540 Chemie und zugeordnete Wissenschaften
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Plasmonic modes supported by noble-metal nanostructures offer strong subwavelength electric-field confinement and promise the realization of nanometer-scale integrated optical circuits with well-defined functionality. In order to measure the spectral and spatial response functions of such plasmonic elements, we combine a confocal microscope setup with spectral interferometry detection. The setup, data acquisition, and data evaluation are discussed in detail by means of exemplary experiments involving propagating plasmons transmitted through silver nanowires. By considering and experimentally calibrating any setup-inherent signal delay with an accuracy of 1 fs, we are able to extract correct timing information of propagating plasmons. The method can be applied, e.g., to determine the dispersion and group velocity of propagating plasmons in nanostructures, and can be extended towards the investigation of nonlinear phenomena.
The reaction products of the picolyl radicals at high temperature were characterized by mass‐selective threshold photoelectron spectroscopy in the gas phase. Aminomethylpyridines were pyrolyzed to initially produce picolyl radicals (m /z =92). At higher temperatures further thermal reaction products are generated in the pyrolysis reactor. All compounds were identified by mass‐selected threshold photoelectron spectroscopy and several hitherto unexplored reactive molecules were characterized. The mechanism for several dissociation pathways was outlined in computations. The spectrum of m /z =91, resulting from hydrogen loss of picolyl, shows four isomers, two ethynyl pyrroles with adiabatic ionization energies (IE\(_{ad}\)) of 7.99 eV (2‐ethynyl‐1H ‐pyrrole) and 8.12 eV (3‐ethynyl‐1H ‐pyrrole), and two cyclopentadiene carbonitriles with IE′s of 9.14 eV (cyclopenta‐1,3‐diene‐1‐carbonitrile) and 9.25 eV (cyclopenta‐1,4‐diene‐1‐carbonitrile). A second consecutive hydrogen loss forms the cyanocyclopentadienyl radical with IE′s of 9.07 eV (T\(_0\)) and 9.21 eV (S\(_1\)). This compound dissociates further to acetylene and the cyanopropynyl radical (IE=9.35 eV). Furthermore, the cyclopentadienyl radical, penta‐1,3‐diyne, cyclopentadiene and propargyl were identified in the spectra. Computations indicate that dissociation of picolyl proceeds initially via a resonance‐stabilized seven‐membered ring.
Besides their widespread use in coordination chemistry, 2,2’‐bipyridines are known for their ability to undergo cis–trans conformational changes in response to metal ions and acids, which has been primarily investigated at the molecular level. However, the exploitation of such conformational switching in self‐assembly has remained unexplored. In this work, the use of 2,2’‐bipyridines as acid‐responsive conformational switches to tune supramolecular polymerization processes has been demonstrated. To achieve this goal, we have designed a bipyridine‐based linear bolaamphiphile, 1, that forms ordered supramolecular polymers in aqueous media through cooperative aromatic and hydrophobic interactions. Interestingly, addition of acid (TFA) induces the monoprotonation of the 2,2’‐bipyridine moiety, leading to a switch in the molecular conformation from a linear (trans) to a V‐shaped (cis) state. This increase in molecular distortion along with electrostatic repulsions of the positively charged bipyridine‐H\(^{+}\) units attenuate the aggregation tendency and induce a transformation from long fibers to shorter thinner fibers. Our findings may contribute to opening up new directions in molecular switches and stimuli‐responsive supramolecular materials.
Bei der Einelektronenreduktion eines durch eine cyclisches (Alkyl)(amino)carben (CAAC) stabilisierten Arylborylen-Carbonylkomplexes erfolgt die Bildung eines dimeren Borylketyl-Radikalanions, bedingt durch eine intramolekulare Arylmigration zum CO Kohlenstoffatom. Computergestützte Analyse liefert Hinweise auf eine radikalanionische [(CAAC)B(CO)Ar]\(^{.-}\) Zwischenstufe. Weiterführende Reduktion des entstandenen Komplexes liefert ein hoch nukleophiles (Boranyliden)methanolat.
Isolated 2‐phenylallyl radicals (2‐PA), generated by pyrolysis from a nitrite precursor, have been investigated by IR/UV ion dip spectroscopy using free electron laser radiation. 2‐PA is a resonance‐stabilized radical that is considered to be involved in the formation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in combustion, but also in interstellar space. The radical is identified based on its gas‐phase IR spectrum. Furthermore, a number of bimolecular reaction products are identified, showing that the self‐reaction as well as reactions with unimolecular decomposition products of 2‐PA form several PAH efficiently. Possible mechanisms are discussed and the chemistry of 2‐PA is compared with the one of the related 2‐methylallyl and phenylpropargyl radicals.
The present work presents investigations on energy and charge transport properties in organic crystals. Chapter 4 treats exciton transport in anthracene, which is an example for weakly coupled π-systems. The electronic coupling parameter is evaluated by the monomer transition density approach. With these and the reorganization energy hopping rates are calculated in the framework of the Marcus theory. Together with the knowledge of the crystal structure, these allow us to calculate the experimental accessible exciton diffusion lengths, whose isotropic part fits nicely within the scattering of experimental values found in the literature. Furthermore, the anisotropy of the exciton diffusion lengths is reproduced qualitatively and quantitatively correct. This chapter also contains studies about electron and hole transport in both polymorphs (α and β) of perylene. Reorganization energies as well as diffusion coefficients for both crystal structures and types of charge transport were calculated. The best transport is hole transport in β-perylene, but it is strongly isotropic. The preferred transport direction is along the b-axis of the unit cell with couplings of greater than 100 meV. However, there is no transport along the c-axis. The diffusion constant in b-direction is bigger by two orders of magnitude than in c-direction (62.7•10-6 m2/s vs. 0.4•10-6 m2/s). Charge transport is calculated to be strongly anisotropic for holes as well as electrons in both modifications. To verify these results experimental electron mobilities have been compared to the simulations. Good agreement was found with errors of less than 27%. As it was shown above, the calculation and measurement of transport properties between weakly coupled systems is possible. However, it is difficult to exactly determine the quality of the electronic coupling. For this reason a collaboration about strongly interacting π-systems was started between us and the research group of Prof. Ingo Fischer. There, [2.2]paracyclophanes and its derivates were investigated to show how hydroxyl substitution influences absorption properties. Overall, a combination of SCS-MP2 and SCS-CC2 performs best to address the description of geometric and electronic structures for both ground and excited states of these model systems as well as their parent compounds benzene and phenol. Only [2.2]paracyclophane shows a double minimum potential regarding a twist and shift motion between the benzene/phenol subunits towards each other. All other systems are less flexible due to their substitution pattern. Almost all [2.2]paracyclophanes display minor changes in their geometric structure upon excitation to the S1 state: The inter-ring distance shortens, but qualitatively they keep their shift and twist characteristics, although the extent of these deformations diminishes. The exception is p-DHPC, which turns from a shifted ground state structure into a twisted excited state structure. Consequently, the intensity of the 0-0 transition cannot be observed experimentally due to small Franck-Condon factors and impurities of o-DHPC. In the present thesis, the structures and their changes due to excitation are explained by electrostatic potentials as well as antibonding (bonding) HOMO (LUMO) orbitals. Adiabatic excitation energies have been corrected by ZPEs and result in accuracies with errors smaller than 0.1 eV. Note that corrections on the B3LYP level worsen the results and one has to apply SCS-CC2 to achieve this accuracy. These calculations allow an interpretation of the experimental [1+1]REMPI spectra. Band progressions of the twist, shift and breathing of the [2.2]paracyclophane skeleton vibrations have been identified and show good agreement to the experiment. This work shows that the substitution pattern in [2.2]paracyclophanes can have a significant impact on spectroscopic properties. Because these properties are directly linked to the transport properties of these materials, the hereby gained insight can be used to design materials with customized transport properties. It was shown that the SCS-CC2 method is very appropriate to predict the interaction between the π-systems
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden zwei spektroskopische Methoden (Raman- und Circulardichroismus-Spektroskopie) und die Kernspinresonanz zur Untersuchung der Sekundärstruktur von synthetischen Polypeptiden eingesetzt. Dabei wurden die Struktur-Funktions-Beziehungen der dritten extrazellulären Schleife des Gonadotropin-freisetzenden Rezeptors (GnRH-R) untersucht. Die spektroskopischen Ergebnisse belegten, dass die zuvor getroffene Aussage über eine vorhandene helikale Struktur revidiert werden musste. Die Strukturanalysen mit Hilfe der CD-, Raman- und 2D NMR-Experimente an zwei Serien von Polypeptiden lieferten Aussagen über die Sekundärstruktur. Insbesondere die Raman-Untersuchungen in Verbindung mit einer statistischen Datenanalyse lieferten detaillierte Information über subtile Konformationsänderungen, die einerseits durch die Addition und andererseits durch die Substitution einzelner Aminosäuren in den synthetischen Polypeptiden ausgelöst wurden. Anhand der ausgewählten Raman-Linien konnte nachgewiesen werden, dass sowohl die Änderungen der Polypeptidkettenlänge als auch die Änderung der Polypeptidsequenzen mit den beobachteten Intensitäten der Raman-Linien korreliert sind.
