Molecular Switching: from Blue Biradicals to Colorless Housanes

As chemists, we typically first encounter molecular switches, the general term for any molecule that exists in at least two stable or meta-stable states, as pH indicators in introductory chemistry classes. The external factor that causes the conversion can vary from a redox event to UV light. This makes molecular switches attractive sensors for a range of chemically relevant applications. The reversible and controllable bond-making and bond-breaking also provides a system within which to interrogate the nature of chemical bonding.

Figure 1. The biradical (left) and housane (right) in solution along with their simplified chemical structures.

Chemists at the University of Rostock in Germany explored light-driven molecular switching behavior in a class of heterocyclic molecules. These can exist as either biradicals or housanes (see Figure 1 for why the name makes sense) with a bond between the two phosphorus atoms. Understanding the mechanism by which the photo-isomerization occurs is important for future applications of the biradical system in small molecule activation. The in-depth studies used the 2,6-dimethylphenyl (2Dmp) derivative, since it was the most stable of the synthesized derivatives. The researchers monitored the conversion between species by examining their dramatically different 31P NMR spectra, with the housane resonances between -50 and -200 ppm and the biradical resonances between 200 and 300 ppm. An additional distinguishing feature between is color: the starting biradical is blue while the housane is colorless. The researchers found that biradical converts to the housane, which has a half-life of about 7 minutes at room temperature in solution, with an almost 25% quantum yield.

Figure 2. A single crystal of the biradical. Upon irradiation, the transition to the colorless housane can be observed, along with extensive cracking of the crystal.

This switching occurs not only in solution, but also in the solid state (Figure 2). The cracking evident in the images of a single crystal is attributed to the stress caused by changes to the crystal lattice by conversion of the biradical to the housane. Despite various efforts by the team, including crystallization attempts under constant irradiation, they were unable to obtain high enough quality crystals to acquire a crystal structure of the housane. The specific isomerization mechanism was computationally modeled and showed that the photoexcitation of the biradical led to a bonding interaction and distortion, allowing for housane formation. The reverse, thermally activated process, occurs due to the intersection of the ground and excited state energies near a transition state.

Given this enhanced understanding of the isomerization mechanism, the researchers manipulated the reactivity of the biradical by adding tert-butyl isocyanide (tBuNC). tBuNC catalyzed the thermal conversion of the housane back to the diradical. While the mechanism of the catalysis is unknown, it’s an exciting proof-of-concept for easily tuning molecular switching behavior.

To find out more please read:

A chemical reaction controlled by light-activatedmolecular switches based on hetero-cyclopentanediyls

Jonas Bresien, Thomas Kröger-Badge, Stefan Lochbrunner, Dirk Michalik, Henrik Müller, Axel Schultz, and Edgar Zander

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3486-3493

About the blogger:

 

Beth Mundy is a PhD candidate in chemistry in the Cossairt lab at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington. Her research focuses on developing new and better ways to synthesize nanomaterials for energy applications. She is often spotted knitting in seminars or with her nose in a good book. You can find her on Twitter at @BethMundySci.

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HOT Chemical Science articles for March

We are happy to present a selection of our HOT articles for March. To see all of our HOT referee-recommended articles from 2019, please find the collection here.

As always, Chemical Science articles are free to access.

The antioxidant activity of polysulfides: it’s radical!

Jean-Philippe R. Chauvin, Markus Griesser and Derek A. Pratt*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 4999-5010

DOI
: 10.1039/C9SC00276F, Edge Article

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Anisotropic strain release in a thermosalient crystal: correlation between the microscopic orientation of molecular rearrangements and the macroscopic mechanical motion

Tomohiro Seki,* Takaki Mashimo and Hajime Ito*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 4185-4191

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05563G, Edge Article

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Alkali metal complexes of an enantiopure iminophosphonamide ligand with bright delayed fluorescence

Thomas J. Feuerstein, Bhupendra Goswami, Pascal Rauthe, Ralf Köppe, Sergei Lebedkin, Manfred M. Kappes and Peter W. Roesky*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 4742-4749

DOI
: 10.1039/C9SC00629J, Edge Article

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Direct observation of prion protein oligomer formation reveals an aggregation mechanism with multiple conformationally distinct species

Jason C. Sang, Ji-Eun Lee, Alexander J. Dear, Suman De, Georg Meisl, Alana M. Thackray, Raymond Bujdoso, Tuomas P. J. Knowles and David Klenerman*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 4588-4597

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05627G, Edge Article

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Using coligands to gain mechanistic insight into iridium complexes hyperpolarized with para-hydrogen

Ben. J. Tickner, Richard O. John, Soumya S. Roy, Sam J. Hart, Adrian C. Whitwood and Simon B. Duckett*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, Advance Article

DOI
: 10.1039/C9SC00444K, Edge Article

 

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Direct conversion of phenols into primary anilines with hydrazine catalyzed by palladium

Zihang Qiu, Leiyang Lv, Jianbin Li, Chen-Chen Li and Chao-Jun Li*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 4775-4781

DOI
: 10.1039/C9SC00595A, Edge Article

 

 

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Bioorthogonal & Bioresponsive Symposium 2019

The second Bioorthogonal & Bioresponsive symposium will be held at the Institute of Genetics & Molecular Medicine in Edinburgh on the 6th and 7th of June 2019. Chemical Science is proud to sponsor the symposium and our new Assistant Editor Amelia Newman will be attending.

The symposium aims to bring together chemists and biologists interested in the latest advances in bioorthogonal and bioresponsive strategies. Talks will highlight state-of-the-art work from leading UK and international experts, and speakers include Jason Chin, Ben Davis, Karen Faulds, Sarah Heilshorn, Ludovic Jullien and Vincent Rotello.

It’s not too late to join us at this exciting meeting – registration is still open at the RSC Events webpage. The registration deadline is 31st May 2019.

If you cannot attend the symposium next month, you can follow @BBSymposium1 on Twitter to stay updated.

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CPE Annual Symposium 2019

The Centre for Plastic Electronics is hosting its prestigious annual symposium on 10 and 11 June 2019. It will take place at Imperial College London and and will include talks from several high-profile speakers to discuss their latest advances in the science and technology of organic conducting materials and of organic/flexible electronics and photonics. The program includes a day of short talks and poster presentations by students and early career scientists giving them a platform to highlight their recent work.

More information and details of how to register is available at: http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/newsandeventspggrp/imperialcollege/centres/plasticelectronics/eventssummary/event_20-2-2019-14-14-7. Abstracts submissions for poster presentations are open until the 31 May.

Imperial College London are delighted to host Prof Erwin Reisner of the University of Cambridge who will be giving his RSC Corday-Morgan Prize talk for his work on the development of solar-driven catalysis with molecularly engineered semiconductors and semi-artificial photosynthesis.

The symposium will cover all areas related to organic/plastic electronics and photonics, including chemistry, physics, materials science and device engineering. Confirmed speakers include:

  • Christine Luscombe, University of Washington
  • Andy Cooper, University of Liverpool
  • Iain McCulloch, KAUST and Imperial College London
  • Erwin Reisner, University of Cambridge
  • Kwanghee Lee, GIST, South Korea
  • Henry Yan, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
  • Ji-Seon Kim, Imperial College London
  • Artem Bakulin, Imperial College London
  • Maria Ibáñez, Institute of Science and Technology, Austria
  • Rachel Evans, University of Cambridge
  • Oliver Dumele, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
  • Hyejeong Seong, Imperial College London
  • Rowena Brugge, Imperial College London
  • Ludmilla Steier, Imperial College London
  • Jess Wade, Imperial College London
  • Alex Clark, Imperial College London

With more speakers being confirmed in the coming weeks, this will be an event not to miss!

If you cannot attend the Symposium next month, you can follow the hashtag #CPESymp19 on Twitter.

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Protein-Protein Interactions 2019

Protein-Protein Interactions 2019 was held at the University of Leeds from 4-5 April. The event was organised by SCI’s Fine Chemicals Group and the RSC Biological and Medicinal Chemistry Sector in association with PPI-Net, and is aimed at all scientists with an interest in the understanding or manipulation of protein-protein interactions. Chemical Science was pleased to support the conference along with MedChemComm, another Royal Society of Chemistry journal.

The Chemical Science poster prize was won by Lydia Dewis from the University of Bristol for her poster on ‘The Synthesis, Computation and NMR Spectroscopy to Design Conformationally Controlled α-Helix Mimetics to Inhibit Protein-Protein Interactions’.

