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Die vorliegende Arbeit behandelt die Synthese sowie die Eigenschaften einer Serie von organofunktionellen α-, β-, γ- und ζ-Silanen, mit einem Fokus auf Alkoxy(aminoalkyl)silanen. Der Großteil dieser Modellstrukturen wurde anschließend hinsichtlich ihrer Hydrolysekinetik in Abhängigkeit der Art der funktionellen Gruppe X (NMe3+, N(H)COOMe, N(Me)COOMe, NH2, N(H)Me, NMe2, Pip, Me), des Abstandes des Substituenten X zu dem Silicium-Atom
(α-, β-, γ- und ζ-Position), der Alkoxy-Abgangsgruppe am Silicium-Atom (MeO, iPrO, tBuO) und des pD-Wertes der Reaktionslösung systematisch untersucht.
Eine große Herausforderung dieser Studie war die Synthese von β-Amino-funktionalisierten Alkoxysilanen, deren Chemie aufgrund ihrer Labilität bisher kaum erforscht ist. Die einzigen literaturbekannten Vertreter stellten bislang das Trialkoxysilan (EtO)3Si(CH2)2NH2 (1) und sein Dialkoxy-Derivat (EtO)2SiMe(CH2)2NH2 (2) dar, welche durch Reaktion des entsprechenden 2-(Chlorethyl)silans mit Ammoniak unter hohem Druck im Autoklaven zugänglich sind. Unter Verwendung dieser Synthesemethode konnte sowohl die Synthese der Silane 1 und 2 reproduziert, als auch das Trimethoxy-Analogon (MeO)3Si(CH2)2NH2 (3) erstmals dargestellt werden.
Darüber hinaus wurde eine Serie von organofunktionellen Monoalkoxysilanen des Typs RORSiMe(CH2)2X und ROSiMe2C(H)MeCH2X (4b–18b) im präparativen Maßstab analyserein dargestellt.
Des Weiteren wurden die entsprechenden α-Silane 8a, 11a, 14a und 15a, die γ-Silane 6c, 8c, 11c, 13c–15c und 18c sowie die ζ-Silane 19 und 20 erstmals dargestellt.
Weiterhin wurden die bereits literaturbekannten α-Silane 16a–18a und γ-Silane 7c, 16c und 17c für die Verwendung in den Hydrolyseexperimenten synthetisiert.
Die Charakterisierung aller im Rahmen dieser Arbeit synthetisierten Verbindungen erfolgte mittels NMR-Spektroskopie (1H-, 13C-, 15N- und 29Si-NMR) und Elementaranalysen (C, H, N) bzw. HRMS-Experimente.
Die hydrolytische Spaltung der Si–OC-Bindung in Alkoxy(aminoalkyl)silanen stellt einen technisch sehr wichtigen Schlüsselschritt in der Synthese von Amino-funktionalisierten Polysiloxanen dar. Um den Mechanismus dieser Si–OC-Bindungsspaltung besser zu verstehen, wurden die Alkoxysilane 4b, 4c, 5b, 6b, 6c, 7b, 7c, 8a–8c, 9b, 11a–11c, 12b, 14a–14c,
15a–15c, 16a–16c, 17a–17c, 18a–18c, 19 und 20 hinsichtlich ihrer Hydrolysekinetik in CD3CN/D2O unter sauren und basischen Bedingungen mittels 1H-NMR-Spektroskopie untersucht.
Die Ergebnisse dieser Struktur–Reaktivitäts-Studie zeigten, dass die beobachteten unterschiedlichen Hydrolysegeschwindigkeiten das Resultat mehrerer Faktoren sind, wie beispielsweise elektronische und sterische Effekte, der große Einflusses des pD-Wertes und auch intramolekulare N–H∙∙∙O-Wasserstoffbrückenbindungen zwischen der protonierten Amino-Gruppe und der Alkoxy-Abgangsgruppe. Da der Einfluss dieser Effekte auf die Reaktivität der untersuchten α-, β-, γ- und ζ-Silane sehr unterschiedlich ist, kann kein klarer Zusammenhang zwischen der Hydrolysereaktivität und der Positionierung der stickstoff-haltigen funktionellen Gruppe (α-, β-, γ- und ζ-Position) erkannt werden. Die jeweils beobachtete Reaktivität entspricht vielmehr einer Summe aller zuvor genannten Teileffekte.
