931 resultados para CARBENE ANALOGS
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Metamamterials are 1D, 2D or 3D arrays of articial atoms. The articial atoms, called "meta-atoms", can be any component with tailorable electromagnetic properties, such as resonators, LC circuits, nano particles, and so on. By designing the properties of individual meta-atoms and the interaction created by putting them in a lattice, one can create a metamaterial with intriguing properties not found in nature. My Ph. D. work examines the meta-atoms based on radio frequency superconducting quantum interference devices (rf-SQUIDs); their tunability with dc magnetic field, rf magnetic field, and temperature are studied. The rf-SQUIDs are superconducting split ring resonators in which the usual capacitance is supplemented with a Josephson junction, which introduces strong nonlinearity in the rf properties. At relatively low rf magnetic field, a magnetic field tunability of the resonant frequency of up to 80 THz/Gauss by dc magnetic field is observed, and a total frequency tunability of 100% is achieved. The macroscopic quantum superconducting metamaterial also shows manipulative self-induced broadband transparency due to a qualitatively novel nonlinear mechanism that is different from conventional electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) or its classical analogs. A near complete disappearance of resonant absorption under a range of applied rf flux is observed experimentally and explained theoretically. The transparency comes from the intrinsic bi-stability and can be tuned on/ off easily by altering rf and dc magnetic fields, temperature and history. Hysteretic in situ 100% tunability of transparency paves the way for auto-cloaking metamaterials, intensity dependent filters, and fast-tunable power limiters. An rf-SQUID metamaterial is shown to have qualitatively the same behavior as a single rf-SQUID with regards to dc flux, rf flux and temperature tuning. The two-tone response of self-resonant rf-SQUID meta-atoms and metamaterials is then studied here via intermodulation (IM) measurement over a broad range of tone frequencies and tone powers. A sharp onset followed by a surprising strongly suppressed IM region near the resonance is observed. This behavior can be understood employing methods in nonlinear dynamics; the sharp onset, and the gap of IM, are due to sudden state jumps during a beat of the two-tone sum input signal. The theory predicts that the IM can be manipulated with tone power, center frequency, frequency difference between the two tones, and temperature. This quantitative understanding potentially allows for the design of rf-SQUID metamaterials with either very low or very high IM response.
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The direct CO2 electrochemical reduction on model platinum single crystal electrodes Pt(hkl) is studied in [C2mim+][NTf2−], a suitable room temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) medium due to its moderate viscosity, high CO2 solubility and conductivity. Single crystal electrodes represent the most convenient type of surface structured electrodes for studying the impact of RTIL ion adsorption on relevant electrocatalytic reactions, such as surface sensitive electrochemical CO2 reduction. We propose here based on cyclic voltammetry and in situ electrolysis measurements, for the first time, the formation of a stable adduct [C2mimH–CO2−] by a radical–radical coupling after the simultaneous reduction of CO2 and [C2mim+]. It means between the CO2 radical anion and the radical formed from the reduction of the cation [C2mim+] before forming the corresponding electrogenerated carbene. This is confirmed by the voltammetric study of a model imidazolium-2-carboxylate compound formed following the carbene pathway. The formation of that stable adduct [C2mimH–CO2−] blocks CO2 reduction after a single electron transfer and inhibits CO2 and imidazolium dimerization reactions. However, the electrochemical reduction of CO2 under those conditions provokes the electrochemical cathodic degradation of the imidazolium based RTIL. This important limitation in CO2 recycling by direct electrochemical reduction is overcome by adding a strong acid, [H+][NTf2−], into solution. Then, protons become preferentially adsorbed on the electrode surface by displacing the imidazolium cations and inhibiting their electrochemical reduction. This fact allows the surface sensitive electro-synthesis of HCOOH from CO2 reduction in [C2mim+][NTf2−], with Pt(110) being the most active electrode studied.
