381 research outputs found

    Synthesis and optical power limiting properties of heteroleptic Mo3S7 clusters

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    Substitution of the halide ligands in (Bu4N)2[Mo3S7X6] (X = Cl, Br) by diimine ligands, such as 4,4′-dimethyl-2,2′-bipyridine (dmbpy), 2,2′-bipyridine (bpy) and 1,10-phenanthroline (phen), affords the neutral heteroleptic clusters Mo3S7Cl4(dmbpy) (1), Mo3S7Br4(dmbpy) (2), Mo3S7Br4(bpy) (3), and Mo3S7Br4(phen) (4). Further substitution of the halide ligands in Mo3S7Br4(diimine) clusters by dmit (1,3-dithiole-2-thione-4,5-dithiolate) allows the preparation of the mixed diimine–dithiolene neutral cluster complexes Mo3S7(dnbpy)(dmit)2 (5, dnbpy = 4,4′-dinonyl-2,2′-bipyridine), Mo3S7(dcmbpy)(dmit)2 (6, dcmbpy = 4,4′-dimethoxycarbonyl-2,2′-bipyridine), and Mo3S7(dcbpy)(dmit)2 (7, dcbpy = 2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid). The optical limiting properties of complexes 1–7 have been assessed by the open-aperture Z-scan technique at 570 nm, employing a nanosecond optical parametric oscillator. In order to investigate the effect of increasing the π-system, complexes 1–4, with the general formula Mo3S7X4(diimine), (X = Cl, Br), were compared to clusters 5–7, containing the dmit ligand. The influence of the metal content on the optical power limiting properties was also investigated by comparing the trinuclear series of complexes prepared herein with the bis(dithiolene) dinuclear cluster (Et4N)2[Mo2O2S2(BPyDTS2)2], which has been recently prepared by our group. All trinuclear clusters 1–7 are efficient optical limiters (σeff > σ0) with the threshold limiting fluence F15% decreasing on proceeding from dinuclear to trinuclear clusters and, generally, on extending the π-system.Financial support from the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) (Grant CTQ2011-23157), UJI (research project P1.1B2013-19) and Generalitat Valenciana (Prometeo/2014/022 and ACOMP/2014/274) is gratefully acknowledged. The authors also thank Serveis Centrals d ’ Instrumentació Cientifica (SCIC), within Universitat Jaume, I for providing them with materials characterization facilities. D. R. thanks the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competividad for a predoctoral fellowship. M. G. H. thanks the Australian Research Council for support. M. S. acknowl- edges the NCN grant DEC-2013/10/A/ST4/0011

    Nonlinear optical properties of meso-Tetra(fluorenyl)porphyrins peripherally functionalized with one to four ruthenium alkynyl substituents

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    The synthesis of a series of four porphyrin derivatives based on a meso-tetrafluorenylporphyrin core functionalized with one to four trans-chlorobis(dppe)ruthenium alkynyl units (dppe = 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane) at the periphery, together with cyclic voltammetry (CV) and UV–Vis absorption and emission spectroscopy studies, are reported. In these multipolar assemblies, the organoruthenium endgroups are potential electron-donors and the central porphyrin core is a potential electron-acceptor. The third-order nonlinear optical (NLO) responses have been assessed by Z-scan, revealing that these extended π-networks incorporating polarizable organometallic units behave as nonlinear absorbers in the near-IR range. The role of the peripheral transition metal centers on the third-order NLO properties is discussed

    Enhanced two-photon absorption cross-sections of zinc(II) tetraphenylporphyrins peripherally substituted with d(6)-metal alkynyl complexes

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    International audienceThe syntheses of new Zn(II) tetraphenylporphyrin (ZnTPP) derivatives functionalized with electron-rich d6-transition metal alkynyl complexes at their periphery are reported. Z-scan measurements reveal remarkably large effective two-photon absorption (TPA) cross-sections in the visible range for these compounds

    Antimicrobial properties of gallium (III)-and iron (III)-loaded polysaccharides affecting the growth of escherichia coli, staphylococcus aureus, and pseudomonas aeruginosa, in vitro

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    Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) has become a global concern as many bacterial species have developed resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics, making them ineffective to treatments. One type of antibiotics, gallium(III) compounds, stands out as possible candidates due to their unique “Trojan horse” mechanism to tackle bacterial growth, by substituting iron(III) in the metabolic cycles of bacteria. In this study, we tested three polysaccharides (carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), alginate, and pectin) as the binding and delivery agent for gallium on three bacteria (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, and Staphylococcus aureus) with a potential bioresponsive delivery mode. Two types of analysis on bacterial growth (minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) and minimum bactericidal concentrations (MBC)) were carried out while iron(III)-loaded polysaccharide samples were also tested for comparison. The results suggested that gallium showed an improved inhibitory activity on bacterial growth, in particular gallium(III)-loaded carboxymethyl cellulose (Ga-CMC) sample showing an inhibiting effect on growth for all three tested bacteria. At the MIC for all three bacteria, Ga-CMC showed no cytotoxicity effect on human dermal neonatal fibroblasts (HDNF). Therefore, these bioresponsive gallium(III) polysaccharide compounds show significant potential to be developed as the next-generation antibacterial agents with controlled release capability.info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersio

    Variability and scale-dependency of tire derived aggregate

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    Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering, 19(3): pp. 233-241.This paper presents a variability study of several engineering properties of tire-derived aggregate based on a comprehensive literature survey of experimental test programs. The dry compacted unit weight, cohesion intercept, friction angle, constrained modulus, and modified secondary compression index were evaluated and compared to the engineering parameter variability of natural soils. A series of regression analyses were performed to investigate the presence and significance of scale-dependency. The results of the variability analysis indicate that unit weight has the lowest value of coefficient of variation COV whereas the shear strength parameters, constrained modulus, and compression index have COV values that are substantially higher. Regression analyses indicated that unit weight and constrained modulus showed the greatest sensitivity to changes in maximum tire particle size. A nonstatistical investigation was used to further investigate the variability and scale-dependency of the shear strength parameters. Using Mohr-Coulomb failure criterion and assuming that cohesion is negligible, the analysis showed a scale-independent relationship which is consistent with the statistical findings for cohesion and friction angle

    Telescoped approach to aryl hydroxymethylation in the synthesis of a key pharmaceutical intermediate

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    An efficient synthetic approach leading to introduction of the hydroxymethyl group to an aryl moiety via combination of the Bouveault formylation and hydride reduction has been optimized using a rational, mechanistic-based approach. This approach enabled telescoping of the two steps into a single efficient process, readily amenable to scaleup

    Mechanism of Chromophore Assisted Laser Inactivation Employing Fluorescent Proteins

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    Chromophore Assisted Laser Inactivation (CALI) is a technique that uses irradiation of chromophores proximate to a target protein to inactivate function. Previously, EGFP mediated CALI has been used to inactivate EGFP-fusion proteins in a spatio-temporally defined manner within cells but the mechanism of inactivation is unknown 1, 2. To help elucidate the mechanism of protein inactivation mediated by fluorescent protein CALI ([FP]-CALI), the activities of purified Glutathione-S-transferase-FP (GST-EXFP) fusions were measured after laser irradiation in vitro. Singlet oxygen and free radical quenchers as well as the removal of oxygen inhibited CALI, indicating the involvement of a reactive oxygen species (ROS). At higher concentrations of protein, turbidity after CALI increased significantly indicating cross-linking of proximate fusion proteins suggesting that damage of residues on the surface the protein, distant from the active site, results in inactivation. Control experiments removed sample heating as a possible cause of these effects. Different FP mutants fused to GST vary in their CALI efficiency in the order EGFP>EYFP>ECFP, while a GST construct that binds FlAsH results in significantly higher CALI efficiency than any of the XFPs tested. It is likely that the hierarchy of XFP effectiveness reflects the balance between ROS that are trapped within the XFP structure and cause fluorophore and chromophore bleaching and those that escape to effect CALI of proximate proteins

    Energy Landscape and Global Optimization for a Frustrated Model Protein

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    The three-color (BLN) 69-residue model protein was designed to exhibit frustrated folding. We investigate the energy landscape of this protein using disconnectivity graphs and compare it to a Go model, which is designed to reduce the frustration by removing all non-native attractive interactions. Finding the global minimum on a frustrated energy landscape is a good test of global optimization techniques, and we present calculations evaluating the performance of basin-hopping and genetic algorithms for this system.Comparisons are made with the widely studied 46-residue BLN protein.We show that the energy landscape of the 69-residue BLN protein contains several deep funnels, each of which corresponds to a different β-barrel structure
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