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Featured researches published by Chakadola Panda.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Homogeneous Photochemical Water Oxidation by Biuret-Modified Fe-TAML: Evidence of FeV(O) Intermediate

Chakadola Panda; Joyashish Debgupta; David Díaz Díaz; Kundan K. Singh; Sayam Sen Gupta; Basab B. Dhar

Water splitting, leading to hydrogen and oxygen in a process that mimics natural photosynthesis, is extremely important for devising a sustainable solar energy conversion system. Development of earth-abundant, transition metal-based catalysts that mimic the oxygen-evolving complex of photosystem II, which is involved in oxidation of water to O2 during natural photosynthesis, represents a major challenge. Further, understanding the exact mechanism, including elucidation of the role of active metal-oxo intermediates during water oxidation (WO), is critical to the development of more efficient catalysts. Herein, we report Fe(III) complexes of biuret-modified tetra-amidomacrocyclic ligands (Fe-TAML; 1a and 1b) that catalyze fast, homogeneous, photochemical WO to give O2, with moderate efficiency (maximum TON = 220, TOF = 0.76 s(-1)). Previous studies on photochemical WO using iron complexes resulted in demetalation of the iron complexes with concomitant formation of iron oxide nanoparticles (NPs) that were responsible for WO. Herein, we show for the first time that a high valent Fe(V)(O) intermediate species is photochemically generated as the active intermediate for the oxidation of water to O2. To the best of our knowledge, this represents the first example of a molecular iron complex catalyzing photochemical WO through a Fe(V)(O) intermediate.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Formation of a Room Temperature Stable Fe V (O) Complex: Reactivity Toward Unactivated C−H Bonds

Munmun Ghosh; Kundan K. Singh; Chakadola Panda; Andrew C. Weitz; Michael P. Hendrich; Terrence J. Collins; Basab B. Dhar; Sayam Sen Gupta

An Fe(V)(O) complex has been synthesized from equimolar solutions of (Et4N)2[Fe(III)(Cl)(biuret-amide)] and mCPBA in CH3CN at room temperature. The Fe(V)(O) complex has been characterized by UV-vis, EPR, Mössbauer, and HRMS and shown to be capable of oxidizing a series of alkanes having C-H bond dissociation energies ranging from 99.3 kcal mol(-1) (cyclohexane) to 84.5 kcal mol(-1) (cumene). Linearity in the Bell-Evans-Polayni graph and the finding of a large kinetic isotope effect suggest that hydrogen abstraction is engaged the rate-determining step.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Fe-TAML encapsulated inside mesoporous silica nanoparticles as peroxidase mimic: femtomolar protein detection.

Sushma Kumari; Basab B. Dhar; Chakadola Panda; Abhishek Meena; Sayam Sen Gupta

Peroxidase, such as horseradish peroxidase (HRP), conjugated to antibodies are routinely used for the detection of proteins via an ELISA type assay in which a critical step is the catalytic signal amplification by the enzyme to generate a detectable signal. Synthesis of functional mimics of peroxidase enzyme that display catalytic activity which far exceeds the native enzyme is extremely important for the precise and accurate determination of very low quantities of proteins (fM and lower) that is necessary for early clinical diagnosis. Despite great advancements, analyzing proteins of very low abundance colorimetrically, a method that is most sought after since it requires no equipment for the analysis, still faces great challenges. Most reported HRP mimics that show catalytic activity greater than native enzyme (∼10-fold) are based on metal/metal-oxide nanoparticles such as Fe3O4. In this paper, we describe a second generation hybrid material developed by us in which approximately 25,000 alkyne tagged biuret modified Fe-tetraamido macrocyclic ligand (Fe-TAML), a very powerful small molecule synthetic HRP mimic, was covalently attached inside a 40 nm mesoporous silica nanoparticle (MSN). Biuret-modified Fe-TAMLs represent one of the best small molecule functional mimics of the enzyme HRP with reaction rates in water close to the native enzyme and operational stability (pH, ionic strength) far exceeding the natural enzyme. The catalytic activity of this hybrid material is around 1000-fold higher than that of natural HRP and 100-fold higher than that of most metal/metal oxide nanoparticle based HRP mimics reported to date. We also show that using antibody conjugates of this hybrid material it is possible to detect and, most importantly, quantify femtomolar quantities of proteins colorimetrically in an ELISA type assay. This represents at least 10-fold higher sensitivity than other colorimetric protein assays that have been reported using metal/metal oxide nanoparticles as HRP mimic. Using a human IgG expressing cell line, we were able to demonstrate that the protein of interest human IgG could be detected from a mixture of interfering proteins in our assay.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Tuning the Reactivity of FeV(O) toward C–H Bonds at Room Temperature: Effect of Water

Kundan K. Singh; Mrityunjay k. Tiwari; Munmun Ghosh; Chakadola Panda; Andrew C. Weitz; Michael P. Hendrich; Basab B. Dhar; Kumar Vanka; Sayam Sen Gupta

The presence of an FeV(O) species has been postulated as the active intermediate for the oxidation of both C–H and C=C bonds in the Rieske dioxygenase family of enzymes. Understanding the reactivity of these high valent iron–oxo intermediates, especially in an aqueous medium, would provide a better understanding of these enzymatic reaction mechanisms. The formation of an FeV(O) complex at room temperature in an aqueous CH3CN mixture that contains up to 90% water using NaOCl as the oxidant is reported here. The stability of FeV(O) decreases with increasing water concentration. We show that the reactivity of FeV(O) toward the oxidation of C–H bonds, such as those in toluene, can be tuned by varying the amount of water in the H2O/CH3CN mixture. Rate acceleration of up to 60 times is observed for the oxidation of toluene upon increasing the water concentration. The role of water in accelerating the rate of the reaction has been studied using kinetic measurements, isotope labeling experiments, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. A kinetic isotope effect of ∼13 was observed for the oxidation of toluene and d8-toluene showing that C–H abstraction was involved in the rate-determining step. Activation parameters determined for toluene oxidation in H2O/CH3CN mixtures on the basis of Eyring plots for the rate constants show a gain in enthalpy with a concomitant loss in entropy. This points to the formation of a more-ordered transition state involving water molecules. To further understand the role of water, we performed a careful DFT study, concentrating mostly on the rate-determining hydrogen abstraction step. The DFT-optimized structure of the starting FeV(O) and the transition state indicates that the rate enhancement is due to the transition state’s favored stabilization over the reactant due to enhanced hydrogen bonding with water.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Selective C–H Bond Oxidation Catalyzed by the Fe-bTAML Complex: Mechanistic Implications

Munmun Ghosh; Santanu Pattanayak; Basab B. Dhar; Kundan K. Singh; Chakadola Panda; Sayam Sen Gupta

Nonheme iron complexes bearing tetradentate N-atom-donor ligands with cis labile sites show great promise for chemoselective aliphatic C-H hydroxylation. However, several challenges still limit their widespread application. We report a mechanism-guided development of a peroxidase mimicking iron complex based on the bTAML macrocyclic ligand framework (Fe-bTAML: biuret-modified tetraamido macrocyclic ligand) as a catalyst to perform selective oxidation of unactivated 3° bonds with unprecedented regioselectivity (3°:2° of 110:1 for adamantane oxidation), high stereoretention (99%), and turnover numbers (TONs) up to 300 using mCPBA as the oxidant. Ligand decomposition pathways involving acid-induced demetalation were identified, and this led to the development of more robust and efficient Fe-bTAML complexes that catalyzed chemoselective C-H oxidation. Mechanistic studies, which include correlation of the product formed with the FeV(O) reactive intermediates generated during the reaction, indicate that the major pathway involves the cleavage of C-H bonds by FeV(O). When these oxidations were performed in the presence of air, the yield of the oxidized product doubled, but the stereoretention remained unchanged. On the basis of 18O labeling and other mechanistic studies, we propose a mechanism that involves the dual activation of mCPBA and O2 by Fe-bTAML, leading to formation of the FeV(O) intermediate. This high-valent iron oxo remains the active intermediate for most of the reaction, resulting in high regio- and stereoselectivity during product formation.


Chemical Communications | 2012

One pot glucose detection by [FeIII(biuret-amide)] immobilized on mesoporous silica nanoparticles: an efficient HRP mimic

Bharmana Malvi; Chakadola Panda; Basab B. Dhar; Sayam Sen Gupta


Chemical Communications | 2011

Fe(III) complex of biuret-amide based macrocyclic ligand as peroxidase enzyme mimic

Chakadola Panda; Munmun Ghosh; Tamas Panda; Rahul Banerjee; Sayam Sen Gupta


Chemical Communications | 2013

Catalytic signal amplification using [FeIII(biuret-amide)]-mesoporous silica nanoparticles: visual cyanide detection

Chakadola Panda; Basab B. Dhar; Bharmana Malvi; Yudhajit Bhattacharjee; Sayam Sen Gupta


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Reactivity and Operational Stability ofN-Tailed TAMLs through Kinetic Studies of the Catalyzed Oxidation of Orange II by H2O2: Synthesis and X-ray Structure of anN-Phenyl TAML

Genoa R. Warner; Matthew R. Mills; Clarissa Enslin; Shantanu Pattanayak; Chakadola Panda; Tamas Panda; Sayam Sen Gupta; Alexander D. Ryabov; Terrence J. Collins


Chemical Communications | 2012

Synthesis of functional hybrid silica scaffolds with controllable hierarchical porosity by dynamic templating

Anal Kr. Ganai; Sushma Kumari; Kamendra P. Sharma; Chakadola Panda; Guruswamy Kumaraswamy; Sayam Sen Gupta

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Sayam Sen Gupta

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Basab B. Dhar

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Munmun Ghosh

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Kundan K. Singh

Indian Institute of Chemical Technology

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Sayam Sen Gupta

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Sushma Kumari

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Tamas Panda

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Andrew C. Weitz

Carnegie Mellon University

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