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The photochemistry of 4-chlorophenol (4-CP) was studied on silica and cellulose, using time-resolved diffuse reflectance techniques and product degradation analysis. The results have shown that the photochemistry of 4-CP depends on the support, on the concentration, and also on the sample preparation method. Transient absorption and photoproduct results can be understood by assuming the formation of the carbene 4-oxocyclohexa-2,5-dienylidene in both supports. On cellulose, at concentrations lower than 10 mumol g(-1), the carbene leads to the unsubstituted phenoxyl radical, and phenol is the main degradation product. At higher concentrations a new transient resulting from phenoxyl radicals coupling was also observed, and dihydroxybiphenyls are also formed. The reaction of the carbene with ground-state 4-CP was also detected through the formation of 5-chloro-2,4'-dihydroxybiphenyl. 4-Chlorophenoxyl radical and degradations products resulting from its coupling were also detected. Oxygen has little effect on the photochemistry of 4-CP on cellulose. On silica the transient benzoquinone O-oxide was formed in the presence of oxygen. Benzoquinone and hydroquinone are the main degradation products. In well-dried samples the formation of hydroquinone is reduced. At higher concentrations the same products as detected on cellulose were observed. 4-CP undergoes slow photochemical decomposition under solar radiation in both supports. The same main degradation products were observed in these conditions.
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Dissertação (mestrado)—Universidade de Brasília, Instituto de Ciências Biológicas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biologia Animal, 2016.
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One of the most exciting discoveries in astrophysics of the last last decade is of the sheer diversity of planetary systems. These include "hot Jupiters", giant planets so close to their host stars that they orbit once every few days; "Super-Earths", planets with sizes intermediate to those of Earth and Neptune, of which no analogs exist in our own solar system; multi-planet systems with planets smaller than Mars to larger than Jupiter; planets orbiting binary stars; free-floating planets flying through the emptiness of space without any star; even planets orbiting pulsars. Despite these remarkable discoveries, the field is still young, and there are many areas about which precious little is known. In particular, we don't know the planets orbiting Sun-like stars nearest to our own solar system, and we know very little about the compositions of extrasolar planets. This thesis provides developments in those directions, through two instrumentation projects.
The first chapter of this thesis concerns detecting planets in the Solar neighborhood using precision stellar radial velocities, also known as the Doppler technique. We present an analysis determining the most efficient way to detect planets considering factors such as spectral type, wavelengths of observation, spectrograph resolution, observing time, and instrumental sensitivity. We show that G and K dwarfs observed at 400-600 nm are the best targets for surveys complete down to a given planet mass and out to a specified orbital period. Overall we find that M dwarfs observed at 700-800 nm are the best targets for habitable-zone planets, particularly when including the effects of systematic noise floors caused by instrumental imperfections. Somewhat surprisingly, we demonstrate that a modestly sized observatory, with a dedicated observing program, is up to the task of discovering such planets.
We present just such an observatory in the second chapter, called the "MINiature Exoplanet Radial Velocity Array," or MINERVA. We describe the design, which uses a novel multi-aperture approach to increase stability and performance through lower system etendue, as well as keeping costs and time to deployment down. We present calculations of the expected planet yield, and data showing the system performance from our testing and development of the system at Caltech's campus. We also present the motivation, design, and performance of a fiber coupling system for the array, critical for efficiently and reliably bringing light from the telescopes to the spectrograph. We finish by presenting the current status of MINERVA, operational at Mt. Hopkins observatory in Arizona.
The second part of this thesis concerns a very different method of planet detection, direct imaging, which involves discovery and characterization of planets by collecting and analyzing their light. Directly analyzing planetary light is the most promising way to study their atmospheres, formation histories, and compositions. Direct imaging is extremely challenging, as it requires a high performance adaptive optics system to unblur the point-spread function of the parent star through the atmosphere, a coronagraph to suppress stellar diffraction, and image post-processing to remove non-common path "speckle" aberrations that can overwhelm any planetary companions.
