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Dive into the research topics where Emre H. Discekici is active.

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Featured researches published by Emre H. Discekici.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Diffusion-controlled detection of trinitrotoluene: Interior nanoporous structure and low highest occupied molecular orbital level of building blocks enhance selectivity and sensitivity

Yanke Che; Dustin E. Gross; Helin Huang; Dongjiang Yang; Xiaomei Yang; Emre H. Discekici; Zheng Xue; Huijun Zhao; Jeffrey S. Moore; Ling Zang

Development of simple, cost-effective, and sensitive fluorescence-based sensors for explosives implies broad applications in homeland security, military operations, and environmental and industrial safety control. However, the reported fluorescence sensory materials (e.g., polymers) usually respond to a class of analytes (e.g., nitroaromatics), rather than a single specific target. Hence, the selective detection of trace amounts of trinitrotoluene (TNT) still remains a big challenge for fluorescence-based sensors. Here we report the selective detection of TNT vapor using the nanoporous fibers fabricated by self-assembly of carbazole-based macrocyclic molecules. The nanoporosity allows for time-dependent diffusion of TNT molecules inside the material, resulting in further fluorescence quenching of the material after removal from the TNT vapor source. Under the same testing conditions, other common nitroaromatic explosives and oxidizing reagents did not demonstrate this postexposure fluorescence quenching; rather, a recovery of fluorescence was observed. The postexposure fluorescence quenching as well as the sensitivity is further enhanced by lowering the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) level of the nanofiber building blocks. This in turn reduces the affinity for oxygen, thus allocating more interaction sites for TNT. Our results present a simple and novel way to achieve detection selectivity for TNT by creating nanoporosity and tuning molecular electronic structure, which when combined may be applied to other fluorescence sensor materials for selective detection of vapor analytes.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016

Chemoselective Radical Dehalogenation and C–C Bond Formation on Aryl Halide Substrates Using Organic Photoredox Catalysts

Saemi O. Poelma; G. Leslie Burnett; Emre H. Discekici; Kaila M. Mattson; Nicolas J. Treat; Yingdong Luo; Zachary M. Hudson; Shelby L. Shankel; Paul G. Clark; John W. Kramer; Craig J. Hawker; Javier Read de Alaniz

Despite the number of methods available for dehalogenation and carbon-carbon bond formation using aryl halides, strategies that provide chemoselectivity for systems bearing multiple carbon-halogen bonds are still needed. Herein, we report the ability to tune the reduction potential of metal-free phenothiazine-based photoredox catalysts and demonstrate the application of these catalysts for chemoselective carbon-halogen bond activation to achieve C-C cross-coupling reactions as well as reductive dehalogenations. This procedure works both for conjugated polyhalides as well as unconjugated substrates. We further illustrate the usefulness of this protocol by intramolecular cyclization of a pyrrole substrate, an advanced building block for a family of natural products known to exhibit biological activity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Light-Mediated Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization of Semi-Fluorinated (Meth)acrylates: Facile Access to Functional Materials

Emre H. Discekici; Athina Anastasaki; Revital Kaminker; Johannes Willenbacher; Nghia P. Truong; Carolin Fleischmann; Bernd Oschmann; David J. Lunn; Javier Read de Alaniz; Thomas P. Davis; Christopher M. Bates; Craig J. Hawker

A highly efficient photomediated atom transfer radical polymerization protocol is reported for semi-fluorinated acrylates and methacrylates. Use of the commercially available solvent, 2-trifluoromethyl-2-propanol, optimally balances monomer, polymer, and catalyst solubility while eliminating transesterification as a detrimental side reaction. In the presence of UV irradiation and ppm concentrations of copper(II) bromide and Me6-TREN (TREN = tris(2-aminoethyl amine)), semi-fluorinated monomers with side chains containing between three and 21 fluorine atoms readily polymerize under controlled conditions. The resulting polymers exhibit narrow molar mass distributions (Đ ≈ 1.1) and high end group fidelity, even at conversions greater than 95%. This level of control permits the in situ generation of chain-end functional homopolymers and diblock copolymers, providing facile access to semi-fluorinated macromolecules using a single methodology with unprecedented monomer scope. The results disclosed herein should create opportunities across a variety of fields that exploit fluorine-containing polymers for tailored bulk, interfacial, and solution properties.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Engineering Surfaces through Sequential Stop-Flow Photopatterning.

Christian W. Pester; Benjaporn Narupai; Kaila M. Mattson; David P. Bothman; Daniel Klinger; Kenneth W. Lee; Emre H. Discekici; Craig J. Hawker

Solution-exchange lithography is a new modular approach to engineer surfaces via sequential photopatterning. An array of lenses reduces features on an inkjet-printed photomask and reproduces arbitrarily complex patterns onto surfaces. In situ exchange of solutions allows successive photochemical reactions without moving the substrate and affords access to hierarchically patterned substrates.


Chemical Communications | 2012

Macrocyclic depolymerization of arylene-ethynylene copolymers: a dynamic combinatorial method

Dustin E. Gross; Emre H. Discekici; Jeffrey S. Moore

A dynamic combinatorial approach for the synthesis of arylene ethynylene macrocycles (AEMs) from linear polymers is described. By using readily available carbazolyl-ethynylene copolymers as starting materials we obtained a number of novel macrocycles that would be difficult to prepare by traditional methods.


Polymer Chemistry | 2017

Controlled radical polymerization of vinyl ketones using visible light

In-Hwan Lee; Emre H. Discekici; Athina Anastasaki; Javier Read de Alaniz; Craig J. Hawker

Herein we report the photoinduced electron transfer–reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (PET-RAFT) polymerization of a range of vinyl ketone monomers including methyl, ethyl and phenyl derivatives, using Eosin Y as an organic photoredox catalyst and visible light. The protocol is amenable to a range of conditions and facilitates controlled polymerization in the presence of air and even in the absence of catalyst. This approach is versatile and scalable as demonstrated by the multi-gram scale synthesis of poly(vinyl ketones) with increased polymerization rates being achieved upon the addition of triethylamine as a reducing agent. High chain-end fidelity was demonstrated by ESI-MS and 1H NMR with successful chain extension yielding a library of novel diblock copolymers.


Polymer Chemistry | 2017

Desulfurization–bromination: direct chain-end modification of RAFT polymers

In-Hwan Lee; Emre H. Discekici; Shelby L. Shankel; Athina Anastasaki; Javier Read de Alaniz; Craig J. Hawker; David J. Lunn

We report a simple and efficient transformation of thiol and thiocarbonylthio functional groups to bromides using stable and commercially available brominating reagents. This procedure allows for the quantitative conversion of a range of small molecule thiols (including primary, secondary and tertiary) to the corresponding bromides under mild conditions, as well as the facile chain-end modification of polystyrene (PS) homopolymers and block copolymers prepared by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. Specifically, the direct chain-end bromination of PS prepared by RAFT was achieved, where the introduced terminal bromide remained active for subsequent modification or chain-extension using classical atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP). This transformation sets the foundation for bridging RAFT and ATRP, two of the most widely used controlled radical polymerization (CRP) strategies, and enables the preparation of chain-end functionalized block copolymers not directly accessible using a single CRP technique.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Endo and Exo Diels–Alder Adducts: Temperature-Tunable Building Blocks for Selective Chemical Functionalization

Emre H. Discekici; Andre H. St. Amant; Shay N. Nguyen; In-Hwan Lee; Craig J. Hawker; Javier Read de Alaniz

The development and application of a novel endo furan-protected maleimide building block is reported. The endo isomer undergoes deprotection at temperatures ∼50 °C below the exo derivative. This enables a simple and powerful approach to quantitatively and selectively introduce functional maleimide groups via temperature modulation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Simultaneous Preparation of Multiple Polymer Brushes under Ambient Conditions using Microliter Volumes

Benjaporn Narupai; Zachariah A. Page; Nicolas J. Treat; Alaina J. McGrath; Christian W. Pester; Emre H. Discekici; Neil D. Dolinski; Gregory Meyers; Javier Read de Alaniz; Craig J. Hawker

The fabrication of well-defined, multifunctional polymer brushes under ambient conditions is described. This facile method uses light-mediated, metal-free atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) to grow polymer brushes with only microliter volumes required. Key to the success of this strategy is the dual action of N-phenylphenothiazine (PTH) as both an oxygen scavenger and polymerization catalyst. Use of simple glass cover slips results in a high degree of spatial and temporal control and allows for multiple polymer brushes to be grown simultaneously. The preparation of arbitrary 3D patterns and functional/emissive polymer brushes demonstrates the practicality and versatility of this novel strategy.


ACS central science | 2018

Next-Generation Materials via Orthogonal Stimuli

Emre H. Discekici; Javier Read de Alaniz

A novel and user-friendly synthetic platform enables enhanced control over polymer design and synthesis by exploiting the orthogonality between chemical and photochemical stimuli.

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David J. Lunn

University of California

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In-Hwan Lee

University of California

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