Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Joseph P. Dinnocenzo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joseph P. Dinnocenzo.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

Accurate Oxidation Potentials of Benzene and Biphenyl Derivatives via Electron-Transfer Equilibria and Transient Kinetics

Paul B. Merkel; Pu Luo; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Samir Farid

Nanosecond transient absorption methods were used to determine accurate oxidation potentials (E(ox)) in acetonitrile for benzene and a number of its alkyl-substituted derivatives. E(ox) values were obtained from a combination of equilibrium electron-transfer measurements and electron-transfer kinetics of radical cations produced from pairs of benzene and biphenyl derivatives, with one member of the pair acting as a reference. Using a redox-ladder approach, thermodynamic oxidation potentials were determined for 21 benzene and biphenyl derivatives. Of particular interest, E(ox) values of 2.48 +/- 0.03 and 2.26 +/- 0.02 V vs SCE were obtained for benzene and toluene, respectively. Because of a significant increase in solvent stabilization of the radical cations with decreasing alkyl substitution, the difference between ionization and oxidation potentials of benzene is approximately 0.5 eV larger than that of hexamethylbenzene. Oxidation potentials of the biphenyl derivatives show an excellent correlation with substituent sigma+ values, which allows E(ox) predictions for other biphenyl derivatives. Significant dimer radical cation formation was observed in several cases and equilibrium constants for dimerization were determined. Methodologies are described for determining accurate electron-transfer equilibrium constants even when dimer radical cations are formed. Additional equilibrium measurements in trifluoroacetic acid, methylene chloride, and ethyl acetate demonstrated that solvation differences can substantially alter and even reverse relative E(ox) values.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Bimolecular Electron Transfers That Follow a Sandros―Boltzmann Dependence on Free Energy

Samir Farid; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Paul B. Merkel; Ralph H. Young; Deepak Shukla

Rate constants (k) for exergonic and endergonic electron-transfer reactions of equilibrating radical cations (A(•+) + B ⇌ A + B(•+)) in acetonitrile could be fit well by a simple Sandros-Boltzmann (SB) function of the reaction free energy (ΔG) having a plateau with a limiting rate constant k(lim) in the exergonic region, followed, near the thermoneutral point, by a steep drop in log k vs ΔG with a slope of 1/RT. Similar behavior was observed for another charge shift reaction, the electron-transfer quenching of excited pyrylium cations (P(+)*) by neutral donors (P(+)* + D → P(•) + D(•+)). In this case, SB dependence was observed when the logarithm of the quenching constant (log k(q)) was plotted vs ΔG + s, where the shift term, s, equals +0.08 eV and ΔG is the free energy change for the net reaction (E(redox) - E(excit)). The shift term is attributed to partial desolvation of the radical cation in the product encounter pair (P(•)/D(•+)), which raises its free energy relative to the free species. Remarkably, electron-transfer quenching of neutral reactants (A* + D → A(•-) + D(•+)) using excited cyanoaromatic acceptors and aromatic hydrocarbon donors was also found to follow an SB dependence of log k(q) on ΔG, with a positive s, +0.06 eV. This positive shift contrasts with the long-accepted prediction of a negative value, -0.06 eV, for the free energy of an A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair relative to the free radical ions. That prediction incorporated only a Coulombic stabilization of the A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair relative to the free radical ions. In contrast, the results presented here show that the positive value of s indicates a decrease in solvent stabilization of the A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair, which outweighs Coulombic stabilization in acetonitrile. These quenching reactions are proposed to proceed via rapidly interconverting encounter pairs with an exciplex as intermediate, A*/D ⇌ exciplex ⇌ A(•-)/D(•+). Weak exciplex fluorescence was observed in each case. For several reactions in the endergonic region, rate constants for the reversible formation and decay of the exciplexes were determined using time-correlated single-photon counting. The quenching constants derived from the transient kinetics agreed well with those from the conventional Stern-Volmer plots. For excited-state electron-transfer processes, caution is required in correlating quenching constants vs reaction free energies when ΔG exceeds ∼+0.1 eV. Beyond this point, additional exciplex deactivation pathways-fluorescence, intersystem crossing, and nonradiative decay-are likely to dominate, resulting in a change in mechanism.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 1991

Photooxidative Cleavage of Organosilanes

Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Samir Farid; Joshua L. Goodman; Ian R. Gould; W. P. Todd

