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Dive into the research topics where Julius F. Kögel is active.

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Featured researches published by Julius F. Kögel.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2015

New aspects in bis and tris(dipyrrinato)metal complexes: bright luminescence, self-assembled nanoarchitectures, and materials applications

Ryota Sakamoto; Toshiki Iwashima; Mizuho Tsuchiya; Ryojun Toyoda; Ryota Matsuoka; Julius F. Kögel; Shinpei Kusaka; Ken Hoshiko; Toshiki Yagi; Tatsuhiro Nagayama; Hiroshi Nishihara

Dipyrrins serve as monovalent bidentate ligand molecules that coordinate to various cations. Their BF2 complexes, 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene and its derivatives (BODIPYs), exhibit excellent photostability, strong light absorption, and high fluorescence quantum yield, thereby encouraging their application in various fields, e.g., as biological and biomedical fluorescent markers. Dipyrrin may also accept a wide variety of metal ions spontaneously. However, dipyrrin metal complexes have been disregarded from materials science research. This review article summarizes recent progress in bis(dipyrrinato)metal(II) and tris(dipyrrinato)metal(III) complexes from the viewpoint of materials chemistry. Section 2 describes a series of efforts aimed to realize intense luminescence superior to or comparable with that of BODIPYs. The spontaneous coordination of these complexes enables them to construct self-assembled nanoarchitectures, such as supramolecules and coordination polymers that form one-dimensional nanowires, two-dimensional nanosheets, and metal–organic frameworks. Section 3 describes such alluring molecular superstructures. Section 4 discusses potential applications based on these nanoarchitectures, such as thermoelectric and photoelectric conversion.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Heteroleptic [Bis(oxazoline)](dipyrrinato)zinc(II) Complexes: Bright and Circularly Polarized Luminescence from an Originally Achiral Dipyrrinato Ligand

Julius F. Kögel; Shinpei Kusaka; Ryota Sakamoto; Toshiki Iwashima; Mizuho Tsuchiya; Ryojun Toyoda; Ryota Matsuoka; Takamasa Tsukamoto; Junpei Yuasa; Yasutaka Kitagawa; Tsuyoshi Kawai; Hiroshi Nishihara

Heteroleptic zinc(II) complexes synthesized using achiral dipyrrinato and chiral bis(oxazoline) ligands show bright fluorescence with quantum efficiencies of up to 0.70. The fluorescence originates from the (1)π-π* photoexcited state localized exclusively on the dipyrrinato ligand. Furthermore, the luminescence is circularly polarized despite the achirality of the dipyrrinato ligand. Single-crystal X-ray structure analysis discloses that the chiral bis(oxazoline) ligand undergoes intramolecular π-π stacking with the dipyrrinato ligand, inducing axial chirality in the dipyrrinato moiety.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

A new synthetic pathway to the second and third generation of superbasic bisphosphazene proton sponges: the run for the best chelating ligand for a proton.

Julius F. Kögel; Benjamin Oelkers; Borislav Kovačević; Jörg Sundermeyer

We present the up to now strongest chelating neutral pincer ligand for the simplest electrophile of chemistry, the proton. Two novel bisphosphazene proton sponges, 1,8-bis(trispyrrolidinophosphazenyl)naphthalene (TPPN) and its higher homologue P2-TPPN, were obtained via a Staudinger reaction and investigated concerning their structural features and basic properties by experimental and computational means. They exhibit experimental pK(BH)(+) values in acetonitrile of 32.3 and 42.1, respectively, exceeding the existing basicitiy record for proton sponges by more than 10 orders of magnitude. We show that Schwesingers concept of homologization of phosphazene bases and Alders concept of proton chelation in a constrained geometry regime of basic centers can be combined in the design of highly basic nonionic superbases of pincer type.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Dissymmetric Bis(dipyrrinato)Zinc(II) Complexes: Rich Variety and Bright Red to Near-Infrared Luminescence with a Large Pseudo-Stokes Shift

Ryota Sakamoto; Toshiki Iwashima; Julius F. Kögel; Shinpei Kusaka; Mizuho Tsuchiya; Yasutaka Kitagawa; Hiroshi Nishihara

Bis(dipyrrinato)metal(II) and tris(dipyrrinato)metal(III) complexes have been regarded as much less useful luminophores than their boron difluoride counterparts (4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacenes, BODIPYs), especially in polar solvent. We proposed previously that dissymmetry in such metal complexes (i.e., two different dipyrrinato ligands in one molecule) improves their fluorescence quantum efficiencies. In this work, we demonstrate the universality and utility of our methodology by synthesizing eight new dissymmetric bis(dipyrrinato)zinc(II) complexes and comparing them with corresponding symmetric complexes. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis, (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, and high-resolution mass spectrometry confirm the retention of dissymmetry in both solution and solid states. The dissymmetric complexes all show greater photoluminescence (PL) quantum yields (ϕPL) than the corresponding symmetric complexes, allowing red to near-infrared emissions with large pseudo-Stokes shifts. The best performance achieves a maximum PL wavelength of 671 nm, a pseudo-Stokes shift of 5400 cm(-1), and ϕPL of 0.62-0.72 in toluene (dielectric constant εs = 2.4), dichloromethane (εs = 9.1), acetone (εs = 21.4), and ethanol (εs = 24.3). The large pseudo-Stokes shift is distinctive considering BODIPYs with small Stokes shifts (∼500 cm(-1)), and the ϕPL values are higher than or comparable to those of BODIPYs fluorescing at similar wavelengths. Electrochemistry and density functional theory calculations illustrate that frontier orbital ordering in the dissymmetric complexes meets the condition for efficient PL proposed in our theory.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Superbasic Alkyl‐Substituted Bisphosphazene Proton Sponges: Synthesis, Structural Features, Thermodynamic and Kinetic Basicity, Nucleophilicity and Coordination Chemistry

Julius F. Kögel; Xiulan Xie; Eduard Baal; Donatas Gesevičius; Benjamin Oelkers; Borislav Kovačević; Jörg Sundermeyer

Herein we describe an easily accessible class of superbasic proton sponges based on the 1,8-bisphosphazenylnaphthalene (PN) proton pincer motif and P-alkyl substituents ranging from methyl (TMPN) to n-butyl (TBPN), isopropyl (TiPrPN) and cyclopentyl (TcyPPN). These neutral bases with a pK(BH)(+) value (MeCN) of ~30 were accessible via a Kirsanov condensation using commercially available 1,8-diaminonaphthalene, and in case of TMPN and TBPN, simple one-pot procedures starting from trisalkylphosphanes can be performed. Furthermore, the known pyrrolidinyl-substituted superbase TPPN previously synthesized via a Staudinger reaction could also be prepared by the Kirsanov strategy allowing its preparation in a larger scale. The four alkyl-substituted proton sponges were structurally characterized in their protonated form; molecular XRD structures were also obtained for unprotonated TiPrPN and TcyPPN. Moreover, we present a detailed description of spectroscopic features of chelating bisphosphazenes including TPPN and its hyperbasic homologue P2-TPPN on which we reported recently. The four alkyl-substituted superbases were investigated with respect to their basic features by computational means and by NMR titration experiments revealing unexpectedly high experimental pK(BH)(+) values in acetonitrile between 29.3 for TMPN and 30.9 for TBPN. Besides their thermodynamic basicity, we exemplarily studied the kinetic basicity of TMPN and TPPN by means of NMR-spectroscopic methods. Furthermore, the competing nucleophilic versus basic properties were examined by reacting the proton sponges with ethyl iodide. Insight into the coordination chemistry of chelating superbases was provided by reacting TMPN with trimethylaluminum and trimethylgallium to give cationic complexes of Group XIII metal alkyls that were structurally characterized.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Bis(dipyrrinato)zinc(II) Complex Chiroptical Wires: Exfoliation into Single Strands and Intensification of Circularly Polarized Luminescence

Risa Aoki; Ryojun Toyoda; Julius F. Kögel; Ryota Sakamoto; Jatish Kumar; Yasutaka Kitagawa; Koji Harano; Tsuyoshi Kawai; Hiroshi Nishihara

One-dimensional (1D) coordination polymers (CPs) experiences limitations in exfoliation into individual strands, which hamper their utility as functional 1D nanomaterials. Here we synthesize chiral 1D-CPs that feature the bis(dipyrrinato)zinc(II) complex motif. They can be exfoliated into single strands upon sonication in organic media, retaining lengths of up to 3.19 μm (ca. 2600 monomer units). Their chiroptical structure allows the exfoliated wires to show circularly polarized luminescence at an intensity 5.9 times that of reference monomer complexes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Experimental Basicities of Phosphazene, Guanidinophosphazene, and Proton Sponge Superbases in the Gas Phase and Solution.

