Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Henrik Ottosson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Henrik Ottosson.


Chemical Reviews | 2014

Excited State Aromaticity and Antiaromaticity : Opportunities for Photophysical and Photochemical Rationalizations

Martin Rosenberg; Christian Dahlstrand; Kristine Kilså; Henrik Ottosson

Excited State Aromaticity and Antiaromaticity : Opportunities for Photophysical and Photochemical Rationalizations


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Diindeno-fusion of an anthracene as a design strategy for stable organic biradicals

Gabriel E. Rudebusch; José L. Zafra; Kjell Jorner; Kotaro Fukuda; Jonathan L. Marshall; Iratxe Arrechea-Marcos; Guzmán L. Espejo; Rocío Ponce Ortiz; Carlos J. Gómez-García; Lev N. Zakharov; Masayoshi Nakano; Henrik Ottosson; Juan Casado; Michael M. Haley

The consequence of unpaired electrons in organic molecules has fascinated and confounded chemists for over a century. The study of open-shell molecules has been rekindled in recent years as new synthetic methods, improved spectroscopic techniques and powerful computational tools have been brought to bear on this field. Nonetheless, it is the intrinsic instability of the biradical species that limits the practicality of this research. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of a molecule based on the diindeno[b,i]anthracene framework that exhibits pronounced open-shell character yet possesses remarkable stability. The synthetic route is rapid, efficient and possible on the gram scale. The molecular structure was confirmed through single-crystal X-ray diffraction. From variable-temperature Raman spectroscopy and magnetic susceptibility measurements a thermally accessible triplet excited state was found. Organic field-effect transistor device data show an ambipolar performance with balanced electron and hole mobilities. Our results demonstrate the rational design and synthesis of an air- and temperature-stable biradical compound.


Nature Chemistry | 2012

Organic photochemistry: Exciting excited-state aromaticity

Henrik Ottosson

In 1972, Baird published rules describing aromaticity and antiaromaticity in the lowest triplet excited states of annulenes. The fortieth anniversary of Bairds rules — which are the reverse of Huckels rules for aromaticity and antiaromaticity in the ground state — ought to be celebrated before 2012 comes to an end.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

The Missing C1–C5 Cycloaromatization Reaction: Triplet State Antiaromaticity Relief and Self-Terminating Photorelease of Formaldehyde for Synthesis of Fulvenes from Enynes

Rana K. Mohamed; Sayantan Mondal; Kjell Jorner; Thais Faria Delgado; Vladislav V. Lobodin; Henrik Ottosson; Igor V. Alabugin

The last missing example of the four archetypical cycloaromatizations of enediynes and enynes was discovered by combining a twisted alkene excited state with a new self-terminating path for intramolecular conversion of diradicals into closed-shell products. Photoexcitation of aromatic enynes to a twisted alkene triplet state creates a unique stereoelectronic situation, which is facilitated by the relief of excited state antiaromaticity of the benzene ring. This enables the usually unfavorable 5-endo-trig cyclization and merges it with 5-exo-dig closure. The 1,4-diradical product of the C1-C5 cyclization undergoes internal H atom transfer that is coupled with the fragmentation of an exocyclic C-C bond. This sequence provides efficient access to benzofulvenes from enynes and expands the utility of self-terminating aromatizing enyne cascades to photochemical reactions. The key feature of this self-terminating reaction is that, despite the involvement of radical species in the key cyclization step, no external radical sources or quenchers are needed to provide the products. In these cascades, both radical centers are formed transiently and converted to the closed-shell products via intramolecular H-transfer and C-C bond fragmentation. Furthermore, incorporating C-C bond cleavage into the photochemical self-terminating cyclizations of enynes opens a new way for the use of alkenes as alkyne equivalents in organic synthesis.


ChemPhysChem | 2008

Triplet‐State Aromaticity of 4nπ‐Electron Monocycles: Analysis of Bifurcation in the π Contribution to the Electron Localization Function

Sébastien Villaume; Heather A. Fogarty; Henrik Ottosson

The pi contribution to the electron localization function (ELF) is used to compare 4npi- and (4n+2)pi-electron annulenes, with particular focus on the aromaticity of 4npi-electron annulenes in their lowest triplet state. The analysis is performed on the electron density obtained at the level of OLYP density functional theory, as well as at the CCSD and CASSCF ab initio levels. Two criteria for aromaticity of all-carbon annulenes are set up: the span in the bifurcation values DeltaBV(ELF(pi)) should be small, ideally zero, and the bifurcation value for ring closure of the pi basin RCBV(ELF(pi)) should be high (> or = 0.7). On the basis of these criteria, nearly all 4npi-electron annulenes are aromatic in their lowest triplet states, similar to (4n+2)pi-electron annulenes in their singlet ground states. For singlet biradical cyclobutadiene and cyclooctatetraene constrained to D4h and D8h symmetry, respectively, the RCBV(ELF(pi)) at the CASSCF level is lower (0.531 and 0.745) than for benzene (0.853), even though they have equal proportions of alpha- and beta-electrons.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Influence of excited state aromaticity in the lowest excited singlet states of fulvene derivatives

Martin Rosenberg; Henrik Ottosson; Kristine Kilså

The absorption spectra and excited state dipole moments of four differently substituted fulvenes have been investigated both experimentally and computationally. The results reveal that the excited state dipole moment of fulvenes reverses in the first excited singlet state when compared to the ground state. The oppositely polarized electron density distributions, which dominate the ground state and the first excited singlet state of fulvenes, respectively, reflect the reversed π-electron counting rules for aromaticity in the two states (4n + 2 vs. 4n, respectively). The results show that substituents indeed influence the polarity of fulvenes in the two states, however, cooperative interactions between the substituents and the fulvene moiety are most pronounced in the ground state.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Cross‐Hyperconjugation: An Unexplored Orbital Interaction between π‐Conjugated and Saturated Molecular Segments

Rikard Emanuelsson; Andreas Wallner; Eugene A. M. Ng; Joshua R. Smith; Djawed Nauroozi; Sascha Ott; Henrik Ottosson

Crossing a barrier: Molecules with saturated ER2 units (E=C or Si, R=electron-releasing group) inserted between two π-conjugated segments have electronic and optical properties that resemble those ...


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Substituent Effects on the Electron Affinities and Ionization Energies of Tria-, Penta-, and Heptafulvenes : A Computational Investigation

Christian Dahlstrand; Kaoru Yamazaki; Kristine Kilså; Henrik Ottosson

The extent of substituent influence on the vertical electron affinities (EAs) and ionization energies (IEs) of 43 substituted tria-, penta-, and heptafulvenes was examined computationally at the OVGF/6-311G(d)//B3LYP/6-311G(d) level of theory and compared with those of tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ) and tetrathiafulvalene (TTF) as representing strong electron-acceptor and -donor compounds, respectively. The substituents X at the exocyclic positions of the fulvenes were either NH(2), H, or CN, while the substituents Y at the ring positions were H, Cl, F, CN, or NH(2). The variations of the EAs and IEs were rationalized by qualitative arguments based on frontier orbital symmetries for the different fulvene classes with either X or Y being constant. The minimum and maximum values found for the calculated EAs of the tria-, penta-, and heptafulvenes were 0.51-2.05, 0.24-3.63, and 0.53-3.14 eV, respectively, and for the IEs 5.27-9.96, 7.07-10.31, and 6.35-10.59 eV, respectively. Two of the investigated fulvenes outperform TCNQ (calcd EA = 2.63 eV) and one outperforms TTF (calcd IE = 6.25 eV) with regard to acceptor and donor abilities, respectively. We also evaluated the properties of bis(fulvene)s, i.e., compounds composed of a donor-type heptafulvene fused with an acceptor-type pentafulvene, and it was revealed that these bis(fulvene)s can be designed so that the IE and EA of the two separate fulvene segments are retained, potentially allowing for the design of compact donor-acceptor dyads.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013

Aromaticity Effects on the Profiles of the Lowest Triplet-State Potential-Energy Surfaces for Rotation about the CC Bonds of Olefins with Five-Membered Ring Substituents : An Example of the Impact of Baird's Rule

Jun Zhu; Heather A. Fogarty; Helene Möllerstedt; Maria Brink; Henrik Ottosson

A density functional theory study on olefins with five-membered monocyclic 4n and 4n+2 π-electron substituents (C4H3X; X=CH(+), SiH(+), BH, AlH, CH2, SiH2, O, S, NH, and CH(-)) was performed to assess the connection between the degree of substituent (anti)aromaticity and the profile of the lowest triplet-state (T1) potential-energy surface (PES) for twisting about olefinic C=C bonds. It exploited both Hückels rule on aromaticity in the closed-shell singlet ground state (S0) and Bairds rule on aromaticity in the lowest ππ* excited triplet state. The compounds CH2=CH(C4H3X) were categorized as set A and set B olefins depending on which carbon atom (C2 or C3) of the C4H3X ring is bonded to the olefin. The degree of substituent (anti)aromaticity goes from strongly S0 -antiaromatic/T1 -aromatic (C5H4 (+)) to strongly S0 -aromatic/T1- antiaromatic (C5H4(-)). Our hypothesis is that the shapes of the T1 PESs, as given by the energy differences between planar and perpendicularly twisted olefin structures in T1 [ΔE(T1)], smoothly follow the changes in substituent (anti)aromaticity. Indeed, correlations between ΔE(T1) and the (anti)aromaticity changes of the C4 H3 X groups, as measured by the zz-tensor component of the nucleus-independent chemical shift ΔNICS(T1;1)zz , are found both for sets A and B separately (linear fits; r(2) =0.949 and 0.851, respectively) and for the two sets combined (linear fit; r(2) =0.851). For sets A and B combined, strong correlations are also found between ΔE(T1) and the degree of S0 (anti)aromaticity as determined by NICS(S0,1)zz (sigmoidal fit; r(2) =0.963), as well as between the T1 energies of the planar olefins and NICS(S0,1)zz (linear fit; r(2) =0.939). Thus, careful tuning of substituent (anti)aromaticity allows for design of small olefins with T1 PESs suitable for adiabatic Z/E photoisomerization.


Nature Communications | 2016

Metal-free photochemical silylations and transfer hydrogenations of benzenoid hydrocarbons and graphene.

Raffaello Papadakis; Hu Li; Joakim Bergman; Anna Lundstedt; Kjell Jorner; Rabia Ayub; Soumyajyoti Haldar; Burkhard O. Jahn; Aleksandra V. Denisova; Burkhard Zietz; Roland Lindh; Biplab Sanyal; Helena Grennberg; Klaus Leifer; Henrik Ottosson

The first hydrogenation step of benzene, which is endergonic in the electronic ground state (S0), becomes exergonic in the first triplet state (T1). This is in line with Bairds rule, which tells that benzene is antiaromatic and destabilized in its T1 state and also in its first singlet excited state (S1), opposite to S0, where it is aromatic and remarkably unreactive. Here we utilized this feature to show that benzene and several polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) to various extents undergo metal-free photochemical (hydro)silylations and transfer-hydrogenations at mild conditions, with the highest yield for naphthalene (photosilylation: 21%). Quantum chemical computations reveal that T1-state benzene is excellent at H-atom abstraction, while cyclooctatetraene, aromatic in the T1 and S1 states according to Bairds rule, is unreactive. Remarkably, also CVD-graphene on SiO2 is efficiently transfer-photohydrogenated using formic acid/water mixtures together with white light or solar irradiation under metal-free conditions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Henrik Ottosson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge