63 research outputs found
Iron porphyrin molecules on Cu(001): Influence of adlayers and ligands on the magnetic properties
The structural and magnetic properties of Fe octaethylporphyrin (OEP)
molecules on Cu(001) have been investigated by means of density functional
theory (DFT) methods and X-ray absorption spectroscopy. The molecules have been
adsorbed on the bare metal surface and on an oxygen-covered surface, which
shows a reconstruction. In order to allow
for a direct comparison between magnetic moments obtained from sum-rule
analysis and DFT we calculate the dipolar term , which is also
important in view of the magnetic anisotropy of the molecule. The measured
X-ray magnetic circular dichroism shows a strong dependence on the photon
incidence angle, which we could relate to a huge value of , e.g. on
Cu(001) amounts to -2.07\,\mbo{} for normal incidence leading to a
reduction of the effective spin moment . Calculations have also
been performed to study the influence of possible ligands such as Cl and O
atoms on the magnetic properties of the molecule and the interaction between
molecule and surface, because the experimental spectra display a clear
dependence on the ligand, which is used to stabilize the molecule in the gas
phase. Both types of ligands weaken the hybridization between surface and
porphyrin molecule and change the magnetic spin state of the molecule, but the
changes in the X-ray absorption are clearly related to residual Cl ligands.Comment: 17 figures, full articl
One-pot Synthesis of Soluble Nanoscale CIGS Photoactive Functional Materials
Promising alternatives for solar energy utilization are thin film technologies involving various new materials. This contribution describes an easy and inexpensive synthetic method that can be used to prepare soluble nanoscale triphenyl phosphine-coordinated CIGS (TPP-CIGS) photoactive functional materials. This complex is stable in the solid state under the irradiation of the ambient light, but its solution becomes a little bit unstable under the illumination of the low intensity laser
The polyphenol EGCG directly targets intracellular amyloid-β aggregates and promotes their lysosomal degradation
The accumulation of amyloidogenic protein aggregates in neurons is a pathogenic hallmark of a large number of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Small molecules targeting such structures and promoting their degradation may have therapeutic potential for the treatment of AD. Here, we searched for natural chemical compounds that decrease the abundance of stable, proteotoxic β-sheet-rich amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregates in cells. We found that the polyphenol (-)-epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) functions as a potent chemical aggregate degrader (CAD) in SH-EP cells. We further demonstrate that a novel, fluorescently labeled EGCG derivative (EGC-dihydroxybenzoate (DHB)-Rhodamine) also shows cellular activity. It directly targets intracellular Aβ42 aggregates and competes with EGCG for Aβ42 aggregate binding in vitro. Mechanistic investigations indicated a lysosomal accumulation of Aβ42 aggregates in SH-EP cells and showed that lysosomal cathepsin activity is critical for efficient EGCG-mediated aggregate clearance. In fact, EGCG treatment leads to an increased abundance of active cathepsin B isoforms and increased enzymatic activity in our SH-EP cell model. Our findings suggest that intracellular Aβ42 aggregates are cleared through the endo-lysosomal system. We show that EGCG directly targets intracellular Aβ42 aggregates and facilitates their lysosomal degradation. Small molecules, which bind to protein aggregates and increase their lysosomal degradation could have therapeutic potential for the treatment of amyloid diseases
Magnetic anisotropy in surface supported single ion lanthanide complexes
Single ion lanthanide organic complexes can provide stable magnetic moments with well defined orientation for spintronic applications on the atomic level. Here, we show by a combined experimental approach of scanning tunneling microscopy and x ray absorption spectroscopy that dysprosium tris 1,1,1 trifluoro 4 2 thienyl 2,4 butanedionate Dy tta 3 complexes deposited on a Au 111 surface undergo a molecular distortion, resulting in distinct crystal field symmetry imposed on the Dy ion. This leads to an easy axis magnetization direction in the ligand plane. Furthermore, we show that tunneling electrons hardly couple to the spin excitations, which we ascribe to the shielded nature of the 4f electron
Modifying the Magnetic Anisotropy of an Iron Porphyrin Molecule by an on Surface Ring Closure Reaction
The magnetic properties of adsorbed metalloporphyrin molecules can be altered or tuned by the substrate, additional axial ligands, or changes to the moleculesâ macrocycle. These modifications influence the electronic configuration of the fourfold-coordinated central metal ion that is responsible for the metalloporphyrinsâ magnetic properties. We report a substantial increase in the effective spin moment obtained from sum-rule analysis of X-ray magnetic circular dichroism for an iron metalloporphyrin molecule on Au(111) through its conversion from iron(II)-octaethylporphyrin to iron(II)-tetrabenzoporphyrin in a surface-assisted ring-closure ligand reaction. Density functional theory calculations with additional strong Coulomb correlation (DFT+U) show that the on-surface reaction alters the conformation of the molecule, increasing its planarity and the ionâsurface distance. A spin-Hamiltonian fit of the magnetization as a function of field reveals a substantial increase in the intra-atomic magnetic dipole term (Tz) and a decrease in the magnitude of the easy-plane anisotropy upon ring closure. This consequence of the ring closure demonstrates how new magnetic properties can be obtained from on-surface reactions, resulting here in significant modifications to the magnetic anisotropy of the Fe ion, and sheds light onto the moleculeâsubstrate interaction in these systems
- âŚ