Die Erkenntnisse, die im Rahmen dieser Arbeit erhalten wurden, ermöglichen ein verbessertes grundlegendes Verständnis der Reaktivität von funktionalisierten α-, β-, γ- und ζ-Silanen, und sind für die Silicon-Industrie von großem Interesse, da sie eine gezieltere Anwendung der α-, β- und γ-Aminosilane in der Synthese von technisch wichtigen Amino-funktionalisierten Polysiloxanen erlauben.
Herein, we report the one-pot synthesis of an electron-poor nanographene containing dicarboximide groups at the corners. We efficiently combined palladium-catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling and dehydrohalogenation to synthesize an extended two-dimensional pi-scaffold of defined size in a single chemical operation starting from N-(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-4,5-dibromo-1,8-naphthalimide and a tetrasubstituted pyrene boronic acid ester as readily accessible starting materials. The reaction of these precursors under the conditions commonly used for Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling afforded a C\(_{64}\) nanographene through the formation of ten C-C bonds in a one-pot process. Single-crystal X-ray analysis unequivocally confirmed the structure of this unique extended aromatic molecule with a planar geometry. The optical and electrochemical properties of this largest ever synthesized planar electron-poor nanographene skeleton were also analyzed.
A perylene bisimide dye bearing amide functionalities at the imide positions derived from amino acid L-alanine and a dialkoxy-substituted benzyl amine self-assembles into tightly bound dimers by π-π-stacking and hydrogen bonding in chloroform. In less polar or unpolar solvents like toluene and methylcyclohexane, and in their mixtures, these dimers further self-assemble into extended oligomeric aggregates in an anti-cooperative process in which even numbered aggregates are highly favoured. The stepwise transition from dimers into oligomers can not be properly described by conventional K\(_2\)-K model, and thus a new K\(_2\)-K aggregation model has been developed, which interpretes the present anti-cooperative supramolecular polymerization more appropriately. The newly developed K\(_2\)-K model will be useful to describe self-assembly processes of a plethora of other π-conjugated molecules that are characterized by a favored dimer species.
The quantum efficiency of light emission is a crucial parameter of supramolecular aggregates that can be tuned by the molecular design of the monomeric species. Here, we report on a strong variation of the fluorescence quantum yield due to different phases of aggregation for the case of a perylene bisimide dye. In particular, a change of the dominant aggregation character from H- to J-type within the first aggregation steps is found, explaining the observed dramatic change in quantum yield. This behaviour is rationalised by means of a systematic study of the intermolecular potential energy surfaces using the time-dependent density functional based tight-binding (TD-DFTB) method. This provides a correlation between structural changes and a coupling strength and supports the notion of H- type stacked dimers and J-type stack-slipped dimers. The exciton-vibrational level structure is modelled by means of an excitonic dimer model including two effective vibrational modes per monomer. Calculated absorption and fluorescence spectra are found to be in reasonable agreement with experimental ones, thus supporting the conclusion on the aggregation behaviour.
The linear and nonlinear optical properties of a series of oligomeric squaraine dyes were investigated by one-photon absorption spectroscopy (1PA) and two-photon absorption (2PA) induced fluorescence spectroscopy. The superchromophores are based on two indolenine squaraine dyes with transoid (SQA) and cisoid configuration (SQB). Using these monomers, linear dimers and trimers as well as star-shaped trimers and hexamers with benzene or triphenylamine cores were synthesised and investigated. The red-shifted and intensified 1PA spectra of all superchromophores could well be explained by exciton coupling theory. In the linear chromophore arrangements we also found superradiance of fluorescence but not in the branched systems. Furthermore, the 2PA showed enhanced cross sections for the linear oligomers but only additivity for the branched systems. This emphasizes that the enhancement of the 2PA cross section in the linear arrangements is probably caused by orbital interactions of higher excited configurations.
A donor-acceptor-donor (D-A-D) type naphthalene-diimide (NDI-H) chromophore exhibits highly cooperative J-aggregation leading to nanotubular self-assembly and gelation in n-decane, as demonstrated by UV/Vis, FT-IR, photoluminescence and microscopy studies. Analysis of temperature-dependent UV/Vis spectra using the nucleation-elongation model and FT-IR data reveals the molecular origin of the cooperative nature of the self-assembly. The supramolecular polymerization is initiated by H-bonding up to a degree of polymerization similar to 20-25, which in a subsequent elongation step promotes J-aggregation in orthogonal direction leading to possibly a sheet-like structure that eventually produces nanotubes. Time-resolved fluorescence and absorption measurements demonstrate that such a tubular assembly enables very effective delocalization of excited states resulting in a remarkably prolonged excited state lifetime.