Abstract Avoiding energy wasting return electron transfer reactions remains a central challenge in the design of high efficiency photoinduced electron transfer processes. One strategy for achieving this goal is to utilize compounds which as a result of electron transfer undergo rapid and irreversible chemical reaction in competion with the return electron process. Organosilanes represent a promising class of compounds that may fulfill this requirement. We have found that some organosilanes undergo rapid carbon-silicon bond cleavage when oxidized to their radical cations in photoinduced electron transfer reactions. Interestingly, these radical cation cleavage reactions occur by a rare nucleophile-assisted mechanism. We have investigated the reactivity of different classes of nucleophiles, and have determined the activation parameters for several of these reactions.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1993

Intramolecular nucleophile-assisted cleavage of organosilane cation radicals

W. P. Todd; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Samir Farid; Joshua L. Goodman; Ian R. Gould

Abstract Organosilane cation radicals which have tethered nucleophiles are found to undergo rapid intramolecular nucleophilic substitution in both high and low polarity solvents. This reaction competes with both separation and return electron transfer within the primary ion radical pair generated by photoinduced bimolecular electron transfer. These results demonstrate the ability to effect ion radical substitutions in low polarity solvents.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Bonded Exciplex Formation : Electronic and Stereoelectronic Effects

Yingsheng Wang; Olesya Haze; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Samir Farid; Ramy Farid; Ian R. Gould

As recently proposed, the singlet-excited states of several cyanoaromatics react with pyridine via bonded-exciplex formation, a novel concept in photochemical charge transfer reactions. Presented here are electronic and steric effects on the quenching rate constants, which provide valuable support for the model. Additionally, excited-state quenching in poly(vinylpyridine) is strongly inhibited both relative to that in neat pyridine and also to conventional exciplex formation in polymers, consistent with a restrictive orientational requirement for the formation of bonded exciplexes. Examples of competing reactions to form both conventional and bonded exciplexes are presented, which illustrate the delicate balance between these two processes when their reaction energetics are similar. Experimental and computational evidence is provided for the formation of a bonded exciplex in the reaction of the singlet excited state of 2,6,9,10-tetracyanoanthracene (TCA) with an oxygen-substituted donor, dioxane, thus expanding the scope of bonded exciplexes.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

Accurate oxidation potentials of 40 benzene and biphenyl derivatives with heteroatom substituents.

Pu Luo; Adam M. Feinberg; Gonzalo Guirado; Samir Farid; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo

The redox equilibrium method was used to determine accurate oxidation potentials in acetonitrile for 40 heteroatom-substituted compounds. These include methoxy-substituted benzenes and biphenyls, aromatic amines, and substituted acetanilides. The redox equilibrium method allowed oxidation potentials to be determined with high precision (≤ ±6 mV). Whereas most of the relative oxidation potentials follow well-established chemical trends, interestingly, the oxidation potentials of substituted N-methylacetanilides were found to be higher than those of the corresponding acetanilides. Density functional theory calculations provided insight into the origin of these surprising results in terms of the preferred conformations of the amides versus their cation radicals.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Chain-amplified photochemical fragmentation of N-alkoxypyridinium salts: proposed reaction of alkoxyl radicals with pyridine bases to give pyridinyl radicals.

Deepak Shukla; Shashishekar P. Adiga; Wendy G. Ahearn; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Samir Farid

Photoinduced electron transfer to N-alkoxypyridiniums, which leads to N–O bond cleavage and alkoxyl radical formation, is highly chain amplified in the presence of a pyridine base such as lutidine. Density functional theory calculations support a mechanism in which the alkoxyl radicals react with lutidine via proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) to produce lutidinyl radicals (BH•). A strong electron donor, BH• is proposed to reduce another alkoxypyridinium cation, leading to chain amplification, with quantum yields approaching 200. Kinetic data and calculations support the formation of a second, stronger reducing agent: a hydrogen-bonded complex between BH• and another base molecule (BH•···B). Global fitting of the quantum yield data for the reactions of four pyridinium salts (4-phenyl and 4-cyano with N-methoxy and N-ethoxy substituents) led to a consistent set of kinetic parameters. The chain nature of the reaction allowed rate constants to be determined from steady-state kinetics and independently determined chain-termination rate constants. The rate constant of the reaction of CH3O• with lutidine to form BH•, k1, is ~6 × 10(6) M(–1) s(–1); that of CH3CH2O• is ~9 times larger. Reaction of CD3O• showed a deuterium isotope effect of ~6.5. Replacing lutidine by 3-chloropyridine, a weaker base, decreases k1 by a factor of ~400.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Experimental and theoretical study of triplet energy transfer in rigid polymer films.

Paul B. Merkel; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo

With the judicious selection of triplet energy donor (D) and acceptor (A) pairs, a laser flash photolysis procedure has provided a sensitive method for the study of triplet energy transfer in rigid polymer films. By monitoring changes in triplet-triplet (T-T) absorptions the kinetics of triplet energy transfer were evaluated at short time scales, and overall energy-transfer quantum yields were also obtained. Combinations of xanthone- or thioxanthone-type donors and polyphenyl acceptors were particularly suited to these measurements because the former have high intersystem-crossing quantum yields and the latter have very high extinction coefficients for T-T absorption. For exothermic transfer most of the energy transfer that occurred within the lifetime of triplet D ( (3)D) took place in less than a few microseconds after (3)D formation in poly(methyl methacrylate), and triplet A yields were limited largely by the number of A molecules in near contact with (3)D. The kinetics of triplet energy transfer were modeled using a modified Perrin-type statistical arrangement of D/A separations with allowance for excluded volume in combination with a Dexter-type formula for the distance-dependent exchange energy-transfer rate constant. Experimental observations were best explained by constraining D/A separations to reflect the dimensions of intervening molecules of the medium. Rate constants, k 0, for exothermic energy transfer from (3)D to A molecules in physical contact are approximately 10 (11) s (-1) and very similar to triplet energy-transfer rate constants determined from solution encounters. Energy-transfer rate constants, k( r), fall off as approximately exp(-2 r/ 0.85), where r is the separation distance between D and A centers in angstroms. Exchange energy transfer is not restricted to (3)D and A in physical contact, but at </=0.4 M A at least 85% of the energy transfer arises from interaction of (3)D with a single nearest-neighbor A molecule. The modified Perrin model was also applied to quantum yields of quenching in rigid media. Comparison to the simple Perrin model for quenching shows that the latter may be adequate as long as molecular volumes are accommodated in the Perrin expression. Under these conditions the critical radius, r c, corresponds to the (3)D/A separation at which the effective rate constant for energy transfer equals the inverse of the (3)D lifetime.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1995

The cation radical vinylcyclopropane→cyclopentene rearrangement: reaction mechanism and periselectivity

Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; D.A. Conlon

Abstract The vinylcyclopropane→cyclopentene rearrangement catalyzed by one-electron oxidation has been shown to be most consistent with a stepwise, cation radical mechanism. It was also discovered that the formal rearrangement periselectivity of vinylcyclopropanes with cis-alkyl substituents can be changed by one-electron oxidation.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2013

Multicenter Bonding in Ditetracyanoethylene Dianion: A Simple Aromatic Picture in Terms of Three-Electron Bonds.

Benoît Braïda; Kevin Hendrickx; Dominik Domin; Joseph P. Dinnocenzo; Philippe C. Hiberty

The nature of the multicenter, long bond in ditetracyanoethylene dianion complex [TCNE]2(2-) is elucidated using high level ab initio Valence Bond (VB) theory coupled with Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods. This dimer is the prototype of the general family of pancake-bonded dimers with large interplanar separations. Quantitative results obtained with a compact wave function in terms of only six VB structures match the reference CCSD(T) bonding energies. Analysis of the VB wave function shows that the weights of the VB structures are not compatible with a covalent bond between the π* orbitals of the fragments. On the other hand, these weights are consistent with a simple picture in terms of two resonating bonding schemes, one displaying a pair of interfragment three-electron σ bonds and the other displaying intrafragment three-electron π bonds. This simple picture explains at once (1) the long interfragment bond length, which is independent of the countercations but typical of three-electron (3-e) CC σ bonds, (2) the interfragment orbital overlaps which are very close to the theoretical optimal overlap of 1/6 for a 3-e σ bond, and (3) the unusual importance of dynamic correlation, which is precisely the main bonding component of 3-e bonds. Moreover, it is shown that the [TCNE]2(2-) system is topologically equivalent to the square C4H4(2-) dianion, a well-established aromatic system. To better understand the role of the cyano substituents, the unsubstituted diethylenic Na(+)2[C2H4]2(2-) complex is studied and shown to be only metastable and topologically equivalent to a rectangular C4H4(2-) dianion, devoid of aromaticity.

Collaboration


Dive into the Joseph P. Dinnocenzo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ian R. Gould

Arizona State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W. P. Todd

University of Rochester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

T.R. Simpson

University of Rochester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge