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Dive into the research topics where Juan José Serrano-Pérez is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan José Serrano-Pérez.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

High yield ultrafast intramolecular singlet exciton fission in a quinoidal bithiophene

Oleg Varnavski; Neranga Abeyasinghe; Juan Aragó; Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Enrique Ortí; Juan T. López Navarrete; Kazuo Takimiya; David Casanova; Juan Casado; Theodore Goodson

We report the process of singlet exciton fission with high-yield upon photoexcitation of a quinoidal thiophene molecule. Efficient ultrafast triplet photogeneration and its yield are determined by photoinduced triplet-triplet absorption, flash photolysis triplet lifetime measurements, as well as by femtosecond time-resolved transient absorption and fluorescence methods. These experiments show that optically excited quinoidal bithiophene molecule undergoes ultrafast formation of the triplet-like state with the lifetime ∼57 μs. CASPT2 and RAS-SF calculations have been performed to support the experimental findings. To date, high singlet fission rates have been reported for crystalline and polycrystalline materials, whereas for covalently linked dimers and small oligomers it was found to be relatively small. In this contribution, we show an unprecedented quantum yield of intramolecular singlet exciton fission of ∼180% for a quinoidal bithiophene system.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Light-emitting electrochemical cells using cyanine dyes as the active components.

Antonio Pertegás; Daniel Tordera; Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Enrique Ortí; Henk J. Bolink

Light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) based on cyanine molecules were prepared. High photoluminescence quantum yields were obtained for host-guest films using two cyanine dyes, reaching 27%. Sandwiching these films in between two electrodes allows for very stable near-infrared emission with a maximum radiant flux of 1.7 W m(-2) at an external quantum efficiency of 0.44%.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Theoretical Insight into the Intrinsic Ultrafast Formation of Cyclobutane Pyrimidine Dimers in UV-Irradiated DNA: Thymine versus Cytosine

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Israel González-Ramírez; Pedro B. Coto; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés

The higher formation yields measured in the ultrafast photoinduced formation of cyclobutane thymine dimers (T<>T) with respect to those of cytosine (C<>C) are explained, on the basis of ab initio CASPT2 results, by the existence in thymine of more reactive orientations and a less efficient photoreversibility, whereas in cytosine the funnel toward the photolesion becomes competitive with that mediating the internal conversion of the excited-cytosine monomer.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2013

Proton/Hydrogen Transfer Mechanisms in the Guanine-Cytosine Base Pair: Photostability and Tautomerism.

Vicenta Sauri; João Paulo Gobbo; Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Marcus Lundberg; Pedro B. Coto; Luis Serrano-Andrés; Antonio Carlos Borin; Roland Lindh; Manuela Merchán; Daniel Roca-Sanjuán

Proton/hydrogen-transfer processes have been broadly studied in the past 50 years to explain the photostability and the spontaneous tautomerism in the DNA base pairs. In the present study, the CASSCF/CASPT2 methodology is used to map the two-dimensional potential energy surfaces along the stretched NH reaction coordinates of the guanine-cytosine (GC) base pair. Concerted and stepwise pathways are explored initially in vacuo, and three mechanisms are studied: the stepwise double proton transfer, the stepwise double hydrogen transfer, and the concerted double proton transfer. The results are consistent with previous findings related to the photostability of the GC base pair, and a new contribution to tautomerism is provided. The C-based imino-oxo and imino-enol GC tautomers, which can be generated during the UV irradiation of the Watson-Crick base pair, have analogous radiationless energy-decay channels to those of the canonical base pair. In addition, the C-based imino-enol GC tautomer is thermally less stable. A study of the GC base pair is carried out subsequently taking into account the DNA surroundings in the biological environment. The most important stationary points are computed using the quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) approach, suggesting a similar scenario for the proton/hydrogen-transfer phenomena in vacuo and in DNA. Finally, the static model is complemented by ab initio dynamic simulations, which show that vibrations at the hydrogen bonds can indeed originate hydrogen-transfer processes in the GC base pair. The relevance of the present findings for the rationalization of the preservation of the genetic code and mutagenesis is discussed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Photoreactivity of Furocoumarins and DNA in PUVA Therapy: Formation of Psoralen−Thymine Adducts

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés

The mechanism of the [2+2] cycloaddition photoreaction of psoralen and a DNA nucleobase, thymine, cornerstone of the furocoumarin-based PUVA (psoralen+UVA radiation) phototherapy, has been studied by the quantum-chemical multiconfigurational CASPT2 method. Triplet- and singlet-mediated mono- and diadduct formations have been determined to take place via singlet-triplet crossings and conical intersections, correlated with the initially promoted triplet or singlet states in different possible reactive orientations. Pyrone-side monoadducts are suggested to be formed in the triplet manifold of the system, and to be less prone to yield diadducts because of the properties of the monoadduct lowest triplet state and the minor accessibility of its excited singlet states. Furan-side monoadducts are better produced in the singlet manifold after reaching a conical intersection with the ground state of the system. From there, the absorption of a second photon would in this case trigger the formation of the diadduct. The proposed mechanisms enable rationalizing the phototherapeutic behavior of several furocoumarins.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

How the Conical Intersection Seam Controls Chemical Selectivity in the Photocycloaddition of Ethylene and Benzene

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Freija De Vleeschouwer; Frank De Proft; David Mendive-Tapia; Michael J. Bearpark; Michael A. Robb

The photocycloaddition reaction of benzene with ethylene has been studied at the CASSCF level, including the characterization of an extended conical intersection seam. We show that the chemical selectivity is, in part, controlled by this extended conical intersection seam and that the shape of the conical intersection seam can be understood in terms of simple VB arguments. Further, the shape and energetics of the asynchronous segment of the conical intersection seam suggest that 1,2 (ortho) and 1,3 (meta) will be the preferred chemical products with similar weight. The 1,4 (para) point on the conical intersection is higher in energy and corresponds to a local maximum on the seam. VB analysis shows that the pairs of VB structures along this asynchronous seam are the same and thus the shape will be determined mainly by steric effects. Synchronous structures on the seam are higher in energy and belong to a different branch of the seam separated by a saddle point on the seam. On S1 we have documented three mechanistic pathways corresponding to transition states (with low barriers) between the reactants and the conical intersection seam: a mixed asynchronous/synchronous [1,2] ortho path, an asynchronous [1,3] meta path, and a synchronous [1,3] meta path.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

A theoretical insight into the photophysics of psoralen

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Luis Serrano-Andrés; Manuela Merchán

Psoralen photophysics has been studied on quantum chemistry grounds using the multiconfigurational second-order perturbation method CASPT2. Absorption and emission spectra of the system have been rationalized by computing the energies and properties of the low-lying singlet and triplet excited states. The S1 pipi* state has been determined to be responsible of the lowest absorption and fluorescence bands and to initially carry the population in the photophysical processes related to the phototherapeutic properties of psoralen derivatives. The low-lying T1 pipi* state is, on the other hand, protagonist of the phosphorescence, and its prevalent role in the reactivity of psoralen is suggested to be related to the elongation of the pyrone ring C3-C4 bond, where the spin density is distributed on both carbon atoms. Analysis of energy gaps and spin-orbit coupling elements indicates that the efficient photophysical process leading to the population of the lowest triplet state does not take place at the Franck-Condon region but along the S1 relaxation path.


Pure and Applied Chemistry | 2009

The role of pyrimidine nucleobase excimers in DNA photophysics and photoreactivity

Israel González-Ramírez; Teresa Climent; Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Remedios González-Luque; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés

Quantum chemical studies using the accurate CASPT2//CASSCF procedure show that π-stacked interactions in biochromophores such as pyrimidine (Pyr) DNA/RNA nucleobases pairs yield excimer-like situations which behave as precursors of processes like charge transfer (CT) or photoreactivity and are the source of the emissive properties in DNA. Examples are the CT between adjacent DNA nucleobases in a strand of oligonucleotides and the photodimerization taking place in cytosine (C) pairs leading to cyclobutanecytosine (CBC) mutants. These processes take place through nonadiabatic photochemical mechanisms whose evolution is determined by the presence and accessibility of conical intersections (CIs) and other surface crossings between different electronic states.


Molecular Physics | 2012

The extended S1/S0 conical intersection seam for the photochemical 2 + 2 cycloaddition of two ethylene molecules

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Michael J. Bearpark; Michael A. Robb

The extended S1/S0 conical intersection seam for the photochemical 2s + 2s, 2s + 2a and 2a + 2a cycloadditions of two ethylene molecules has been documented using the methodology described by Sicilia et al. (J. Chem. Theory Comput. 4, 257 (2008)). Two additional critical points on this prototype crossing seam were found as a result, although both lie more than 100 kcal mol−1 above the rhomboidal crossing located previously, and are not minima in the intersection space. Using VB theory, the branching space conditions for the conical intersection can be derived analytically, in fair agreement with calculated CASSCF results. Woodward–Hoffmann symmetry forbidden and allowed reactions are associated with the same extended conical intersection seam in this case.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2007

On the intrinsic population of the lowest triplet state of thymine.

Juan José Serrano-Pérez; Remedios González-Luque; Manuela Merchán; Luis Serrano-Andrés

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