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Featured researches published by Juan Marco-Martínez.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2014

Chiral Fullerenes from Asymmetric Catalysis

Enrique E. Maroto; Marta Izquierdo; Silvia Reboredo; Juan Marco-Martínez; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín

Fullerenes are among the most studied molecules during the last three decades, and therefore, a huge number of chemical reactions have been tested on these new carbon allotropes. However, the aim of most of the reactions carried out on fullerenes has been to afford chemically modified fullerenes that are soluble in organic solvents or even water in the search for different mechanical, optical, or electronic properties. Therefore, although a lot of effort has been devoted to the chemical functionalization of these molecular allotropes of carbon, important aspects in the chemistry of fullerenes have not been properly addressed. In particular, the synthesis of chiral fullerenes at will in an efficient manner using asymmetric catalysis has not been previously addressed in fullerene science. Thus, despite the fact that the chirality of fullerenes has always been considered a fundamental issue, the lack of a general stereoselective synthetic methodology has restricted the use of enantiopure fullerene derivatives, which have usually been obtained only after highly expensive HPLC isolation on specific chiral columns or prepared from a pool of chiral starting materials. In this Account, we describe the first stereodivergent catalytic enantioselective syntheses in fullerene science, which have allowed the highly efficient synthesis of enantiomerically pure derivatives with total control of the stereochemical result using metallic catalysts and/or organocatalysts under very mild conditions. Density functional theory calculations strongly support the experimental findings for the assignment of the absolute configuration of the new stereocenters, which has also been ascertained by application of the sector rule and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The use of the curved double bond of fullerene cages as a two-π-electron component in a variety of stereoselective cycloaddition reactions represents a challenging goal considering that, in contrast to most of the substituted olefins used in these reactions, pristine fullerene is a noncoordinating dipolarophile. The aforementioned features make the study of stereoselective 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions onto fullerenes a unique scenario to shed light onto important mechanistic aspects. On the other hand, the availability of achiral starting materials as well as the use of nonexpensive asymmetric catalysts should provide access to chiral fullerenes and their further application in a variety of different fields. In this regard, in addition to biomedical applications, chiral fullerenes are of interest in less-studied areas such as materials science, organic electronics, and nanoscience, where control of the order and morphology at the nanometer scale are critical issues for achieving better device efficiencies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Enantioselective Cycloaddition of Münchnones onto [60]Fullerene: Organocatalysis versus Metal Catalysis

Juan Marco-Martínez; Silvia Reboredo; Marta Izquierdo; Vanesa Marcos; Juan Luis López; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín

Novel chiral catalytic systems based on both organic compounds and metal salts have been developed for the enantioselective [3 + 2] cycloaddition of münchnones onto fullerenes and olefins. These two different approaches proved to be efficient and complementary in the synthesis of optically active pyrrolino[3,4:1,2][60]fullerenes with high levels of enantiomeric excess and moderate to good conversions. Further functionalization of the pyrrolinofullerene carboxylic acid derivatives has been carried out by esterification and amidation reactions.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2016

Synthesis of modified fullerenes for oxygen reduction reactions

Rosa M. Girón; Juan Marco-Martínez; Sebastiano Bellani; Alberto Insuasty; Hansel Comas Rojas; Gabriele Tullii; Maria Rosa Antognazza; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín

The oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is a key process common in several energy converting systems or electro-chemical technologies such as fuel cells, metal–air batteries, oxygen sensors, etc., which is based on the use of expensive and scarcely available platinum metal. In the search for carbon-based catalysts for ORRs, two different classes of new fullerene hybrids and metal-free fullerene derivatives endowed with suitable active sites have been prepared by highly selective metal- and organo-catalyzed synthetic methodologies. Along with their classical behavior as electron acceptors in polymer-based photo-electrochemical cells, the new fullerene derivatives are able to efficiently catalyze ORRs by using no metals or very low amounts of metals. Remarkably, the activity of metal-free fullerenes has proved to be as high as that observed for metallofullerenes bearing noble metals, and up to ten-fold higher than that of PCBM.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

Stereodivergent-at-Metal Synthesis of [60]Fullerene Hybrids

Juan Marco-Martínez; Sara Vidal; Israel Fernández; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín

Chiral fullerene-metal hybrids with complete control over the four stereogenic centers, including the absolute configuration of the metal atom, have been synthesized for the first time. The stereochemistry of the four chiral centers formed during [60]fullerene functionalization is the result of both the chiral catalysts employed and the diastereoselective addition of the metal complexes used (iridium, rhodium, or ruthenium). DFT calculations underpin the observed configurational stability at the metal center, which does not undergo an epimerization process.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Supramolecular One-Dimensional n/p-Nanofibers.

Alberto Insuasty; Carmen Atienza; Juan Luis López; Juan Marco-Martínez; Santiago Casado; Avishek Saha; Dirk M. Guldi; Nazario Martín

Currently, there is a broad interest in the control over creating ordered electroactive nanostructures, in which electron donors and acceptors are organized at similar length scales. In this article, a simple and efficient procedure is reported en-route towards the construction of 1D arrays of crystalline pristine C60 and phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) coated onto supramolecular fibers based on exTTF-pentapeptides. The resulting n/p-nanohybrids have been fully characterized by a variety of spectroscopic (FTIR, UV-Vis, circular dichroism, Raman and transient absorption), microscopic (AFM, TEM, and SEM), and powder diffraction (X-ray) techniques. Our experimental findings document the tendency of electroactive exTTF-fibers to induce the crystallization of C60 and PCBM, on one hand, and to afford 1D n/p-nanohybrids, on the other hand. Furthermore, photogenerated radical ion pairs, formed upon visible light irradiation of the n/p-nanohybrids, feature lifetimes on the range of 0.9–1.2 ns.


Angewandte Chemie | 2013

Asymmetric Organocatalysis in Fullerenes Chemistry: Enantioselective Phosphine‐catalyzed Cycloaddition of Allenoates onto C60

Juan Marco-Martínez; Vanesa Marcos; Silvia Reboredo; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín


Chemical Communications | 2017

Fullerenes for catalysis: metallofullerenes in hydrogen transfer reactions

Sara Vidal; Juan Marco-Martínez; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín


Faraday Discussions | 2014

Organocatalysis for new chiral fullerene-based materials

Rosa M. Girón; Silvia Reboredo; Juan Marco-Martínez; Salvatore Filippone; Nazario Martín


229th ECS Meeting (May 29 - June 2, 2016) | 2016

(Invited) Fullerenes for Catalysis: C 60 As Molecular Vector in Hydrogen Transfer Reactions

Nazario Martín; Salvatore Filippone; Sara Vidal; Juan Marco-Martínez


223rd ECS Meeting (May 12-17, 2013) | 2013

Invited) Organocatalysis in Fullerene Chemistry

Nazario Martín; Salvatore Filippone; Juan Marco-Martínez; Vanesa Marcos; Silvia Reboredo

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Nazario Martín

Complutense University of Madrid

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Salvatore Filippone

Complutense University of Madrid

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Silvia Reboredo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Sara Vidal

Complutense University of Madrid

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Vanesa Marcos

University of Manchester

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Alberto Insuasty

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan Luis López

Complutense University of Madrid

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Marta Izquierdo

Complutense University of Madrid

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Rosa M. Girón

Complutense University of Madrid

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Carmen Atienza

Complutense University of Madrid

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