The MedChemComm poster prize was won by Devon Legge from the University of Leeds for her poster on ‘A Chemical Approach the Interaction of Host and Microbe via Formylpeptide Signals’.

Congratulations to Lydia and Devon!

Chemical Science poster prize winner Lydia Dewis

MedChemComm poster prize winner Devon Legge

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François Gabbaï joins Chemical Science as an Associate Editor

We are delighted to announce that Dr François Gabbaï has joined Chemical Science as our newest Associate Editor.

François Gabbaï was born in France and attended the University of Bordeaux before moving to UT Austin where he became a PhD student with Alan Cowley.  Upon completion of his Ph.D. in 1994, he joined the group of Hubert Schmidbaur at the Technical University of Munich, first as a postdoctoral fellow and later as an Habilitand.  Upon completion of his Habilitation in 1998, he moved to Texas A&M University where he now holds the Arthur E. Martell Chair of Chemistry.  His research interests revolve around the chemistry of p-block elements and late transition metals with applications in anion recognition, anion transport, and catalysis.  His is a Fellow of the American Chemical Society, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and the recipient of the 2009 North American Dalton Lectureship. In 2016, he also received the ACS F. Albert Cotton Award in Synthetic Inorganic Chemistry.

François has selected 4 of his favourite Chemical Science articles that he has published over the years that he would like to share with you. We hope you enjoy reading them!

Large-bite diboranes for the μ(1,2) complexation of hydrazine and cyanide
C. H. Chen, F. P. Gabbaï
Chem. Sci., 2018, 9, 6210-6218
DOI: 10.1039/c8sc01877d

Fluorinated Antimony(V) Derivatives: Strong Lewis Acidic Properties and Application to the Complexation of Formaldehyde in Aqueous Solutions
D. Tofan, F. P. Gabbaï
Chem. Sci., 2016, 7, 6768-6778
DOI: 10.1039/c6sc02558g

Lewis acidic stiborafluorenes for the fluorescence turn-on sensing of fluoride in drinking water at ppm concentrations
M. Hirai, F. P. Gabbaï
Chem. Sci., 2014, 5, 1886-1893
DOI: 10.1039/c4sc00343h

Lewis acid enhancement by juxtaposition with an onium ion: the case of a mercury stibonium complex
T.-P. Lin, R. C. Nelson, T. Wu, J. T. Miller, F. P. Gabbaï
Chem. Sci., 2012, 3, 1128-1136
DOI: 10.1039/c2sc00904h

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HOT Chemical Science articles for February

We are happy to present a selection of our HOT articles for February. To see all of our HOT referee-recommended articles from 2019, please find the collection here.

As always, Chemical Science articles are free to access.

Cooperativity basis for small-molecule stabilization of protein-protein interactions

Pim J. de Vink, Sebastian A. Andrei, Yusuke Higuchi, Christian Ottmann, Lech-Gustav Milroy and Luc Brunsveld*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 2869-2874

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05242E, Edge Article

 

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Acyclic 1,2-Dimagnesioethanes/-ethene Derived from Magnesium(I) Compounds: Multipurpose Reagents for Organometallic Synthesis

Deepak Dange, Andrew R. Gair, Dafydd D. L. Jones, Martin Juckel, Simon Aldridge and Cameron Jones*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3208-3216

DOI
: 10.1039/C9SC00200F, Edge Article

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Catalytic Radical Difluoromethoxylation of Arenes and Heteroarenes

Johnny W. Lee, Weijia Zheng, Cristian A. Morales-Rivera, Peng Liu* and Ming-Yu Ngai*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3217-3222

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05390A, Edge Article

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Revising measurement process in the variational quantum eigensolver: Is it possible to reduce the number of separately measured operators?

Artur F. Izmaylov,* Tzu-Ching Yen and Ilya G. Ryabinkin

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3746-3755

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05592K, Edge Article

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A dinuclear ruthenium(II) phototherapeutic that targets duplex and quadruplex DNA

Stuart A. Archer, Ahtasham Raza, Fabian Dröge, Craig Robertson, Alexander J. Auty, Dimitri Chekulaev, Julia A. Weinstein, Theo Keane, Anthony J. H. M. Meijer, John W. Haycock,* Sheila MacNeil* and James A. Thomas*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3502-3513

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05084H, Edge Article

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Facile synthesis of AIEgens with wide color tunability for cellular imaging and therapy