Fluorescence enhancement of a high-mobility polymer semiconductor is achieved via energy transfer to a higher fluorescence quantum yield squaraine dye molecule on 50 ps timescales. In organic light-emitting diodes, an order of magnitude enhancement of the external quantum efficiency is observed without reduction in the charge-carrier mobility resulting in radiances of up to 5 W str\(^{-1}\) m\(^{-2}\) at 800 nm.
Multimetallic complexes with extended and highly conjugated bis-2,2':6',2''-terpyridyl bridging ligands, which present building blocks for coordination polymers, are investigated with respect to their ability to act as light-harvesting antennae. The investigated species combine Ru(II)- with Os(II)- and Fe(II)-terpyridyl chromophores, the latter acting as energy sinks. Due to the extended conjugated system the ligands are able to prolong the lifetime of the \(^3\)MLCT states compared to unsubstituted terpyridyl species by delocalization and energetic stabilization of the \(^3\)MLCT states. This concept is applied for the first time to Fe(II) terpyridyl species and results in an exceptionally long lifetime of 23 ps for the Fe(II) \(^3\)MLCT state. While partial energy (>80%) transfer is observed between the Ru(II) and Fe(II) centers with a time-constant of 15 ps, excitation energy is transferred completely from the Ru(II) to the Os(II) center within the first 200 fs after excitation.
Sialyltransferases (STs) are disulfide-containing, type II transmembrane glycoproteins that catalyze the transfer of sialic acid to proteins and lipids and participate in the synthesis of the core structure oligosaccharides of human milk. Sialic acids are found at the outermost position of glycostructures, playing a key role in health and disease. Sialylation is also essential for the production of recombinant therapeutic proteins (RTPs). Despite their importance, availability of sialyltransferases is limited due to the low levels of stable, soluble and active protein produced in bacterial expression systems, which hampers biochemical and structural studies on these enzymes and restricts biotechnological applications. We report the successful expression of active human sialyltransferases ST3Gal1 and ST6Gal1 in commercial Escherichia coli strains designed for production of disulfide-containing proteins. Fusion of hST3Gal1 with different solubility enhancers and substitution of exposed hydrophobic amino acids by negatively charged residues (supercharging-like approach) were performed to promote solubility and folding. Co-expression of sialyltransferases with the chaperon/foldases sulfhydryl oxidase, protein disulfide isomerase and disulfide isomerase C was explored to improve the formation of native disulfide bonds. Active sialyltransferases fused with maltose binding protein (MBP) were obtained in sufficient amounts for biochemical and structural studies when expressed under oxidative conditions and co-expression of folding factors increased the yields of active and properly folded sialyltransferases by 20%. Mutation of exposed hydrophobic amino acids increased recovery of active enzyme by 2.5-fold, yielding about 7 mg of purified protein per liter culture. Functionality of recombinant enzymes was evaluated in the synthesis of sialosides from the β-d-galactoside substrates lactose, N-acetyllactosamine and benzyl 2-acetamido-2-deoxy-3-O-(β-d-galactopyranosyl)-α-d-galactopyranoside.
Cofacial positioning of two perylene bisimide (PBI) chromophores at a distance of 6.5 angstrom in a cyclophane structure prohibits the otherwise common excimer formation and directs photoexcited singlet state relaxation towards intramolecular symmetry-breaking charge separation (τ\(_{CS}\) = 161 +/- 4 ps) in polar CH\(_2\)Cl\(_2\), which is thermodynamically favored with a Gibbs free energy of ΔG\(_{CS}\) = -0.32 eV. The charges then recombine slowly in τ\(_{CR}\) = 8.90 +/- 0.06 ns to form the PBI triplet excited state, which can be used subsequently to generate singlet oxygen in 27% quantum yield. This sequence of events is eliminated by dissolving the PBI cyclophane in non-polar toluene, where only excited singlet state decay occurs. In contrast, complexation of electron-rich aromatic hydrocarbons by the host PBI cyclophane followed by photoexcitation of PBI results in ultrafast electron transfer (<10 ps) from the guest to the PBI in CH\(_2\)Cl\(_2\). The rate constants for charge separation and recombination increase as the guest molecules become easier to oxidize, demonstrating that charge separation occurs close to the peak of the Marcus curve and the recombination lies far into the Marcus inverted region.