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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer S. Mathieson is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer S. Mathieson.


Nature Chemistry | 2011

Observation of Fe(V)=O using variable-temperature mass spectrometry and its enzyme-like C–H and C=C oxidation reactions

Irene Prat; Jennifer S. Mathieson; Mireia Güell; Xavi Ribas; Josep M. Luis; Leroy Cronin

Oxo-transfer chemistry mediated by iron underpins many biological processes and today is emerging as synthetically very important for the catalytic oxidation of C-H and C=C moieties that are hard to activate conventionally. Despite the vast amount of research in this area, experimental characterization of the reactive species under catalytic conditions is very limited, although a Fe(V)=O moiety was postulated. Here we show, using variable-temperature mass spectrometry, the generation of a Fe(V)=O species within a synthetic non-haem complex at -40 °C and its reaction with an olefin. Also, with isotopic labelling we were able both to follow oxygen-atom transfer from H(2)O(2)/H(2)O through Fe(V)=O to the products and to probe the reactivity as a function of temperature. This study pioneers the implementation of variable-temperature mass spectrometry to investigate reactive intermediates.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Assembly of modular asymmetric organic-inorganic polyoxometalate hybrids into anisotropic nanostructures

Mali H. Rosnes; Chiara Musumeci; Chullikkattil P. Pradeep; Jennifer S. Mathieson; De-Liang Long; Yu-Fei Song; Bruno Pignataro; Richard J. Cogdell; Leroy Cronin

Three organic-inorganic hybrid Mn-Anderson polyoxometalates (POMs), with both symmetrical and asymmetrical appended groups, have been synthesized, identified using electrospray mass spectrometry, and isolated using an approach that allows the three AA, BB, and AB compounds to be structurally characterized. Investigation of the self-assembly of the hybrids on hydrophilic surfaces reveals the formation of nanofibres with characteristics that reflect the nature of the substitution of the POM yielding a route to the programmed assembly of anisotropic hybrid nanostructures.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

A classification of spin frustration in molecular magnets from a physical study of large odd-numbered-metal, odd electron rings

Michael L. Baker; Grigore A. Timco; Stergios Piligkos; Jennifer S. Mathieson; Hannu Mutka; Floriana Tuna; Piotr Kozlowski; Michał Antkowiak; T. Guidi; Tulika Gupta; Harapriya Rath; Robert J. Woolfson; G. Kamieniarz; Robin G. Pritchard; Høgni Weihe; Leroy Cronin; Gopalan Rajaraman; David Collison; Eric J. L. McInnes; Richard E. P. Winpenny

The term “frustration” in the context of magnetism was originally used by P. W. Anderson and quickly adopted for application to the description of spin glasses and later to very special lattice types, such as the kagomé. The original use of the term was to describe systems with competing antiferromagnetic interactions and is important in current condensed matter physics in areas such as the description of emergent magnetic monopoles in spin ice. Within molecular magnetism, at least two very different definitions of frustration are used. Here we report the synthesis and characterization of unusual nine-metal rings, using magnetic measurements and inelastic neutron scattering, supported by density functional theory calculations. These compounds show different electronic/magnetic structures caused by frustration, and the findings lead us to propose a classification for frustration within molecular magnets that encompasses and clarifies all previous definitions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

A Versatile Tripodal Cu(I) Reagent for C–N Bond Construction via Nitrene-Transfer Chemistry: Catalytic Perspectives and Mechanistic Insights on C–H Aminations/Amidinations and Olefin Aziridinations

Vivek Bagchi; Patrina Paraskevopoulou; Purak Das; Lingyu Chi; Qiuwen Wang; Amitava Choudhury; Jennifer S. Mathieson; Leroy Cronin; Daniel B. Pardue; Thomas R. Cundari; George Mitrikas; Yiannis Sanakis; Pericles Stavropoulos

A Cu(I) catalyst (1), supported by a framework of strongly basic guanidinato moieties, mediates nitrene-transfer from PhI═NR sources to a wide variety of aliphatic hydrocarbons (C-H amination or amidination in the presence of nitriles) and olefins (aziridination). Product profiles are consistent with a stepwise rather than concerted C-N bond formation. Mechanistic investigations with the aid of Hammett plots, kinetic isotope effects, labeled stereochemical probes, and radical traps and clocks allow us to conclude that carboradical intermediates play a major role and are generated by hydrogen-atom abstraction from substrate C-H bonds or initial nitrene-addition to one of the olefinic carbons. Subsequent processes include solvent-caged radical recombination to afford the major amination and aziridination products but also one-electron oxidation of diffusively free carboradicals to generate amidination products due to carbocation participation. Analyses of metal- and ligand-centered events by variable temperature electrospray mass spectrometry, cyclic voltammetry, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, coupled with computational studies, indicate that an active, but still elusive, copper-nitrene (S = 1) intermediate initially abstracts a hydrogen atom from, or adds nitrene to, C-H and C═C bonds, respectively, followed by a spin flip and radical rebound to afford intra- and intermolecular C-N containing products.


Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology | 2013

Continuous parallel ESI-MS analysis of reactions carried out in a bespoke 3D printed device.

Jennifer S. Mathieson; Mali H. Rosnes; Victor Sans; Philip J. Kitson; Leroy Cronin

Summary Herein, we present an approach for the rapid, straightforward and economical preparation of a tailored reactor device using three-dimensional (3D) printing, which can be directly linked to a high-resolution electrospray ionisation mass spectrometer (ESI-MS) for real-time, in-line observations. To highlight the potential of the setup, supramolecular coordination chemistry was carried out in the device, with the product of the reactions being recorded continuously and in parallel by ESI-MS. Utilising in-house-programmed computer control, the reactant flow rates and order were carefully controlled and varied, with the changes in the pump inlets being mirrored by the recorded ESI-MS spectra.


