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Dive into the research topics where Flavio Maran is active.

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Featured researches published by Flavio Maran.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Interplay of Charge State, Lability, and Magnetism in the Molecule-like Au25(SR)18 Cluster

Sabrina Antonello; Neranjan V. Perera; Marco Ruzzi; José A. Gascón; Flavio Maran

Au25(SR)18 (R = -CH2-CH2-Ph) is a molecule-like nanocluster displaying distinct electrochemical and optical features. Although it is often taken as an example of a particularly well-understood cluster, very recent literature has provided a quite unclear or even a controversial description of its properties. We prepared monodisperse Au25(SR)18(0) and studied by cyclic voltammetry, under particularly controlled conditions, the kinetics of its reduction or oxidation to a series of charge states, -2, -1, +1, +2, and +3. For each electrode process, we determined the standard heterogeneous electron-transfer (ET) rate constants and the reorganization energies. The latter points to a relatively large inner reorganization. Reduction to form Au25(SR)18(2-) and oxidation to form Au25(SR)18(2+) and Au25(SR)18(3+) are chemically irreversible. The corresponding decay rate constants and lifetimes are incompatible with interpretations of very recent literature reports. The problem of how ET affects the Au25 magnetism was addressed by comparing the continuous-wave electron paramagnetic resonance (cw-EPR) behaviors of radical Au25(SR)18(0) and its oxidation product, Au25(SR)18(+). As opposed to recent experimental and computational results, our study provides compelling evidence that the latter is a diamagnetic species. The DFT-computed optical absorption spectra and density of states of the -1, 0, and +1 charge states nicely reproduced the experimentally estimated dependence of the HOMO-LUMO energy gap on the actual charge carried by the cluster. The conclusions about the magnetism of the 0 and +1 charge states were also reproduced, stressing that the three HOMOs are not virtually degenerate as routinely assumed: In particular, the splitting of the HOMO manifold in the cation species is severe, suggesting that the usefulness of the superatom interpretation is limited. The electrochemical, EPR, and computational results thus provide a self-consistent picture of the properties of Au25(SR)18 as a function of its charge state and may furnish a methodology blueprint for understanding the redox and magnetic behaviors of similar molecule-like gold nanoclusters.


ACS Nano | 2014

Au25(SEt)18, a Nearly Naked Thiolate-Protected Au25 Cluster: Structural Analysis by Single Crystal X-ray Crystallography and Electron Nuclear Double Resonance

Tiziano Dainese; Sabrina Antonello; José A. Gascón; Fangfang Pan; Neranjan V. Perera; Marco Ruzzi; Alfonso Venzo; Alfonso Zoleo; Kari Rissanen; Flavio Maran

X-ray crystallography has been fundamental in discovering fine structural features of ultrasmall gold clusters capped by thiolated ligands. For still unknown structures, however, new tools capable of providing relevant structural information are sought. We prepared a 25-gold atom nanocluster protected by the smallest ligand ever used, ethanethiol. This cluster displays the electrochemistry, mass spectrometry, and UV-vis absorption spectroscopy features of similar Au25 clusters protected by 18 thiolated ligands. The anionic and the neutral form of Au25(SEt)18 were fully characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, which confirmed the monolayers properties and the paramagnetism of neutral Au25(SEt)18(0). X-ray crystallography analysis of the latter provided the first known structure of a gold cluster protected by a simple, linear alkanethiolate. Here, we also report the direct observation by electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) of hyperfine interactions between a surface-delocalized unpaired electron and the gold atoms of a nanocluster. The advantages of knowing the exact molecular structure and having used such a small ligand allowed us to compare the experimental values of hyperfine couplings with DFT calculations unaffected by structures approximations or omissions.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Effect of the Charge State (z = −1, 0, +1) on the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance of Monodisperse Au25[S(CH2)2Ph]18z Clusters

Alfonso Venzo; Sabrina Antonello; José A. Gascón; Ivan Guryanov; Richard D. Leapman; Neranjan V. Perera; Alioscka A. Sousa; Martina Zamuner; Alessandro Zanella; Flavio Maran

