5 resultados para Porphyrin-o-quinones
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Chemistry can contribute, in many different ways to solve the challenges we are facing to modify our inefficient and fossil-fuel based energy system. The present work was motivated by the search for efficient photoactive materials to be employed in the context of the energy problem: materials to be utilized in energy efficient devices and in the production of renewable electricity and fuels. We presented a new class of copper complexes, that could find application in lighting techhnologies, by serving as luminescent materials in LEC, OLED, WOLED devices. These technologies may provide substantial energy savings in the lighting sector. Moreover, recently, copper complexes have been used as light harvesting compounds in dye sensitized photoelectrochemical solar cells, which offer a viable alternative to silicon-based photovoltaic technologies. We presented also a few supramolecular systems containing fullerene, e.g. dendrimers, dyads and triads.The most complex among these arrays, which contain porphyrin moieties, are presented in the final chapter. They undergo photoinduced energy- and electron transfer processes also with long-lived charge separated states, i.e. the fundamental processes to power artificial photosynthetic systems.
Resumo:
Lo scopo di questo lavoro di tesi è la caratterizzazione dei prodotti di ossidazione di diversi fenoli idrofili contenuti nell’olio vergine d’oliva come idrossitirosolo, tirosolo e la forma dialdeidica dell’acido decarbossimetil elenolico legato all’idrossitirosolo, e la loro identificazione nel prodotto durante la conservazione. L’obiettivo della ricerca è trovare degli indici analitici che possono essere usati sia come marker di “freschezza” dell’olio vergine di oliva sia nella valutazione della “shelf life” del prodotto stesso. Due sistemi di ossidazione sono stati usati per ossidare le molecole sopracitate: ossidazione enzimatica e ossidazione di Fenton. I prodotti di ossidazione sono stati identificati come chinoni, dimeri e acidi.
Resumo:
Recentemente, sempre più attenzione è stata rivolta all' utilizzo di coloranti organici come assorbitori di luce per la preparazione di strati fotoattivi in celle solari organiche (OPV). I coloranti organici presentano un'elevata abilità nella cattura della luce solare grazie all'elevato coefficiente di estinzione molare e buone proprietà fotofisiche. Per questi motivi sono eccellenti candidati per l'incremento della conversione fotoelettrica in OPV. In questa tesi viene descritta una nuova strategia per l'incorporazione di derivati porfirinici in catena laterale a copolimeri tiofenici. Gli studi svolti hanno dimostrato che poli(3-bromoesil)tiofene può essere variamente funzionalizzato con idrossitetrafenilporfirina (TPPOH), per l'ottenimento di copolimeri utilizzabili come materiali p-donatori nella realizzazione di OPV. I copolimeri poli[3-(6-bromoesil)tiofene-co-(3-[5-(4-fenossi)-10,15,20-trifenilporfirinil]esil tiofene] P[T6Br-co-T6TPP] contenenti differenti quantità di porfirina, sono stati sintetizzati sia con metodi non regiospecifici che regiospecifici, con lo scopo di confrontarene le proprietà e di verificare se la strutture macromolecolare che presenta una regiochimica di sostituzione sempre uguale, promuove o meno il trasporto della carica elettrica, migliorando di conseguenza l'efficienza. E' stato inoltre effettuato un ulteriore confronto tra questi derivati e derivati simili P[T6H-co-T6TPP] che non contengono l'atomo di bromo in catena laterale con lo scopo di verificare se l'assenza del gruppo reattivo, migliora o meno la stabilità termica e chimica dei film polimerici, agendo favorevolmete sulle performance dei dispositivi fotovoltaici. Tutti i copolimeri sono stati caratterizzati con differenti tecniche: spettroscopia NMR, FT-IR e UV-Vis, analisi termiche DSC e TGA, e GPC. Le celle solari Bulk Heterojunction, preparate utilizzando PCBM come materiale elettron-accettore e i copolimeri come materilai elettron-donatori, sono state testate utilizzando un multimetro Keithley e il Solar Simulator.
Resumo:
In chapter one, the autoxidation kinetics of natural oil substrates, including, triglyceric sunflower oil, olive oil, terpenic squalene, and p-cymene were calibrated through differential oximetry methods. Calibration allows their use as reference oxidizable substrates for further studies, e.g. for quantitative testing of antioxidants under biomimetic settings. Several essential oils samples, of different botanical species or different productions of same species were studied for their antioxidant activity in inhibited autoxidation kinetics. Their antioxidant activities were matched with their composition analyzed by GC-MS. In chapter two, the molecular mechanism of the synergy between the common phenolic antioxidants such as tocopherol and catechols with widespread essential component gamma-terpinene was studied through lipid oxidation kinetics. Wherein, gamma-terpinene was able to disclose the key intermediacy HOO·, which acted as a reducing agent regenerating the phenolic antioxidant. This counterintuitive role of HOO· radicals was further investigated in detail and allowed to rationalize for the first time the purported antioxidant behavior of PDA melanin nanoparticles. It will also open to a deeper understanding of the redox biology of quinones. Regarding melanin, its role is broadly important in living organisms and its control, including its inhibition, is of great importance with several relevant applications ranging from food preservation to control of human skin pigmentation. In chapter three, an oximetry method combined with the traditional UV-Vis spectroscopy was developed to study the tyrosinase inhibition kinetics, which allowed identifying Glabridin (from G. glabra, L.), as one of the most effective natural tyrosinase inhibitors.
Resumo:
The catechol (1,2-dihydroxybenzene) is a privileged structural motif among natural antioxidants like flavonoids, owing to its reactivity with alkylperoxyl radicals due to the stability of the semiquinone radical. The exploration of the relevance and mechanism of this non-conventional antioxidant chemistry in heterogenous biomimetic systems (aqueous micelles and unilamellar liposomes) is explored for the first time in Chapter 1. Results show antioxidant behaviour that surpasses that of nature’s premiere antioxidant α-tocopherol and relies on the cross-dismutation of alkylperoxyl and hydroperoxyl radicals at the water-lipid interface with regeneration of the catechol function from the oxidized quinone. The design and synthesis of new biomimetic catechol-type antioxidants by conjugation of thiols (e.g. cysteine) with quinones highlighted an unusual 1,6-type regioselectivity, which had been previously reported but never fully rationalized. Owing to its importance both in nature and in the development of new antioxidants, we investigated it in detail in Chapter 2. We could prove the onsetting of a radical-chain mechanism intermediated by thiyl and thiosemiquinone radicals at the basis of the “anomalous nucleophilic addition” of thiols to ortho-quinones, which paves the way to better understanding of the chemistry of such systems. The oxidation of catechols to the corresponding quinones is also a key reaction in the biosynthesis of melanins, mediated by enzyme Tyrosinase.