Dalton Transactions | 2010

Ferromagnetically coupled chiral cyanide-bridged {Ni6Fe4} cages

Takuya Shiga; Graham N. Newton; Jennifer S. Mathieson; Tamaki Tetsuka; Masayuki Nihei; Leroy Cronin; Hiroki Oshio

Enantiomeric, ferromagnetically coupled decanuclear {Ni₆Fe₄} cages with adamantane-like cores were synthesized around templating tetraethylammonium cations, as shown by crystallographic analysis and CSI-MS, and their homochiral nature was confirmed by circular dichroism measurements.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Exploring the Symmetry, Structure, and Self‐Assembly Mechanism of a Gigantic Seven‐Fold Symmetric {Pd84} Wheel

Rachel A. Scullion; Andrew J. Surman; Feng Xu; Jennifer S. Mathieson; De-Liang Long; Fadi Haso; Tianbo Liu; Leroy Cronin

The symmetry, structure and formation mechanism of the structurally self-complementary {Pd84} = [Pd84O42(PO4)42(CH3CO2)28](70-) wheel is explored. Not only does the symmetry give rise to a non-closest packed structure, the mechanism of the wheel formation is proposed to depend on the delicate balance between reaction conditions. We achieve the resolution of gigantic polyoxopalladate species through electrophoresis and size-exclusion chromatography, the latter has been used in conjunction with electrospray mass spectrometry to probe the formation of the ring, which was found to proceed by the stepwise aggregation of {Pd6}(-) = [Pd6O4(CH3CO2)2(PO4)3Na(6-n)H(n)](-) building blocks. Furthermore, the higher-order assembly of these clusters into hollow blackberry structures of around 50 nm has been observed using dynamic and static light scattering.


Science | 2018

Digitization of multistep organic synthesis in reactionware for on-demand pharmaceuticals

Philip J. Kitson; Guillaume Marie; Jean-Patrick Francoia; Sergey S. Zalesskiy; Ralph C. Sigerson; Jennifer S. Mathieson; Leroy Cronin

A plastic plan for organic synthesis The infrastructure for chemical synthesis typically lies at either end of a spectrum: small-scale studies in ad hoc assemblies of glassware or large-scale production in capital-intensive custom reactors. Kitson et al. report a hybrid protocol that customizes a blueprint for synthesis of a target compound in a series of interconnected plastic modules, which can be assembled en masse by 3D printing (see the Perspective by Hornung). The approach, demonstrated for the commercial muscle relaxant baclofen, establishes a systematic workflow that is potentially amenable to automation: All that is necessary for synthesis and purification is the introduction of stock solutions and variation of temperature or pressure. Science, this issue p. 314; see also p. 273 A blueprint for chemical synthesis in plasticware offers an alternative to capital-intensive reactors for low-volume targets. Chemical manufacturing is often done at large facilities that require a sizable capital investment and then produce key compounds for a finite period. We present an approach to the manufacturing of fine chemicals and pharmaceuticals in a self-contained plastic reactionware device. The device was designed and constructed by using a chemical to computer-automated design (ChemCAD) approach that enables the translation of traditional bench-scale synthesis into a platform-independent digital code. This in turn guides production of a three-dimensional printed device that encloses the entire synthetic route internally via simple operations. We demonstrate the approach for the γ-aminobutyric acid receptor agonist, (±)-baclofen, establishing a concept that paves the way for the local manufacture of drugs outside of specialist facilities.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Following the Reaction of Heteroanions inside a {W18O56} Polyoxometalate Nanocage by NMR Spectroscopy and Mass Spectrometry

Qi Zheng; Laia Vilà-Nadal; Christoph Busche; Jennifer S. Mathieson; De-Liang Long; Leroy Cronin

By incorporating phosphorus(III)-based anions into a polyoxometalate cage, a new type of tungsten-based unconventional Dawson-like cluster, [W18O56(HPIIIO3)2(H2O)2]8−, was isolated, in which the reaction of the two phosphite anions [HPO3]2− within the {W18O56} cage could be followed spectroscopically. As well as full X-ray crystallographic analysis, we studied the reactivity of the cluster using both solution-state NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. These techniques show that the cluster undergoes a structural rearrangement in solution whereby the {HPO3} moieties dimerize to form a weakly interacting (O3PH⋅⋅⋅HPO3) moiety. In the crystalline state the cluster exhibits a thermally triggered oxidation of the two PIII template moieties to form PV centers (phosphite to phosphate), commensurate with the transformation of the cage into a Wells–Dawson {W18O54} cluster.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

The Effect of the Spacer of Bis(biurea) Ligands on the Structure of A2L3‐type (A=anion) Phosphate Complexes

Biao Wu; Shaoguang Li; Yibo Lei; Huaiming Hu; Nader de Sousa Amadeu; Christoph Janiak; Jennifer S. Mathieson; De-Liang Long; Leroy Cronin; Xiao-Juan Yang

By tuning the length and rigidity of the spacer of bis(biurea) ligands L, three structural motifs of the A2 L3 complexes (A represents anion, here orthophosphate PO4 (3-) ), namely helicate, mesocate, and mono-bridged motif, have been assembled by coordination of the ligand to phosphate anion. Crystal structure analysis indicated that in the three complexes, each of the phosphate ions is coordinated by twelve hydrogen bonds from six surrounding urea groups. The anion coordination properties in solution have also been studied. The results further demonstrate the coordination behavior of phosphate ion, which shows strong tendency for coordination saturation and geometrical preference, thus allowing for the assembly of novel anion coordination-based structures as in transition-metal complexes.

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Qi Zheng

University of Glasgow

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David Collison

University of Manchester

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