large field
of view (>30'x30'), significantly increasing the known population of stellar
and substellar cluster members with precisely determined properties. We develop
and exploit a technique to determine stellar effective temperatures from
optical colors, nearly doubling the previously available number of objects with
effective temperature determinations in this benchmark cluster. Our technique
utilizes colors from deep photometry in the I-band and in two medium-band
filters at lambda~753 and 770nm, which accurately measure the depth of a
molecular feature present in the spectra of cool stars. From these colors we
can derive effective temperatures with a precision corresponding to better than
one-half spectral subtype, and importantly this precision is independent of the
extinction to the individual stars. Also, because this technique utilizes only
photometry redward of 750nm, the results are only mildly sensitive to optical
veiling produced by accretion. Completing our census with previously available
data, we place some 1750 sources in the Hertzsprung-Russel diagram and assign
masses and ages down to 0.02 solar masses. At faint luminosities, we detect a
large population of background sources which is easily separated in our
photometry from the bona fide cluster members. The resulting initial mass
function of the cluster has good completeness well into the substellar mass
range, and we find that it declines steeply with decreasing mass. This suggests
a deficiency of newly formed brown dwarfs in the cluster compared to the
Galactic disk population.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Isomerization and Redox Tuning: Reorganizing the Maya Blue Puzzle from Synthetic, Spectral, and Electrochemical Issues
[EN] A new approach to describe the composition of Maya blue (MB), an ancient organic- inorganic hybrid material, is presented. It is based on the analysis of attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR), Raman spectroscopy, UV-visible (vis) spectroscopic, and electrochemical data for indigo and dehydroindigo plus palygorskite hybrids, including a novel methodology using electrocatalytic effects on the oxygen reduction reaction. As a result, it is concluded that MB results from the tautomerization of indigo-to-indigo hemienol and the subsequent oxidation of these isomeric forms to dehydroindigo, all associated with the palygorskite clay framework, at temperatures above 100 degrees C. This model is also consistent with C-13 NMR data on indigo plus sepiolite hybrids. A consistent set of thermochemical parameters is obtained from ATR-FTIR, solid-state electrochemistry, and UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectra for the successive isomerization and redox tuning processes experienced by palygorskite-associated indigo.Projects PID2020-113022GB-I00 and RTI2018-100910-BC42, supported by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 are gratefully acknowledged for all of the equipment employed. NMR was registered at the U26 facility of ICTS "NANBIOSIS" at the SCSIE of the Universitat of Valencia.Doménech-Carbó, A.; Costero, AM.; Gil Grau, S.; Montoya, N.; López-Carrasco, A.; Sáez, JA.; Arroyo, P.... (2021). Isomerization and Redox Tuning: Reorganizing the Maya Blue Puzzle from Synthetic, Spectral, and Electrochemical Issues. The Journal of Physical Chemistry. 125(47):26188-26200. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.1c0793226188262001254
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