To this end, we present the "Stellar Double Coronagraph," or SDC, a flexible coronagraphic platform for use with the 200" Hale telescope. It has two focal and pupil planes, allowing for a number of different observing modes, including multiple vortex phase masks in series for improved contrast and inner working angle behind the obscured aperture of the telescope. We present the motivation, design, performance, and data reduction pipeline of the instrument. In the following chapter, we present some early science results, including the first image of a companion to the star delta Andromeda, which had been previously hypothesized but never seen.
A further chapter presents a wavefront control code developed for the instrument, using the technique of "speckle nulling," which can remove optical aberrations from the system using the deformable mirror of the adaptive optics system. This code allows for improved contrast and inner working angles, and was written in a modular style so as to be portable to other high contrast imaging platforms. We present its performance on optical, near-infrared, and thermal infrared instruments on the Palomar and Keck telescopes, showing how it can improve contrasts by a factor of a few in less than ten iterations.
One of the large challenges in direct imaging is sensing and correcting the electric field in the focal plane to remove scattered light that can be much brighter than any planets. In the last chapter, we present a new method of focal-plane wavefront sensing, combining a coronagraph with a simple phase-shifting interferometer. We present its design and implementation on the Stellar Double Coronagraph, demonstrating its ability to create regions of high contrast by measuring and correcting for optical aberrations in the focal plane. Finally, we derive how it is possible to use the same hardware to distinguish companions from speckle errors using the principles of optical coherence. We present results observing the brown dwarf HD 49197b, demonstrating the ability to detect it despite it being buried in the speckle noise floor. We believe this is the first detection of a substellar companion using the coherence properties of light.
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The main goal of the research presented in this work is to provide some important insights about computational modeling of open-shell species. Such projects are: the investigation of the size-extensivity error in Equation-of-Motion Coupled Cluster methods, the analysis of the Long-Range corrected scheme in predicting UV-Vis spectra of Cu(II) complexes with the 4-imidazole acetate and its ethylated derivative, and the exploration of the importance of choosing a proper basis set for the description of systems such as the lithium monoxide anion. The most significant findings of this research are: (i) The contribution of the left operator to the size-extensivity error of the CR-EOMCC(2,3) approach, (ii) The cause of d-d shifts when varying the range-separation parameter and the amount of the exact exchange arising from the imbalanced treatment of localized vs. delocalized orbitals via the "tuned" CAM-B3LYP* functional, (iii) The proper acidity trend of the first-row hydrides and their lithiated analogs that may be reversed if the basis sets are not correctly selected.
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Las representaciones sociales son una construcción de significados que las personas otorgan a un objeto en este caso el tratamiento oncológico. En el mundo, el cáncer es una enfermedad de alta prevalencia y sus tratamientos suelen generar numerosos efectos secundarios, pero a la vez es el recurso médico disponible para controlar la enfermedad. Este estudio cualitativo tuvo como objetivo analizar las representaciones sociales del tratamiento oncológico en población colombiana. Participaron voluntariamente 20 personas seleccionadas por conveniencia. Se realizaron entrevistas abiertas y se analizaron los resultados a través del análisis temático y se interpretaron con base en la teoría de las representaciones sociales. Los resultados indicaron que las personas representan el tratamiento oncológico convencional, predominantemente como quimioterapia, generadores de sufrimiento, miedo, alto costo físico, emocional y económico; así como una apuesta en la que la ganancia puede ser la prolongación de la vida o la remisión. Se discuten los resultados y sus implicaciones.
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This Thesis aims at presenting the general results achieved during my PhD, that was focused on the study and characterisation of new homoleptic and heteroleptic metal carbonyl clusters. From a dimensional point of view, the nuclearity of such species ranges from 2 to 44 metal atoms. Lower nuclearity compounds may be viewed as polymetallic complexes, whereas higher nuclearity species can reach the nanocluster size, by resembling to ultrasmall nanoparticles (USNPs). Initially, my research was focused on the investigation of small MCCs stabilised by N-Heterocyclic carbene (NHCs) ligands. At this regard, a general strategy for the synthesis of mono-anionic [Fe(CO)4(MNHC)]− and neutral Fe(CO)4(MNHC)2, Co(CO)4(MNHC) (M = Cu, Ag, Au; NHC = IMes, IPr) species has been developed. Furthermore, during this investigation, neutral trimetallic Fe(CO)4(MNHC)(M’NHC) (M, M’ = Cu, Ag, Au; M ≠ M'; NHC = IPr) and neutral heteroleptic Fe(CO)4(MNHC)(MNHC’) (M = Au; NHC = IMes, IPr) compounds have been isolated. Thermal treatment turned out to be an efficient method for the growth of the dimension of MCCs. Indeed, species of the type [M3Fe3(CO)12]3– and [M4Fe4(CO)16]4– (M = Ag, Au) as well as larger clusters were formed during the thermal treatment of the new Fe-M (M = Ag, Cu, Au) carbonyl compounds. These species inspired the investigation of promising reaction paths for the synthesis of Fe-M (M = Ag, Cu, Au) carbonyl compounds devoid of ancillary ligands and alloy MCCs, such as the heterometallic [MxM’5-xFe4(CO)16]3− (M, M' = Cu, Ag, Au; M ≠ M'; x = 0-5) carbonyl clusters. The second part of this Thesis regards high nuclearity MCCs. In particular, new strategies for the growth of platinum carbonyl clusters involving, for instance, the employment of bidentate phosphines are described, as well as the syntheses and the thermal decomposition of new Ni-M (Pd, Pt) carbonyl clusters.
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Next to conventional solar panels that harvest direct sunlight, p-type dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) have been developed, which are able to harvest diffuse sunlight. Due to unwanted charge recombination events p-type DSSCs exhibit low power conversion efficiencies (PCEs). Previous research has shown that dye-redox mediator (RM) interactions can prevent these recombination events, resulting in higher PCEs. It is unknown how the nature of dye-RM interactions affects the PCEs of pseudorotaxane-based solar cells. In this research this correlation is investigated by comparing one macrocycle, the 3-NDI, in combination with the three dyes that contains a recognition sites. 2D-DOSY-NMR experiments have been conducted to evaluate the diffusion constants (LogD) of the three couple. The research project has been stopped due to the coronavirus pandemic. The continuation of this thesis would have been to synthesize a dye on the basis of the data obtained from the diffusion tests and attempt the construction of a solar cell to then evaluate its effectiveness. During my training period I synthetized new Fe(0) cyclopentadienone compounds bearing a N-Heterocyclic Carbene ligand. The aim of the thesis was to achieve water solubility by modifications of the cyclopentadienone ligand. These new complexes have been modified using a sulfonation reaction, replacing an hydroxyl with a sulfate group, on the alkyl backbone of the cyclopentadienone ligand. All the complexes were characterized with IR, ESI-MS and NMR spectroscopy, and a new Fe(0) cyclopentadienone complex, involved as an intermediate, was obtained as a single crystal and was characterized also with X-Ray spectroscopy.
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Il presente lavoro di tesi si inserisce in un progetto di ricerca volto alla sintesi di nuovi complessi di metalli di transizione per lo sviluppo di catalizzatori da impiegare in reazioni di catalisi omogenea. In particolare il mio progetto si è concentrato sulla sintesi di complessi organometallici di manganese con leganti carbenici N-eterociclici (NHC). La scelta dei leganti è stata effettuata in modo tale da poter avere leganti chelanti NHC di tipo MIC (mesoionic carbene) sintetizzati tramite cicloaddizione tra un alchino ed un azide catalizzata da rame (CuAAC) e N-alchilazione. Lo studio di questi complessi a base di manganese è ancora tutt’oggi agli albori, leganti NHC vengono molto utilizzati grazie alla possibilità di variarne le proprietà steriche ed elettroniche e alla possibilità di formare legami forti con quasi tutti i metalli. Il manganese è stato scelto poiché un elemento abbondante, poco tossico e poco costoso. The present thesis work is part of a research project aimed at the synthesis of new transition metal complexes to be used in homogeneous catalysis reactions. In particular my project focused on the synthesis of manganese organometallic complexes with N-heterocyclic carbene ligands (NHC). The choice of ligands was carried out to have NHC chelating ligands of the class of MIC (mesoionic carbene). These ligands are synthesized by cycloaddition between alkyl and azide with a copper-catalyzed reaction (CuAAC) and N-alkylation in order to obtain MIC after deprotonation. The study of these manganese-based complexes is still in its infancy today, NHC ligands are widely used thanks to the possibility of varying their steric and electronic properties and the possibility of forming strong bonds with almost all metals. The choice of manganese was made because is an abundant, low-toxic and inexpensive element.
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The mechanism of homologation of bioethanol to butanol and higher alcohols via the Guerbet reaction was computationally and experimentally investigated. The catalytic pathway involves a ruthenium-based complex and a base co-catalyst which work simultaneously. Due to selectivity issues, secondary products were formed and high competition between main pathway and side reactions was recorded. Herein, the overall catalytic mechanism for all the processes involved in was investigated, also considering the principal side reactions, using density functional theory (DFT) methods and experiments to confirm theoretical outcomes. Due to the complexity of the reaction network, kinetic simulations were established from DFT results, confirming experimental products distribution and giving insights into the factors governing the reaction mechanism.
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In Cystic Fibrosis (CF) the deletion of phenylalanine 508 (F508del) in the CFTR anion channel is associated to misfolding and defective gating of the mutant protein. Among the known proteins involved in CFTR processing, one of the most promising drug target is the ubiquitin ligase RNF5, which normally promotes F508del-CFTR degradation. In this context, a small molecule RNF5 inhibitor is expected to chemically mimic a condition of RNF5 silencing, thus preventing mutant CFTR degradation and causing its stabilization and plasma membrane trafficking. Hence, by exploiting a virtual screening (VS) campaign, the hit compound inh-2 was discovered as the first-in-class inhibitor of RNF5. Evaluation of inh-2 efficacy on CFTR rescue showed that it efficiently decreases ubiquitination of mutant CFTR and increases chloride current in human primary bronchial epithelia. Based on the promising biological results obtained with inh-2, this thesis reports the structure-based design of potential RNF5 inhibitors having improved potency and efficacy. The optimization of general synthetic strategies gave access to a library of analogues of the 1,2,4-thiadiazol-5-ylidene inh-2 for SAR investigation. The new analogues were tested for their corrector activity in CFBE41o- cells by using the microfluorimetric HS-YFP assay as a primary screen. Then, the effect of putative RNF5 inhibitors on proliferation, apoptosis and the formation of autophagic vacuoles was evaluated. Some of the new analogs significantly increased the basal level of autophagy, reproducing RNF5 silencing effect in cell. Among them, one compound also displayed a greater rescue of the F508del-CFTR trafficking defect than inh-2. Our preliminary results suggest that the 1,2,4-thiadiazolylidene could be a suitable scaffold for the discovery of potential RNF5 inhibitors able to rescue mutant CFTRs. Biological tests are still ongoing to acquire in-depth knowledge about the mechanism of action and therapeutic relevance of this unprecedented pharmacological strategy.
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This PhD thesis summarize the work carried out during three years of PhD course. Several thematic concerning gold(I) chemistry are analysed by crossing data from different chemistry areas as: organic chemistry, organometallic chemistry, inorganic chemistry and computational chemistry. In particular, the thesis focuses its attention on the evaluation of secondary electronic interactions, subsisting between ligand and Au(I) metal centre in the catalyst, and their effects on catalytic activity. The interaction that has been taken in consideration is the Au…Ar π-interaction which is known to prevent the decomposition of catalyst, but exhaustive investigations of further effects has never been done so far. New libraries of carbene (ImPy) and biarylphosphine ligands have been designed and synthetized for the purpose and subsequently utilized for the synthesis of corresponding Au(I) complexes. Resulting catalysts are tested in various catalytic processes involving different intermediates and in combination with solid state information from SC-XRD revealed an unprecedented activation mode which is only explained by considering both electronic nature and strength of Au…Ar π-interaction. DFT calculation carried on catalysis intermediates are in agreement with experimental ones, giving robustness to the theory. Moreover, a new synthetic protocol for the lactonization of N-allenyl indole-2-carboxylic acids is presented. Reaction conditions are optimized with the newly synthetized ImPy-Au(I) catalysts and different substrates are also tested providing a quite broad reaction scope. Chiral ImPy ligands have also been developed for the asymmetric variant of the same reaction and encouraging enantiomeric excess are obtained.
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Neuronal microtubules assembly and dynamics are regulated by several proteins including (MT)-associated protein tau, whose aberrant hyperphosphorylation promotes its dissociation from MTs and its abnormal deposition into neurofibrillary tangles, a common neurotoxic hallmarks of neurodegenerative tauopathies. To date, no disease-modifying drugs have been approved to combat CNS tau-related diseases. The multifactorial etiology of these conditions represents one of the major limits in the discovery of effective therapeutic options. In addition, tau protein functions are orchestrated by diverse post-translational modifications among which phosphorylation mediated by PKs plays a leading role. In this context, conventional single-target therapies are often inadequate in restoring perturbed networks and fraught with adverse side-effects. This thesis reports two distinct approaches to hijack MT defects in neurons. The first is focused on the rational design and synthesis of first-in-class triple inhibitors of GSK-3β, FYN, and DYRK1A, three close-related PKs, which act as master regulators of aberrant tau hyperphosphorylation. A merged multi-target pharmacophore strategy was applied to simultaneously modulate all three targets and achieve a disease-modifying effect. Optimization of ARN25068 by a computationally and crystallographic driven SAR exploration, allowed to rationalize the key structural modifications to maintain a balanced potency against all three targets and develop a new generation of quite well-balanced analogs exhibiting improved physicochemical properties, a good in vitro ADME profile, and promising cell-based anti-tau phosphorylation activity. In Part II, MT-stabilizing compounds have been developed to compensate MT defects in tau-related pathologies. Intensive chemical effort has been devoted to scaling up BL-0884, identified as a promising MT-normalizing TPD, which exhibited favorable ADME-PK, including brain penetration, oral bioavailability, and brain pharmacodynamic activity. A suitable functionalization of the exposed hydroxyl moiety of BL-0884 was carried out to generate corresponding esters and amides possessing a wide range of applications as prodrugs and active targeting for cancer chemotherapy.
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Chemotherapeutic drugs can in many ways disrupt the replication machinery triggering apoptosis in cancer cells: some act directly on DNA and others block the enzymes involved in preparing DNA for replication. Cisplatin-based drugs are common as first-line cancer chemotherapics. Another example is etoposide, a molecule that blocks topoisomerase II α leading to the inhibition of dsDNA replication. Despite their efficacy, cancer cells can respond to these treatments over time by overtaking their effects, leading to drug resistance. Chemoresistance events can be triggered by the action of enzymes like DNA polymerase ƞ (Pol η). This polymerase helps also to bypass drug-induced damage in cancer cells, allowing DNA replication and cancer cells proliferation even when cisplatin-based chemotherapeutic drugs are in use. Pol ƞ is a promising drug discovery target, whose inhibition would help in overcoming of drug resistance. This study aims to identify a potent and selective Pol ƞ inhibitor able to improve the efficacy of platinum-based chemotherapeutic drugs. We report the discovery of compound 64 (ARN24964), after an extensive SAR reporting 35 analogs. We evaluated compound 64 on four different cell lines. Interestingly, the molecule is a Pol η inhibitor able to act synergistically with cisplatin. Moreover, we also synthesized a prodrug form that allowed us to improve its stability and the bioavailability. This compound represents an advanced scaffold featuring good potency and DMPK properties. In addition to this central theme, this thesis also describes our efforts in developing and characterize a novel hybrid inhibitor/poison for the human topoisomerase II α enzyme. In particular, we performed specific assays to study the inhibiton of Topoisomesare II α and we evaluated compounds effect on three cancer cell lines. These studies allowed us to identify a compound that is able to inhibit the enzyme with a good pK and a good potency.