Monodisperse Au(25)L(18)(0) (L = S(CH(2))(2)Ph) and [n-Oct(4)N(+)][Au(25)L(18)(-)] clusters were synthesized in tetrahydrofuran. An original strategy was then devised to oxidize them: in the presence of bis(pentafluorobenzoyl) peroxide, the neutral or the negatively charged clusters react as efficient electron donors in a dissociative electron-transfer (ET) process, in the former case yielding [Au(25)L(18)(+)][C(6)F(5)CO(2)(-)]. As opposed to other reported redox methods, this dissociative ET approach is irreversible, easily controllable, and clean, particularly for NMR purposes, as no hydrogen atoms are introduced. By using this approach, the -1, 0, and +1 charge states of Au(25)L(18) could be fully characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, using one- and two-dimensional techniques, in various solvents, and as a function of temperature. For all charge states, the NMR results and analysis nicely match recent structural findings about the presence of two different ligand populations in the capping monolayer, each resonance of the two ligand families displaying distinct NMR patterns. The radical nature of Au(25)L(18)(0) is particularly evident in the (1)H and (13)C NMR patterns of the inner ligands. The NMR behavior of radical Au(25)L(18)(0) was also simulated by DFT calculations, and the interplay between theory and experiments revealed a fundamental paramagnetic contribution coming from Fermi contact shifts. Interestingly, the NMR patterns of Au(25)L(18)(-) and Au(25)L(18)(+) were found to be quite similar, pointing to the latter cluster form as a diamagnetic species.


Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry | 2001

Nickel(I)(salen)-electrocatalyzed reduction of benzyl chlorides in the presence of carbon dioxide

Armando Gennaro; Abdirisak Ahmed Isse; Flavio Maran

The electrochemical carboxylation of a series of substituted benzyl and benzylic-type chlorides Y-C6H4CH(Z)Cl (Z= H; Y=H, 4-CF3, 4-OCH3, 3-OCH3 ;a nd Y=H; Z=Ph, CH3), catalyzed by nickel(I)(salen), was investigated in acetonitrile by cyclic voltammetry and controlled-potential electrolysis. For all of the chlorides investigated, remarkable catalytic currents were measured under atmospheric CO2 pressure. For most chlorides, controlled-potential electrolysis yields the corresponding carboxylic acid as the main product, the other significant product being the substituted toluene. The results indicate that the extent of carboxylation is strongly influenced by the structure of the halide. Electron-withdrawing groups, either on the phenyl ring or on the benzylic carbon, favor the formation of the carboxylate. In the first step of the electrocatalytic process, the halide reacts with electrogenerated [Ni I (salen)] − to form the benzyl radical. Further reduction of the radical to the corresponding carbanion is followed by electrocarboxylation in competition with protonation by residual water. The yield of the carboxylic acid is determined by the ease of reduction of the benzylic radical, which in turn reflects the nucleophilicity and basicity of the ensuing carbanion.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2002

Nitroxyl peptides as catalysts of enantioselective oxidations.

Fernando Formaggio; Marcella Bonchio; Marco Crisma; Cristina Peggion; Stefano Mezzato; Alessandra Polese; Alessandra Barazza; Sabrina Antonello; Flavio Maran; Quirinus B. Broxterman; Bernard Kaptein; Johan Kamphuis; Rosa Vitale; Michele Saviano; Ettore Benedetti; Claudio Toniolo

The achiral, nitroxyl-containing alpha-amino acid TOAC (TOAC = 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxylic acid), in combination with the chiral alpha-amino acid C(alpha)-methyl valine [(alphaMe)Val], was used to prepare short peptides (from di- to hexa-) that induced the enantioselective oxidation of racemic 1-phenylethanol to acetophenone. The best catalyst was an N(alpha)-acylated dipeptide alkylamide with the -TOAC-(alphaMe)Val- sequence folded in a stable, intramolecularly hydrogen-bonded beta-turn conformation with large, lipophilic (hydrophobic) N- and C-terminal blocking groups. We rationalized our findings by proposing models for the diastereomeric intermediates between (R)-[and (S)]-1-phenylethanol and the catalyst Fmoc-TOAC-L-(alphaMe)Val-NHiPr, based on the X-ray diffraction structure of the latter.


ACS Nano | 2014

Gold nanowired: a linear (Au25)(n) polymer from Au25 molecular clusters.

Marco De Nardi; Sabrina Antonello; De-en Jiang; Fangfang Pan; Kari Rissanen; Marco Ruzzi; Alfonso Venzo; Alfonso Zoleo; Flavio Maran

Au25(SR)18 has provided fundamental insights into the properties of clusters protected by monolayers of thiolated ligands (SR). Because of its ultrasmall core, 1 nm, Au25(SR)18 displays molecular behavior. We prepared a Au25 cluster capped by n-butanethiolates (SBu), obtained its structure by single-crystal X-ray crystallography, and studied its properties both experimentally and theoretically. Whereas in solution Au25(SBu)18(0) is a paramagnetic molecule, in the crystal it becomes a linear polymer of Au25 clusters connected via single Au-Au bonds and stabilized by proper orientation of clusters and interdigitation of ligands. At low temperature, [Au25(SBu)18(0)]n has a nonmagnetic ground state and can be described as a one-dimensional antiferromagnetic system. These findings provide a breakthrough into the properties and possible solid-state applications of molecular gold nanowires.


Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry | 2001

Kinetics and mechanism of the dissociative reduction of CX and XX bonds (X O, S)

Flavio Maran; Danial D. M. Wayner; Mark S. Workentin

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses some recent developments and methodologies that have impacted the understanding of dissociative electron transfer (ET). It focuses on the reduction of C–X and X–X bonds in which X is either oxygen or sulfur and provides insights into the nature of the intrinsic barriers for the stepwise dissociative reduction reactions as well as some interesting examples that demonstrate a need to continue to develop the present dissociative ET model. The reduction of ethers, peroxides, sulfides, and disulfides presented also provides some insights into the three-surface and two-surface models of transition from the stepwise to the concerted mechanisms. The combination of electrochemical data with other kinetic or thermodynamic approaches provides independent confirmation of the kinetic and thermodynamic data and allows the kinetic window to be extended both for highly exergonic and highly endergonic processes. It is significant to ensure that the kinetics is in the activation region in the assessment of intrinsic barriers.


ACS Nano | 2014

Electron transfer through 3D monolayers on Au25 clusters.

Sabrina Antonello; Giorgio Arrigoni; Tiziano Dainese; Marco De Nardi; Giulia Parisio; Lorena Perotti; Alice René; Alfonso Venzo; Flavio Maran

The monolayer protecting small gold nanoparticles (monolayer-protected clusters, MPCs) is generally represented as the 3D equivalent of 2D self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on extended gold surfaces. However, despite the growing relevance of MPCs in important applied areas, such as catalysis and nanomedicine, our knowledge of the structure of 3D SAMs in solution is still extremely limited. We prepared a large series of monodisperse Au25(SCnH2n+1)18 clusters (n=2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18) and studied how electrons tunnel through these monolayers. Electron transfer results, nicely supported by 1H NMR spectroscopy, IR absorption spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics results, show that there is a critical ligand length marking the transition between short ligands, which form a quite fluid monolayer structure, and longer alkyl chains, which self-organize into bundles. At variance with the truly protecting 2D SAMs, efficient electronic communication of the Au25 core with the outer environment is thus possible even for long alkyl chains. These conclusions provide a different picture of how an ultrasmall gold core talks with the environment through/with its protecting but not-so-shielding monolayer.


Nanoscale | 2012

Electron transfer catalysis with monolayer protected Au25 clusters

Sabrina Antonello; Mahdi Hesari; Federico Polo; Flavio Maran

Au₂₅L₁₈ (L = S(CH₂)₂Ph) clusters were prepared and characterized. The resulting monodisperse clusters were reacted with bis(pentafluorobenzoyl) peroxide in dichloromethane to form Au₂₅L₁₈⁺ quantitatively. The kinetics and thermodynamics of the corresponding electron transfer (ET) reactions were characterized via electrochemistry and thermochemical calculations. Au₂₅L₁₈⁺ was used in homogeneous redox catalysis experiments with a series of sym-substituted benzoyl peroxides, including the above peroxide, bis(para-cyanobenzoyl) peroxide, dibenzoyl peroxide, and bis(para-methoxybenzoyl) peroxide. Peroxide dissociative ET was catalyzed using both the Au₂₅L₁₈/Au₂₅L₁₈⁻ and the Au₂₅L₁₈⁺/Au₂₅L₁₈ redox couples as redox mediators. Simulation of the CV curves led to determination of the ET rate constant (k(ET)) values for concerted dissociative ET to the peroxides. The ET free energy ΔG° could be estimated for all donor-acceptor combinations, leading to observation of a nice activation-driving force (log k(ET)vs.ΔG°) relationship. Comparison with the k(ET) obtained using a ferrocene-type donor with a formal potential similar to that of Au₂₅L₁₈/Au₂₅L₁₈⁻ showed that the presence of the capping monolayer affects the ET rate rather significantly, which is attributed to the intrinsic nonadiabaticity of peroxide acceptors.


Small | 2014

Reductive Deprotection of Monolayer Protected Nanoclusters: An Efficient Route to Supported Ultrasmall Au Nanocatalysts for Selective Oxidation

Sayantani Das; Anandarup Goswami; Mahdi Hesari; Jafar F. Al-Sharab; Eliška Mikmeková; Flavio Maran; Tewodros Asefa

Bulk gold has long been considered too inert to be a catalyst until the discovery that Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) supported on metal oxides such as TiO 2 , CeO 2 and Fe 2 O 3 could be very active for CO oxidation. [ 1 ] Supported Au and other NPs have now been successfully shown to catalyze various chemical reactions. [ 2 ] AuNP-catalyzed oxidation reactions, in particular, have attracted special attention because the reactions can lead to a range of important value-added oxygenated chemical products and pharmaceuticals, and also because oxidation (or epoxidation) of various alkenes, arenes and alcohols are proven to be effectively catalyzed by AuNPs. [ 3 ]

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