Infrared (IR) and Raman spectroscopy are among the most widely used techniques in the physical and natural sciences today. Vibrational spectroscopy, including IR and Raman spectroscopy, has both a long and interesting history and an illustrious record of contributions to science. Spectroscopy in the pharmaceutical industry is dominated by techniques such as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and mass spectrometry (MS) for the elucidation of chemical structures. Despite this, the versatility of infrared spectroscopy ensures it still remains a key technique in quality control laboratories, and in applications where solid form characterization or minimal sample preparation is a necessity. Raman spectroscopy has many uses in the pharmaceutical and chemical industry, but its strengths is in solid form analysis. It is regularly used to identify compounds, and results are used in the release of pharmaceutical and chemical products. This work consists of 8 chapters, which cover the vibrational spectroscopy beginning with the theory and instrumentation, continuing with the experimental setup and probes description, and completing with results and discussions of the experiments. The first chapter of this work introduces Raman spectroscopy as a dominant technique used in pharmaceutical and chemical industry. The theoretical background regarding vibrational spectroscopy (IR and Raman) is accounted for in the second chapter of this work, while the samples presentation, the experimental procedures, and the description of the apparatus together with the computational details are briefly specified in the third chapter. The fourth chapter investigates the concentration dependent wavenumber shifts and linewidth changes of tetrahydrofuran in a binary system. Many of the applications in food science rely heavily on Raman spectroscopy, often preceding the biomedical applications. The characterization and identification of food additives using Raman, surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy, and theoretical calculations is in detail depicted in the fifth chapter, whereas in the sixth and seventh chapters the monitoring of several medicines and various lanthanide complexes with anticancer properties, respectively, employing IR and Raman techniques are treated. These last two chapters address applications of vibrational spectroscopy to pharmaceutical products, and include the use of vibrational spectroscopy in combinatorial chemistry and density functional theory, a modality increasingly used by the pharmaceutical industry for the discovery if new pharmacologically active substances.
In the current work, several well-known pharmaceuticals (1,4-dihydrazinophthalazine sulfate, caffeine, and papaverine hydrochloride) and new organometallic compounds (nickel(II) cupferronato complexes NiL2An, L = PhN2O2-, n = 1, A = o-phenanthroline (1), o,o’-bipyridine (2) and n = 2, A = H2O (3), o-NH2Py (4), o-C6H4(NH2)2 (5); silylene-bridged dinuclear iron complexes [Cp(OC)2Fe]2SiX2 (X = H (6), F (7), Cl (8), Br (9), I (10)); 3-silaoxetane 3,3-dimethyl-2,2,4,4-tetraphenyl-1-oxa-3-silacyclobutane (11) and 3-silathietane 3,3-dimethyl-2,2,4,4-tetraphenyl-1-sila-3-thiacyclobutane (12) compounds), which have successfully been characterized by using vibrational spectroscopy in conjunction with accurate density functional theory (DFT) calculations, are presented. The DFT computed molecular geometries of the species of interest reproduced the crystal structure data very well and in conjunction with IR and Raman measurements helped us to clarify the structures of the compounds, for which no experimental data were available; and this, especially for the new organometallic compounds, where the X-Ray analysis was limited by the non-availability of single crystals (3, 5, 10). Furthermore, a natural population analysis (NPA) and natural bond orbital (NBO) calculations together with a detailed analysis of the IR and Raman experimental as well as calculated spectra of the new organometallic compounds, allowed us to study some special bonding situations (1-12) or to monitor the structural changes observed with the change in temperature during the Raman experiments (11, 12). By combining these two methods (DFT and vibrational spectroscopy), the auspicious results obtained on the organometallic compounds 6-12 and overall in literature, made us confident of the power of theoretical calculations in aiding the interpretation of rich SERS spectra by solving some interesting issues. Consequently, the Raman and SERS spectra of well-known pharmaceuticals (1,4-dihydrazinophthalazine sulfate, caffeine, and papaverine hydrochloride) or new potentially biological active organometallic complexes (1-5), that were synthetized by our coworkers, were discussed with the assistance of the accurate results obtained from DFT calculations (structural parameters, harmonic vibrational wavenumbers, Raman scattering activities), and many previous incomplete assignments have been analyzed and improved. This allowed us to establish the vibrational behavior of these biological compounds near a biological artificial model at different pH values or concentrations (Ag substrate), taking into account that information about the species present under particular conditions could be of great importance for the interpretation of biochemical processes. The total electron density of molecules and the partial charges situated on selected atoms, which were determined theoretically by NPA, allowed us to establish the probability of different atoms acting as an adsorptive site for the metal surface. Moreover, a closer examination of the calculated orbitals of molecules brought further arguments on the presence or absence of the photoproducts at the Ag surface during the irradiation (1,4-dihydrazinophthalazine sulfate). Overall, the results provide a benchmark illustration of the virtues of DFT in aiding the interpretation of rich vibrational spectra attainable for larger polyatomic adsorbates by using SERS, as well as in furnishing detailed insight into the relation between the vibrational properties and the nature of the Ag substrate-adsorbate bonding. Therefore, we strongly believe that theoretical calculations will become a matter of rapidly growing scientific and practical interest in SERS.