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Dive into the research topics where Aaron S. Micallef is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron S. Micallef.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Halogen bonding between an isoindoline nitroxide and 1,4-diiodotetrafluorobenzene: new tools and tectons for self-assembling organic spin systems.

Graeme R. Hanson; Paul R. Jensen; John C. McMurtrie; Llew Rintoul; Aaron S. Micallef

Radical assembly: Halogen bonding has been observed for the first time between an isoindoline nitroxide and an iodoperfluorocarbon (see figure), which cocrystallize to form a discrete 2:1 supramolecular compound in which N--O(.)I halogen bonding is the dominant intermolecular interaction. This illustrates the potential use of halogen bonding and isoindoline nitroxide tectons for the assembly of organic spin systems.The isoindoline nitroxide 1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl (TMIO) and 1,4-diiodotetrafluorobenzene readily form a discrete 2:1 complex that shows evidence of relatively strong N--O(.)I halogen bonding. This interaction was characterized in the solid state by single-crystal X-ray analysis, thermal analysis, and vibrational spectroscopy (IR and Raman), backed by density functional theory calculations. EPR spectroscopy performed on a solution of TMIO in pentafluoroiodobenzene, a halogen-bonding donor, indicates that halogen bonding induces an increase in electron density at the nitroxide nitrogen nucleus and an increase in the nitroxide rotational correlation time. Our findings demonstrate the potential of utilizing halogen-bonding interactions to promote the self-assembly of new isoindoline nitroxide tectons for the preparation of organic spin systems.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2008

Electron spin-lattice relaxation of nitroxyl radicals in temperature ranges that span glassy solutions to low-viscosity liquids.

Hideo Sato; Steven E. Bottle; James P. Blinco; Aaron S. Micallef; Gareth R. Eaton; Sandra S. Eaton

Electron spin-lattice relaxation rates, 1/T1, at X-band of nitroxyl radicals (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl, 4-oxo-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl, 3-carbamoyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidin-1-oxyl and 3-carbamoyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolin-1-oxyl) in glass-forming solvents (decalin, glycerol, 3-methylpentane, o-terphenyl, 1-propanol, sorbitol, sucrose octaacetate, and 1:1 water:glycerol) at temperatures between 100 and 300K were measured by long-pulse saturation recovery to investigate the relaxation processes in slow-to-fast tumbling regimes. A subset of samples was also studied at lower temperatures or at Q-band. Tumbling correlation times were calculated from continuous wave lineshapes. Temperature dependence and isotope substitution (2H and 15N) were used to distinguish the contributions of various processes. Below about 100K relaxation is dominated by the Raman process. At higher temperatures, but below the glass transition temperature, a local mode process makes significant contributions. Above the glass transition temperature, increased rates of molecular tumbling modulate nuclear hyperfine and g anisotropy. The contribution from spin rotation is very small. Relaxation rates at X-band and Q-band are similar. The dependence of 1/T1 on tumbling correlation times fits better with the Cole-Davidson spectral density function than with the Bloembergen-Purcell-Pound model.


Molecular Physics | 2007

Impact of molecular size on electron spin relaxation rates of nitroxyl radicals in glassy solvents between 100 and 300 K

Hiedo Sato; Velavan Kathirvelu; Alistair J. Fielding; James P. Blinco; Aaron S. Micallef; Steven E. Bottle; Sandra S. Eaton; Gareth R. Eaton

Electron spin lattice relaxation rates were measured for 12 nitroxyls with molecular weights between 144 and 438, and for galvinoxyl, 1,3-bisdiphenylene-2-phenylallyl (BDPA), and 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) in glassy sucrose octaacetate. Relaxation rates for polar nitroxyls also were measured in glassy sorbitol. Dependence on T where V eff is effective molecular volume and γ is a material-specific parameter, was used to compare processes. Values of V eff were determined based on molecular libration in glassy sucrose octaacetate (γ = 3.5), tumbling in viscous decalin at 233 K (γ = 4.7), or tumbling in heavy mineral oil (γ = 6.0). For nitroxyl relaxation there is a master curve: log(1/T 1) vs log( T) (γ = 0.89). The similarity of the values of γ for the Raman process and for the additional process that contributes at higher temperatures, and the absence of frequency dependence between X- and Q-band, support assignment of this additional process as a local mode. For these radicals the contributions from the local mode and the Raman process are correlated and follow trends in spin–orbit coupling. The temperature dependence of spin echo dephasing in sucrose octaacetate is dominated by rotation of methyl groups and by a motional process analogous to the Raman process.


Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2010

Ultrafast and reversible multiblock formation by the SET-nitroxide radical coupling reaction

Jakov Kulis; Craig A. Bell; Aaron S. Micallef; Michael J. Monteiro

The single electron transfer-nitroxide radical coupling (SET-NRC) reaction has been used to produce multiblock polymers with high molecular weights in under 3 min at 50°C by coupling a difunctional telechelic polystyrene (Br-PSTY-Br) with a dinitroxide. The well known combination of dimethyl sulfoxide as solvent and Me6TREN as ligand facilitated the in situ disproportionation of CuIBr to the highly active nascent Cu0 species. This SET reaction allowed polymeric radicals to be rapidly formed from their corresponding halide end-groups. Trapping of these carbon-centred radicals at close to diffusion controlled rates by dinitroxides resulted in high-molecular-weight multiblock polymers. Our results showed that the disproportionation of CuI was critical in obtaining these ultrafast reactions, and confirmed that activation was primarily through Cu0. We took advantage of the reversibility of the NRC reaction at elevated temperatures to decouple the multiblock back to the original PSTY building block through capping the chain-ends with mono-functional nitroxides. These alkoxyamine end-groups were further exchanged with an alkyne mono-functional nitroxide (TEMPO–≡) and ‘clicked’ by a CuI-catalyzed azide/alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction with N3–PSTY–N3 to reform the multiblocks. This final ‘click’ reaction, even after the consecutive decoupling and nitroxide-exchange reactions, still produced high-molecular-weight multiblocks efficiently. These SET-NRC reactions would have ideal applications in re-usable plastics and possibly as self-healing materials.


Applied Magnetic Resonance | 2002

Development of Isoindoline Nitroxides for EPR Oximetry in Viable Systems

J. Shen; Steven E. Bottle; Nadeem Khan; Oleg Y. Grinberg; Damien A. Reid; Aaron S. Micallef; Harold M. Swartz

Nitroxides are widely used as biophysical probes to study molecular motion, intracellular oxygen, pH, transmembrane potential, and cellular redox metabolism, etc. They may be rapidly metabolized to hydroxylamines by cells, which limits their use in viable systems. In this study, we have characterized relevant properties in cells of several isoindoline nitroxides that have been prepared to have different physicochemical properties: 1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl (TMIO) and its analogs 5-carboxy-1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl (CTMIO), 5-(N,N,N-trimethylammonio)-1,1,3,3-tetramethyl isoindolin-2-yloxyl iodide (QATMIO) and 2-hydroxy-1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindoline hydrochloride (TMIOH.HCI). The oxygen sensitivity and metabolic kinetics of these were compared in CHO cells under different oxygen tensions with 1-oxyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-4-piperidione (Tempone) and 3-carboxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-pyrrolidine-1-oxyl (PCA). Cytotoxicity was evaluated by the measurement of oxygen consumption rates, trypan blue exclusion, and clone formation. TMIO and its analogues have a higher relative oxygen sensitivity than Tempone and PCA with the oxygen sensitivity in electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrometry in the order of: TMIO=TMIOH=CTMIO>QATMIO=Tempone<PCA. The rates of metabolism of these nitroxides are moderate and depend on oxygen concentration, ring type, ring substituent, and membrane permeation. These nitroxides have low cytotoxicity. The results indicate that TMIO and its analogues are potentially useful for EPR studies of viable systems, especially for oximetry.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2011

The evaluation of new and isotopically labeled isoindoline nitroxides and an azaphenalene nitroxide for EPR oximetry.

Nadeem Khan; James P. Blinco; Steven E. Bottle; Kazuyuki Hosokawa; Harold M. Swartz; Aaron S. Micallef

Isoindoline nitroxides are potentially useful probes for viable biological systems, exhibiting low cytotoxicity, moderate rates of biological reduction and favorable Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) characteristics. We have evaluated the anionic (5-carboxy-1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl; CTMIO), cationic (5-(N,N,N-trimethylammonio)-1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl iodide, QATMIO) and neutral (1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl; TMIO) nitroxides and their isotopically labeled analogs ((2)H(12)- and/or (2)H(12)-(15)N-labeled) as potential EPR oximetry probes. An active ester analogue of CTMIO, designed to localize intracellularly, and the azaphenalene nitroxide 1,1,3,3-tetramethyl-2,3-dihydro-2-azaphenalen-2-yloxyl (TMAO) were also studied. While the EPR spectra of the unlabeled nitroxides exhibit high sensitivity to O(2) concentration, deuteration resulted in a loss of superhyperfine features and a subsequent reduction in O(2) sensitivity. Labeling the nitroxides with (15)N increased the signal intensity and this may be useful in decreasing the detection limits for in vivo measurements. The active ester nitroxide showed approximately 6% intracellular localization and low cytotoxicity. The EPR spectra of TMAO nitroxide indicated an increased rigidity in the nitroxide ring, due to dibenzo-annulation.


Polymer Chemistry | 2010

Highly efficient, stoichiometric radical exchange reactions using isoindoline profluorescent nitroxides

James P. Blinco; Kathryn E. Fairfull-Smith; Aaron S. Micallef; Steven E. Bottle

Exchange reactions between the isoindoline profluorescent nitroxide 1,1,3,3-tetramethyldibenzo[e,g]isoindolin-2-yloxyl (TMDBIO) and a TEMPO capped polystyrene were carried out. High conversions to the desired products were achieved using only stoichiometric ratios of nitroxide relative to polymer. The scope of this study was expanded by exploiting a di-nitroxide 9,10-bis(5-[1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxy])anthracene (BTMIOA) as a connector between two polymer chains forming PS–nitroxide–PS systems.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2003

Synthesis and EPR Spin Trapping Properties of a New Isoindole-Based Nitrone: 1,1,3-Trimethylisoindole N-Oxide (TMINO)

Steven E. Bottle; Aaron S. Micallef

Here we describe the synthesis and characterisation of a new isoindole-based nitrone spin trap, 1,1,3-trimethylisoindole N-oxide (TMINO). This nitrone and its radical adducts (isoindoline nitroxides) exhibit enhanced stability with respect to other commonly used spin traps and their adducts. We also report EPR trapping studies of this new nitrone with some carbon- and oxygen-centred radicals including alkyl, aryl, hydroxyl and benzoyloxyl systems. The narrow EPR line-widths and stability of the resulting nitroxide spin adducts allowed the detection of the expected radicals as well as secondary and minor radical components in the reaction mixtures.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 1999

ESR measurements of the partitioning of some new spin probes in n-octanol–water

Steven E. Bottle; Duncan G. Gillies; Aaron S. Micallef; Damien A. Reid; Leslie H. Sutcliffe

The stable free radical 1,1,3,3‐tetramethylisoindolin‐2‐yloxyl (TMIO) has proved to be very suitable for use as a spin probe for a number of applications. Because it is soluble mainly in non‐polar liquids, there is a need for new derivatives that can be used in a variety of environments. This has been done by introducing substituents in the 5‐position of the aromatic ring, namely carboxyl (CTMIO), trimethylamino (TMTMIOI) and sodium sulphonate (NaTMIOS). An accurate ESR method was developed for the measurement of partition coefficients in n‐octanol–water. For comparison purposes the method was also applied to some Tempo derivatives. The effect of temperature on the rotational correlation times and the nitrogen‐14 hyperfine coupling constant of some of the spin probes was investigated. There is evidence for dimerization of CTMIO to form a biradical. Copyright


CrystEngComm | 2011

Vapour phase assembly of a halogen bonded complex of an isoindoline nitroxide and 1,2-diiodotetrafluorobenzene

Karl J. P. Davy; John C. McMurtrie; Llew Rintoul; Paul V. Bernhardt; Aaron S. Micallef

Vapour phase assembly has been used for the first time to prepare co-crystals in which the primary intermolecular interaction is halogen bonding. Co-crystals of the nitroxide 1,1,3,3-tetramethylisoindolin-2-yloxyl (TMIO) and 1,2-diiodotetrafluorobenzene (1,2-DITFB) are readily formed under standard sublimation conditions. Single crystal X-ray diffraction confirmed the structure of a 2 : 2 cyclic tetramer, (TMIO)2·(1,2-DITFB)2, which exhibits a new halogen bonding motif, with each nitroxide oxygen atom accepting two halogen bonds. Powder X-ray diffraction confirmed the homogeneity of the bulk sample. The crystalline complex was further characterized in the solid state using thermal analysis and vibrational spectroscopy (infrared and Raman). Density functional theory calculations were also used to evaluate the enthalpy of formation, electrostatic potential and unpaired electron density of the complex. These findings illustrate the preparation of co-crystals where solution state methodology is problematic and the potential of this approach for the formation of novel organic spin systems.

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Steven E. Bottle

Queensland University of Technology

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James P. Blinco

Queensland University of Technology

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John C. McMurtrie

Queensland University of Technology

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Llew Rintoul

Queensland University of Technology

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Damien A. Reid

Queensland University of Technology

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Dennis P. Arnold

Queensland University of Technology

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Jakov Kulis

University of Queensland

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Craig A. Bell

University of Queensland

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