Wenhan Xu, Michelle M. S. Lee, Zhihan Zhang, Herman H. Y. Sung, Ian D. Williams, Ryan T. K. Kwok, Jacky W. Y. Lam, Dong Wang* and Ben Zhong Tang*

Chem. Sci., 2019, 10, 3494-3501

DOI
: 10.1039/C8SC05805A, Edge Article

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6th RSC Analytical Biosciences Group Early Career Researcher Meeting

Chemical Science poster prize winner Seán Doyle (left) from Maynooth University with Chemical Science Assistant Editor William King

The 6th RSC Analytical Biosciences Group Early Career Researcher Meeting was recently held at the University of Cambridge, UK from 28-29th March. Chemical Science were proud to support the meeting, and Chemical Science Assistant Editor William King attended to meet with delegates and represent the Royal Society of Chemistry.

The annual meeting is organised by the RSC Analytical Biosciences Group and aims to engage early career researchers in debate and discussions about all areas of analytical biosciences, providing the opportunity to network with other researchers in the field. Speakers gave a broad overview of the current state of the art for analytical techniques, with detailed examples of their applications in biosciences.

We were proud to present Seán Doyle from Maynooth University with the Chemical Science poster prize for his poster on ‘In vivo monitoring of cholinergic neurotransmission with a microelectrochemical choline biosensor’. Congratulations to Seán!

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7th UK Solar Fuels Network Symposium

The 7th UK Solar Fuels Network Symposium was held at the University of Cambridge, UK on 28th – 29th February 2019. The meeting was chaired by Professor Erwin Reisner, director of the Solar Fuels Network. Chemical Science were proud to sponsor the meeting, alongside Energy & Environmental Science and Sustainable Energy & Fuels, which are other Royal Society of Chemistry journals.

The meeting was an opportunity to bring together members of the Solar Fuels Network to meet up and discuss the latest advances in the field of solar-driven fuels research and provided an excellent opportunity for interaction with the rapidly expanding network of Solar Fuels researchers in the UK and beyond. The main meeting was followed by a half day post-graduate symposium at which PhD students and early career researchers had the opportunity to present their work. This meeting made up part of a larger ‘Solar Fuels Week’, taking place after the Artificial Photosynthesis Faraday Discussion and the Doppler Symposium.

Chemical Science Assistant Editor Carri Cotton was in attendance to meet with the delegates and represent the Royal Society of Chemistry. She also helped present a talk prize on behalf of Chemical Science and some poster prizes on behalf of Energy & Environmental Science and Sustainable Energy & Fuels:

  • Chemical Science talk prize winner: Katarzyna Sokol
  • Energy & Environmental Science poster prize winner: Hui Luo
  • Sustainable Energy & Fuels poster prize winner: Alexander Kibler

Chemical Science talk prize winner, Katarzyna Sokol (left) awarded by Carri Cotton

Energy & Environmental Science and Sustainable Energy & Fuels poster prize winners Hui Luo (left) and Alexander Kibler (right)

Congratulations to all of the prize winners from everyone at Chemical Science!

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19th Annual R. Bryan Miller Symposium 2019

The 19th Annual R. Bryan Miller Symposium was held at UC Davis, California on 28th February – 1st March 2019. The meeting was led by Professor Sheila David, Chair of the Miller Symposium Committee. Chemical Science was happy to support and sponsor the meeting, alongside Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, another Royal Society of Chemistry journal.

The Miller Symposium celebrates Professor Bryan Miller’s pioneering research, which laid the groundwork for the current thriving research programs in Pharmaceutical Chemistry and Chemical Biology in the Department of Chemistry at UC Davis. Top speakers from the world of chemical biology shared cutting edge research results and perspectives on the future of biologically relevant chemistry research.

  • Chemical Science poster prize winner: Jayashri Viswanathan (Olson Laboratory, UC Davis) for “Potential of Psychedelic Analogs for Treating Neuropsychiatric Disorders”
  • Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry poster prize winner: Lee Dunlap (Olson Laboratory, UC Davis) for “Structure Activity Relationship Studies of Tryptamine and Phenethylamine Based Psychoplastogens”

 

Jayashri Viswanathan Miller Symposium UC Davis

Jayashri Viswanathan

Lee Dunalp Miller Symposium UC Davis

Lee Dunlap

Congratulations to both prize winners from everyone at Chemical Science!

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