Ivari Kaljurand; Jaan Saame; Toomas Rodima; Ivar Koppel; Ilmar A. Koppel; Julius F. Kögel; Jörg Sundermeyer; Uwe Köhn; Martyn P. Coles; Ivo Leito

Experimental gas-phase superbasicity scale spanning 20 orders of magnitude and ranging from bicyclic guanidine 7-methyl-1,5,7-triazabicyclo[4.4.0]dec-5-ene to triguanidinophosphazenes and P3 phosphazenes is presented together with solution basicity data in acetonitrile and tetrahydrofuran. The most basic compound in the scale-triguanidinophosphazene Et-N═P[N═C(NMe2)2]3-has the highest experimental gas-phase basicity of an organic base ever reported: 273.9 kcal mol(-1). The scale includes besides the higher homologues of classical superbasic phosphazenes and several guanidino-substituted phosphazenes also a number of recently introduced bisphosphazene and bis-guanidino proton sponges. This advancement was made possible by a newly designed Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) mass spectrometry setup with the unique ability to generate and control in the ICR cell sufficient vapor pressures of two delicate compounds having low volatility, which enables determining their basicity difference. The obtained experimental gas-phase and solution basicity data are analyzed in terms of structural and solvent effects and compared with data from theoretical calculations.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Fluoro‐ and Perfluoralkylsulfonylpentafluoroanilides: Synthesis and Characterization of NH Acids for Weakly Coordinating Anions and Their Gas‐Phase and Solution Acidities

Julius F. Kögel; Thomas Linder; Fabian G. Schröder; Jörg Sundermeyer; Sascha K. Goll; Daniel Himmel; Ingo Krossing; Karl Kütt; Jaan Saame; Ivo Leito

Fluoro- and perfluoralkylsulfonyl pentafluoroanilides [HN(C6F5)(SO2X); X = F, CF3, C4F9, C8F17] are a class of imides with two different strongly electron-withdrawing substituents attached to a nitrogen atom. They are NH acids, the unsymmetrical hybrids of the well-known symmetrical bissulfonylimides and bispentafluorophenylamine. The syntheses, the structures of these perfluoroanilides, their solvates, and some selected lithium salts give rise to a structural variety beyond the symmetrical parent compounds. The acidities of representative subsets of these novel NH acids have been investigated experimentally and quantum-chemically and their gas-phase acidities (GAs) are reported, as well as the pKa values of these compounds in acetonitrile (MeCN) and DMSO solution. In quantum chemical investigations with the vertical and relaxed COSMO cluster-continuum models (vCCC/rCCC), the unusual situation is encountered that the DMSO-solvated acid Me2SO-H-N(SO2CF3)2, optimized in the gas phase (vCCC model), dissociates to Me2SO-H(+)-N(SO2CF3)2(-) during structural relaxation and full optimization with the solvation model turned on (rCCC model). This proton transfer underlines the extremely high acidity of HN(SO2CF3)2. The importance of this effect is studied computationally in DMSO and MeCN solution. Usually this effect is less pronounced in MeCN and is of higher importance in the more basic solvent DMSO. Nevertheless, the neglect of the structural relaxation upon solvation causes typical changes in the computational pKa values of 1 to 4 orders of magnitude (4-20 kJ mol(-1)). The results provide evidence that the published experimental DMSO pKa value of HN(SO2CF3)2 should rather be interpreted as the pKa of a Me2SO-H(+)-N(SO2CF3)2(-) contact ion pair.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

The new NH-acid HN(C6F5)(C(CF3)3) and its crystalline and volatile alkaline and earth alkaline metal salts.

Julius F. Kögel; Lars H. Finger; Nicolas Frank; Jörg Sundermeyer

Herein we report on the new NH-acid N-(2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorophenyl)-N-nonafluoro-tert-butylamine, HN(C6F5)(C(CF3)3), bearing two different sterically demanding and strongly electron-withdrawing perfluorinated amine substituents. The title compound and seven of its alkaline and alkaline earth metal salts were synthesized and investigated concerning their thermal, spectroscopic, and structural properties. The Li, Na, K, Cs, and Mg salts were investigated by single-crystal XRD analysis. The molecular structures reveal interesting motifs such as manifold fluorine metal secondary interactions. The lithium and magnesium compounds exhibit a remarkable thermal stability and an unexpectedly high volatility. We believe that this report will provoke investigations to apply the corresponding anion in ionic liquids, in lithium electrolytes, and as a weakly electron-donating ligand in the preparation of highly Lewis-acidic main group, rare earth, or transition metal complexes.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017

Chelating P2‐Bis‐phosphazenes with a (R,R)‐1,2‐Diaminocyclohexane Skeleton: Two New Chiral Superbases

Julius F. Kögel; Borislav Kovačević; Sebastian Ullrich; Xiulan Xie; Jörg Sundermeyer

The linkage of two P2 -phosphazenyl groups through a C2 -symmetric (R,R)-1,2-diaminocyclohexane (DACH) backbone yielded the new chiral superbases DACH-P2 NMe2 and DACH-P2 Pyr (Pyr=pyrrolidinyl). These bases were prepared by a Kirsanov reaction and studied with respect to their spectroscopic and structural characteristics. Theoretical calculations concerning their basicity properties revealed remarkable pKBH+ values of 38.1 and 39.9 on the acetonitrile scale; this makes them the strongest nonionic chiral superbases known to date.

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