Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alfonso Pedone is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alfonso Pedone.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Elucidation of the structural role of fluorine in potentially bioactive glasses by experimental and computational investigation.

Gigliola Lusvardi; Gianluca Malavasi; Cortada M; Ledi Menabue; Maria Cristina Menziani; Alfonso Pedone; Ulderico Segre

Glasses belonging to the Na(2)O-CaO-P(2)O(5)-SiO(2) system and modified by CaF(2) substitution for CaO and Na(2)O alternatively, were synthesized and characterized experimentally and computationally. The results of molecular dynamics simulations show that fluorine is almost exclusively bonded to modifier cations (Ca and Na) with coordination number close to 4. A similar mean coordination number value is found in the crystal phases obtained by means of thermal treatment at fixed temperature. Addition of fluorine increases the polymerization of silicate tetrahedra by removing modifiers from the siliceous matrix. No appreciable amount of Si-F bonds are detected.


ChemPhysChem | 2010

Environmental Effects in Computational Spectroscopy: Accuracy and Interpretation

Alfonso Pedone; Malgorzata Biczysko; Vincenzo Barone

Spectroscopic techniques are valuable tools for understanding the structure and dynamics of complex systems, such as biomolecules or nanomaterials. Most of the current research is devoted to the development of new experimental techniques for improving the intrinsic resolution of different spectra. However, the subtle interplay of several different effects acting at different length and time scales still makes the interpretation and analysis of such spectra a very difficult task. In this respect, computational spectroscopy is becoming a needful and versatile tool for the assignment and interpretation of experimental spectra. It is in fact possible nowadays to model with relatively high accuracy the physical-chemical properties of complex molecules in different environments, and to link spectroscopic evidence directly to the structural and dynamical properties of optically or magnetically active solvated probes. In this Review, significant steps toward the simulation of entire spectra in condensed phases are presented together with some basic aspects of computational spectroscopy, which highlight how intramolecular and intermolecular degrees of freedom influence several spectroscopic parameters.


Theoretical Chemistry Accounts | 2012

Integrated computational approaches for spectroscopic studies of molecular systems in the gas phase and in solution: pyrimidine as a test case

Malgorzata Biczysko; Julien Bloino; Giuseppe Brancato; Ivo Cacelli; Chiara Cappelli; Alessandro Ferretti; Alessandro Lami; Susanna Monti; Alfonso Pedone; Giacomo Prampolini; Cristina Puzzarini; Fabrizio Santoro; Fabio Trani; Giovanni Villani

An integrated computational approach built on quantum mechanical (QM) methods, purposely tailored inter- and intra-molecular force fields and continuum solvent models combined with time-independent and time-dependent schemes to account for nuclear motion effects is applied to the spectroscopic investigation of pyrimidine in the gas phase as well as in aqueous and CCl4 solutions. Accurate post-Hartree–Fock methodologies are employed to compute molecular structure, harmonic vibrational frequencies, energies and oscillator strengths for electronic transitions in order to validate the accuracy of approaches rooted into density functional theory with emphasis also on hybrid QM/QM′ models. Within the time-independent approaches, IR spectra are computed including anharmonicities through perturbative corrections while UV–vis line-shapes are simulated accounting for the vibrational structure; in both cases, the environmental effects are described by continuum models. The effects of conformational flexibility, including solvent dynamics, are described through time-dependent models based on purposely DFT-tailored force fields applied to molecular dynamics simulations and on QM computations of spectroscopic properties. Such procedures are exploited to simulate IR and UV–vis spectra of pyrimidine in the gas phase and in solutions, leading in all cases to good agreement with experimental observations and allowing to dissect different effects underlying spectral phenomena.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012

The structure of fluoride-containing bioactive glasses: new insights from first-principles calculations and solid state NMR spectroscopy

