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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Hamza is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Hamza.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Rationalizing the Reactivity of Frustrated Lewis Pairs: Thermodynamics of H2 Activation and the Role of Acid−Base Properties

Tibor András Rokob; Andrea Hamza; Imre Pápai

The acid-base strengths of recently reported frustrated Lewis pairs and their relation with the thermodynamic feasibility of heterolytic hydrogen splitting reactions are analyzed in terms of quantum chemical calculations. Reaction free energies of hydrogenation processes are computed, and an energy partitioning scheme is introduced, which involves quantitative measures of the acidity and basicity of the reacting Lewis centers. Additional terms are also included that account for possible dative bond formation between the active sites and for stabilizing electrostatic interactions occurring in the product species. For intermolecular combinations of donor-acceptor components, the calculated reaction free energies are found to correlate well with the cumulative acid-base strengths. Product stabilization for these systems represents a notable contribution to the overall energetics; however, it generally shows only a slight variation for the investigated series. The reactivity of linked donor-acceptor pairs is primarily governed by acid-base properties as well, but the magnitude of stabilizing effects arising from acid-base cooperativity of active sites is also of significant importance in determining the thermodynamic feasibility of the reactions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

On the Mechanism of B(C6F5)3-Catalyzed Direct Hydrogenation of Imines: Inherent and Thermally Induced Frustration

Tibor András Rokob; Andrea Hamza; András Stirling; Imre Pápai

The reaction mechanism for the transition metal free direct hydrogenation of bulky imines catalyzed by the Lewis acid B(C6F5)3 is investigated in detail by quantum chemical calculations. A recently introduced mechanistic model of heterolytic hydrogen splitting that is based on noncovalent association of bulky Lewis acid-base pairs is shown to account for the reactivity of imine-borane as well as amine-borane systems. Possible catalytic cycles are examined, and the results provide solid support for the imine reduction pathway proposed from experimental observations. In addition, the feasibility of an autocatalytic route initiated by amine-borane hydrogen cleavage is demonstrated. Conceptual issues regarding the notion of frustration are also discussed. The observed reactivity is interpreted in terms of thermally induced frustration, which refers to thermal activation of strained dative adducts of bulky Lewis donor-acceptor pairs to populate their reactive frustrated complex forms.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Reactivity Models of Hydrogen Activation by Frustrated Lewis Pairs: Synergistic Electron Transfers or Polarization by Electric Field?

Tibor András Rokob; Imre Bakó; András Stirling; Andrea Hamza; Imre Pápai

Two alternative qualitative reactivity models have recently been proposed to interpret the facile heterolytic cleavage of H2 by frustrated Lewis pairs (FLPs). Both models assume that the reaction takes place via reactive intermediates with preorganized acid/base partners; however, they differ in the mode of action of the active centers. In the electron transfer (ET) model, the hydrogen activation is associated with synergistic electron donation processes with the simultaneous involvement of active centers and the bridging hydrogen, showing similarity to transition-metal-based and other H2-activating systems. In contrast, the electric field (EF) model suggests that the heterolytic bond cleavage occurs as a result of polarization by the strong EF present in the cavity of the reactive intermediates. To assess the applicability of the two conceptually different mechanistic views, we examined the structural and electronic rearrangements as well as the EFs along the H2 splitting pathways for a representative set of reactions. The analysis reveals that electron donations developing already in the initial phase are general characteristics of all studied reactions, and the related ET model provides qualitative interpretation for the main features of the reaction pathways. On the other hand, several arguments have emerged that cast doubt on the relevance of EF effects as a conceptual basis in FLP-mediated hydrogen activation.


Chemical Communications | 2008

Concerted attack of frustrated Lewis acid–base pairs on olefinic double bonds: a theoretical study

András Stirling; Andrea Hamza; Tibor András Rokob; Imre Pápai

A computational approach reveals cooperative action of the preorganized acidic and basic centers of the frustrated P(t-Bu)(3)/B(C(6)F(5))(3) Lewis pair on olefinic bonds as the key to the observed regioselective addition reaction.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

On the Mechanism of Bifunctional Squaramide-Catalyzed Organocatalytic Michael Addition: A Protonated Catalyst as an Oxyanion Hole

Bianka Kótai; György Kardos; Andrea Hamza; Viktor Farkas; Imre Pápai; Tibor Soós

A joint experimental-theoretical study of a bifunctional squaramide-amine-catalyzed Michael addition reaction between 1,3-dioxo nucleophiles and nitrostyrene has been undertaken to gain insight into the nature of bifunctional organocatalytic activation. For this highly stereoselective reaction, three previously proposed mechanistic scenarios for the critical CC bond-formation step were examined. Accordingly, the formation of the major stereoisomeric products is most plausible by one of the bifunctional pathways that involve electrophile activation by the protonated amine group of the catalyst. However, some of the minor product isomers are also accessible through alternative reaction routes. Structural analysis of transition states points to the structural invariance of certain fragments of the transition state, such as the protonated catalyst and the anionic fragment of approaching reactants. Our topological analysis provides deeper insight and a more general understanding of bifunctional noncovalent organocatalysis.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Mukaiyama–Michael Reactions with trans‐2,5‐Diarylpyrrolidine Catalysts: Enantioselectivity Arises from Attractive Noncovalent Interactions, Not from Steric Hindrance

Eeva K. Kemppainen; Gokarneswar Sahoo; Antti Piisola; Andrea Hamza; Bianka Kótai; Imre Pápai; Petri M. Pihko

The scope of the enantioselective Mukaiyama-Michael reactions catalyzed by trans-2,5-diphenylpyrrolidine has been expanded to include both α- and β-substituted enals. However, the rationalization of the observed enantioselectivity is far from obvious since the catalyst is not very sterically hindered. DFT calculations were carried out to rationalize the observed stereoselectivities. Transition states of the C-C bond formation between iminium intermediates and silyloxyfurans were located and their relative energies were used to estimate the stereoselectivity data. We find excellent agreement between the predicted and observed stereoselectivities. The analysis of intermolecular forces reveals that the enantioselectivity is mostly due to stabilizing noncovalent interactions between the reacting partners, not due to steric hindrance. The role of attractive noncovalent interactions in enantioselective catalysis may be underappreciated.


CrystEngComm | 2014

A stimuli-responsive double-stranded digold(I) helicate

Csaba Jobbágy; Miklos Z. Molnar; Péter Baranyai; Andrea Hamza; Gábor Pálinkás; Andrea Deák

We report herein a stimuli-responsive dinuclear double stranded [Au2L2]2+ helicate assembled from gold(I) atoms and phenyl-substituted diphosphine ligands derived from a xanthene-type backbone (L). The conformational flexibility of the dinuclear [Au2L2]2+ helicate allows a diversity of molecular conformations and packing arrangements that lead to different solid-state emission colours. Blue (IB), bluish green (IIG) and yellow (IIIY) emitting crystalline and red emitting (IVR) amorphous forms of this double stranded [Au2L2]2+ helicate have been obtained by slight modification of the crystallization conditions. Different molecular conformations and packing arrangements of dinuclear double stranded [Au2L2]2+ helicates that result in different non-covalent interactions played the most significant role in tailoring the solid-state luminescence properties. On the basis of the single crystal structural data and photophysical studies, we found that an increasing number of intra- and mainly intermolecular noncovalent interactions locked and rigidified the twisted conformation of the double stranded [Au2L2]2+ helicate, and enhanced π-stacking between its aromatic units induced the red-shift in solid-state luminescence emission. The solid-state luminescence colour of this double stranded [Au2L2]2+ helicate can be switched reversibly from blue to red by external (mechanical and chemical) stimuli.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Copper(II)-binding ability of stereoisomeric cis- and trans -2-aminocyclohexanecarboxylic acid-l-phenylalanine dipeptides. A combined CW/pulsed EPR and DFT study

Nóra Veronika Nagy; Sabine Van Doorslaer; Terézia Szabó-Plánka; Senne Van Rompaey; Andrea Hamza; Ferenc Fülöp; Gábor K. Tóth; Antal Rockenbauer

With the aim of an improved understanding of the metal-complexation properties of alicyclic β-amino acid stereoisomers, and their peptides, the complex equilibria and modes of coordination with copper(II) of L-phenylalanine (F) derivatives of cis/trans-2-aminocyclohexanecarboxylic acid (c/tACHC), i.e. the dipeptides F-c/tACHC and c/tACHC-F, were investigated by a combination of CW and pulsed EPR methods. For the interpretation of the experimental data, DFT quantum-chemical calculations were carried out. Simulation of a pH-dependent series of room-temperature CW-EPR spectra revealed the presence of EPR-active complexes ([Cu(aqua)](2+), [CuL](+), [CuLH(-1)], [CuLH(-2)](-), and [CuL(2)H(-1)](-)), and an EPR-inactive species ([Cu(2)L(2)H(-3)](-)) in aqueous solutions for all studied cases. [CuLH](2+) was included in the equilibrium model for the c/tACHC-F-copper(II) systems, and [CuL(2)], together with two coordination isomers of [CuL(2)H(-1)](-), were also identified in the F-tACHC-copper(II) system. Comparison of the complexation properties of the diastereomeric ligand pair F-(1S,2R)-ACHC and F-(1R,2S)-ACHC did not reveal significant differences. Considerably lower formation constants were obtained for the trans than for the cis isomers for both the F-c/tACHC and the c/tACHC-F pairs in the case of [CuLH(-1)] involving tridentate coordination by the amino, the deprotonated peptide, and the carboxylate groups. A detailed structural analysis by pulsed EPR methods and DFT calculations indicated that there was no significant destabilization for the complexes of the trans isomers. The lower stability of their complexes was explained by the limitation that only the conformer with donor groups in equatorial-equatorial ring positions can bind to copper(II), whereas both equatorial-axial conformers of the cis isomers are capable of binding. From a consideration of the proton couplings obtained with X-band (1)H HYSCORE, (2)H exchange experiments, and DFT, the thermodynamically most stable cyclohexane ring conformer was assigned for all four [CuLH(-1)] complexes. For the F-cACHC case, the conformer did not match the most stable conformer of the free ligand.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Stereoelectronic Requirements for Optimal Hydrogen‐Bond‐Catalyzed Enolization

Imre Pápai; Andrea Hamza; Petri M. Pihko; Rik K. Wierenga

Protein crystallographic analysis of the active sites of enolizing enzymes and structural analysis of hydrogen-bonded carbonyl compounds in small molecule crystal structures, complemented by quantum chemical calculations on related model enolization reactions, suggest a new stereoelectronic model that accounts for the observed out-of-plane orientation of hydrogen-bond donors (HBDs) in the oxyanion holes of enolizing enzymes. The computational results reveal that the lone-pair directionality of HBDs characteristic for hydrogen-bonded carbonyls is reduced upon enolization, and the enolate displays almost no directional preference for hydrogen bonding. Positioning the HBDs perpendicular to the carbonyl plane induces strain in the catalyst-substrate complex, which is released upon enolization, resulting in more favorable kinetics and thermodynamics than the in-plane arrangement of HBDs.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Folding Patterns in a Family of Oligoamide Foldamers

Minna Kortelainen; Aku Suhonen; Andrea Hamza; Imre Pápai; Elisa Nauha; Sanna Yliniemelä-Sipari; Maija Nissinen; Petri M. Pihko

A series of small, unsymmetrical pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylamide oligoamide foldamers with varying lengths and substituents at the end groups were synthetized to study their conformational properties and folding patterns. The @-type folding pattern resembled the oxyanion-hole motifs of enzymes, but several alternative folding patterns could also be characterized. Computational studies revealed several alternative conformers of nearly equal stability. These folding patterns differed from each other in their intramolecular hydrogen-bonding patterns and aryl-aryl interactions. In the solid state, the foldamers adopted either the globular @-type fold or the more extended S-type conformers, which were very similar to those foldamers obtained computationally. In some cases, the same foldamer molecule could even crystallize into two different folding patterns, thus confirming that the different folding patterns are very close in energy in spite of their completely different shapes. Finally, the best match for the observed NOE interactions in the liquid state was a conformation that matched the computationally characterized helix-type fold.

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Imre Pápai

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tibor András Rokob

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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András Stirling

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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I. Mayer

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tibor Soós

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Petri M. Pihko

University of Jyväskylä

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Andrea Deák

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Bianka Kótai

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Csaba Jobbágy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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