Alfonso Pedone; Thibault Charpentier; Maria Cristina Menziani

Fluoride-containing bioactive glasses are attracting particular interest in many fields of dentistry and orthopedics because they combine the bone-bonding ability of bioactive glasses with the anticariogenic protection provided by fluoride ions. Since the biomedical applications of these materials critically depend on the release of ionic species in the surrounding physiological environment, a deep knowledge of their environments is required. In this paper, density functional theory calculations and spin effective Hamiltonians have been employed to analyse the NMR signatures of the various environments of 19F, 29Si, 31P and 23Na atoms in fluorinated bioglasses structural models previously generated by Car–Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations. Comparison with experimental spectra expressly recorded in this work shows a good agreement and allows the enlightenment of some longstanding issues about the atomic structure of fluorinated bioglasses, such as the presence of Si–F and Si–O–P bonds. In particular, it is shown that Si–F bonds cannot be resolved by using MAS NMR experiments only, and 29Si{19F} REDOR experiments, that probes directly spatial proximities among atoms, must be employed. Our results show that F is coordinated entirely to the modifier ions Na and Ca, and that no Si–F bonds are present in the real glass structure. Thus, the addition of fluorine to the 45S5 Bioglass® increases the polymerization of the silicate network by removing modifiers from the siliceous matrix and reducing its reactivity. Finally, the computed isotropic chemical shifts of the various environments of phosphorus show that, if present, Si–O–P bonds should be clearly noticeable in the 31P static NMR experimental spectrum. Instead, the latter show that P is present as isolated orthophosphate units and does not enter into the siliceous matrix by forming Si–O–P bonds as conjectured by molecular dynamics simulations.


Journal of Biomaterials Applications | 2008

Properties of Zinc Releasing Surfaces for Clinical Applications

Gigliola Lusvardi; Gianluca Malavasi; Ledi Menabue; Maria Cristina Menziani; Alfonso Pedone; Ulderico Segre; Valentina Aina; Alessandra Perardi; C. Morterra; Francesca Boccafoschi; S. Gatti; M. Bosetti; Mario Cannas

Two series of glasses of general formula (2-p) SiO2·1.1Na 2O·CaO·pP2O5·xZnO (p=0.10, 0.20; x=0.0, 0.16, 0.35, and 0.78) have been analyzed for physico-chemical surface features before and after contact with simulated body fluid, morphological characteristics, and osteoblast-like cells behavior when cultured on them. The resulted good cell adhesion and growth, along with nonsignificant changes of the focal contacts, allow the authors to indicate HZ5 and HP5Z5 glasses as the ones having optimal ratio of Zn/P to maintain acceptable cell behavior, comparable to the bioactive glass (Bioglass®) used as a control; results are also rationalized by means of three-dimensional models derived by molecular dynamic simulations, with decomposition and conversion rates optimized with respect to the parent Henchs Bioglass®.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2015

Benchmarking TD-DFT against Vibrationally Resolved Absorption Spectra at Room Temperature: 7-Aminocoumarins as Test Cases

Francesco Muniz-Miranda; Alfonso Pedone; Giulia Battistelli; Marco Montalti; Julien Bloino; Vincenzo Barone

Time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) is usually benchmarked by evaluating how the vertical excitation energies computed by using different exchange-correlation (XC) functionals compare with the maximum of the absorption spectra. However, the latter does not necessarily coincide with the vertical energies because it is affected by the vibronic band structure that has to be properly taken into account. In this work, we have evaluated the performance of several functionals belonging to different families in reproducing the vibronic structure (band shape) of four 7-aminocoumarin molecules of technological interest, whose spectra have been recorded in methylcyclohexane and acetonitrile solvents. In order to compare the computed vibronic spectra with the experimental ones in the most consistent way, the effect of temperature, often neglected, was also taken into account. We have found that no single functional provides simultaneously accurate band positions and shapes, but the combination of ωB97X vibronic couplings with PBE0 vertical energies can lead to very satisfactory results. In addition to the assessment of XC functionals, several adiabatic and vertical models proposed in the literature to compute vibrationally resolved electronic spectra have been tested and validated with respect to experiments. On these grounds, the adiabatic Hessian model has been used to perform a complete analysis of the ωB97X/PBE0 vibronic transitions contributing to the final band shapes of the investigated aminocoumarin molecules.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Study of the structural role of gallium and aluminum in 45S5 bioactive glasses by molecular dynamics simulations.

Gianluca Malavasi; Alfonso Pedone; Maria Cristina Menziani

The structural properties of phosphosilicate glasses based on the 45S5 Bioglass doped with gallium and aluminum (46.2 SiO2·24.3Na2O·26.9CaO·2.6P2O5·1.0X2O3, X = Ga or Al) are investigated by means of classical molecular dynamics simulations. Structural features of the two compositions are compared with those of the original 45S5 Bioglass in order to relate them to the different known bioactivities of these materials. Differences in the coordination environments of Ga and Al, network connectivity, and ion aggregation reveal a microscopic model of these glasses which supports the interpretation of the experimental data and provides new insight into the different biological behaviors of Ga- and Al-containing phosphosilicate glasses. Although Ga is found predominantly in a 4-fold coordination environment, small amounts of 5- and 6-fold coordinated atoms have been detected depending on the interatomic potential model employed. This suggests its possible intermediate role in phosphosilicate glasses. On the contrary, Al plays a network former role and leads to glasses with a more polymerized structure. Interestingly, the results show an increased propensity for aggregation of the Ca(2+) and PO4(3-) ions in the Al-containing phosphosilicate glasses with respect to the Ga-containing ones. This leads to insoluble calcium-phosphate-rich regions not detected in the bioactive glasses.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Quantitative Structure-Property Relationships of Potentially Bioactive Fluoro Phospho-silicate Glasses

Gigliola Lusvardi; Gianluca Malavasi; F. Tarsitano; Ledi Menabue; Maria Cristina Menziani; Alfonso Pedone

In this work, the glass transition temperature and chemical durability of bioactive phospho-silicate glasses were experimentally determined and correlated to the structural descriptor Fnet derived from classical molecular dynamics simulations. The replacement of CaF2 for Na2O in the parent glass 45S5 enhances both chemical durability and density, while the replacement of CaF2 for CaO lowers chemical durability. The proposed descriptor, Fnet, provides satisfactorily correlations with glass transition temperature and chemical durability over a wide range of compositions.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Absorption and emission spectra of fluorescent silica nanoparticles from TD-DFT/MM/PCM calculations

Alfonso Pedone; Giacomo Prampolini; Susanna Monti; Vincenzo Barone

A multi-scale computational protocol, which combines Quantum Mechanics and Molecular Mechanics (QM/MM) calculations with the polarisable continuum model (PCM), has been used to study the tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate (TRITC) fluorophore, embedded in three different environments, namely in water, on an amorphous silica surface and covalently encapsulated in a silica nanoparticle (C dot). Absorption and emission spectra have been simulated by using TD-B3LYP/PCM calculations, performed on the TRITC ground and excited state geometries, optimized at the QM/MM level. The results are in good agreement with experimental data confirming the caging effect played by the silica shell on the mobility of the TRITC molecule when covalently encapsulated in silica nanoparticles. This could result in a decrease of the nonradiative decay rate and thus an increase of the quantum yield of the molecule.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2010

An integrated computational protocol for the accurate prediction of EPR and PNMR parameters of aminoxyl radicals in solution.

Vincenzo Barone; Paola Cimino; Alfonso Pedone

Magnetic spectroscopic techniques such as electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and paramagnetic NMR (PNMR) are valuable tools for understanding the structure and dynamics of complex systems such as, for example, biomolecules or nanomaterials labeled with suitable free radicals. Unfortunately, such spectra do not give direct access to the radical structure because of the subtle interplay between several different effects not easily separable and evaluable by experimentalists alone. In this respect, computational spectroscopy is becoming an essential and versatile tool for the assignment and interpretation of experimental spectra. In this article, the new integrated computational approaches developed in the recent years in our research group are reviewed. Such approaches have been applied to two widely used spin probes showing that proper account of stereo‐electronic, environmental and dynamical effects leads to magnetic properties in remarkable agreement with experimental results. Copyright

Collaboration


Dive into the Alfonso Pedone's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Cristina Menziani

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gianluca Malavasi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vincenzo Barone

Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Francesco Muniz-Miranda

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ledi Menabue

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gigliola Lusvardi

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Davide Presti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ulderico Segre

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Cristina Menziani

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge