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Dive into the research topics where Justin A. Bogart is active.

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Featured researches published by Justin A. Bogart.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2013

Homoleptic cerium(III) and cerium(IV) nitroxide complexes: significant stabilization of the 4+ oxidation state.

Justin A. Bogart; Andrew J. Lewis; Scott Medling; Nicholas A. Piro; Patrick J. Carroll; Corwin H. Booth; Eric J. Schelter

Electrochemical experiments performed on the complex Ce(IV)[2-((t)BuNO)py]4, where [2-((t)BuNO)py](-) = N-tert-butyl-N-2-pyridylnitroxide, indicate a 2.51 V stabilization of the 4+ oxidation state of Ce compared to [(n)Bu4N]2[Ce(NO3)6] in acetonitrile and a 2.95 V stabilization compared to the standard potential for the ion under aqueous conditions. Density functional theory calculations suggest that this preference for the higher oxidation state is a result of the tetrakis(nitroxide) ligand framework at the Ce cation, which allows for effective electron donation into, and partial covalent overlap with, vacant 4f orbitals with δ symmetry. The results speak to the behavior of CeO2 and related solid solutions in oxygen uptake and transport applications, in particular an inherent local character of bonding that stabilizes the 4+ oxidation state. The results indicate a cerium(IV) complex that has been stabilized to an unprecedented degree through tuning of its ligand-field environment.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

An Operationally Simple Method for Separating the Rare-Earth Elements Neodymium and Dysprosium**

Justin A. Bogart; Connor A. Lippincott; Patrick J. Carroll; Eric J. Schelter

Rare-earth metals are critical components of electronic materials and permanent magnets. Recycling of consumer materials is a promising new source of rare earths. To incentivize recycling there is a clear need for simple methods for targeted separations of mixtures of rare-earth metal salts. Metal complexes of a tripodal nitroxide ligand [{(2-(t) BuNO)C6 H4 CH2 }3 N](3-) (TriNOx(3-) ), feature a size-sensitive aperture formed of its three η(2) -(N,O) ligand arms. Exposure of metal cations in the aperture induces a self-associative equilibrium comprising [M(TriNOx)thf]/ [M(TriNOx)]2 (M=rare-earth metal). Differences in the equilibrium constants (Keq ) for early and late metals enables simple Nd/Dy separations through leaching with a separation ratio SNd/Dy =359.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

DFT Study of the Active Site of the XoxF-Type Natural, Cerium-Dependent Methanol Dehydrogenase Enzyme

Justin A. Bogart; Andrew J. Lewis; Eric J. Schelter

Rare-earth metal cations have recently been demonstrated to be essential co-factors for the growth of the methanotrophic bacterium Methylacidiphilum fumariolicum SolV. A crystal structure of the rare-earth-dependent methanol dehydrogenase (MDH) includes a cerium cation in the active site. Herein, the Ce-MDH active site has been analyzed through DFT calculations. The results show the stability of the Ce(III)-pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) semiquinone configuration. Calculations on the active oxidized form of this complex indicate a 0.81 eV stabilization of the PQQ(0) LUMO at cerium versus calcium, supporting the observation that the cerium cation in the active site confers a competitive advantage to Methylacidiphilum fumariolicum SolV. Using reported aqueous electrochemical data, a semi-empirical correlation was established based on cerium(IV/III) redox potentials. The correlation allowed estimation of the cerium oxidation potential of +1.35 V versus saturated calomel electrode (SCE) in the active site. The results are expected to guide the design of functional model complexes and alcohol-oxidation catalysts based on lanthanide complexes of biologically relevant quinones.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Fine-Tuning the Oxidative Ability of Persistent Radicals: Electrochemical and Computational Studies of Substituted 2-Pyridylhydroxylamines

Justin A. Bogart; Heui Beom Lee; Michael A. Boreen; Minsik Jun; Eric J. Schelter

N-tert-butyl-N-2-pyridylhydroxylamines were synthesized from 2-halopyridines and 2-methyl-2-nitrosopropane using magnesium-halogen exchange. The use of Turbo Grignard generated the metallo-2-pyridyl intermediate more reliably than alkyllithium reagents. The hydroxylamines were characterized using NMR, electrochemistry, and density functional theory. Substitution of the pyridyl ring in the 3-, 4-, and 5-positions was used to vary the potential of the nitroxyl/oxoammonium redox couple by 0.95 V. DFT computations of the electrochemical properties agree with experiment and provide a toolset for the predictive design of pyridyl nitroxides.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Controlled Redox Chemistry at Cerium within a Tripodal Nitroxide Ligand Framework

Justin A. Bogart; Connor A. Lippincott; Patrick J. Carroll; Corwin H. Booth; Eric J. Schelter

Ligand reorganization has been shown to have a profound effect on the outcome of cerium redox chemistry. Through the use of a tethered, tripodal, trianionic nitroxide ligand, [((2-tBuNOH)C6 H4 CH2 )3 N](3-) (TriNOx (3-) ), controlled redox chemistry at cerium was accomplished, and typically reactive complexes of tetravalent cerium were isolated. These included rare cationic complexes [Ce(TriNOx )thf][BAr(F) 4 ], in which Ar(F) =3,5-(CF3 )2 -C6 H3 , and [Ce(TriNOx )py][OTf]. A rare complete Ce-halide series, Ce(TriNOx )X, in which X=F(-) , Cl(-) , Br(-) , I(-) , was also synthesized. The solution chemistry of these complexes was explored through detailed solution-phase electrochemistry and (1) H NMR experiments and showed a unique shift in the ratio of species with inner- and outer-sphere anions with size of the anionic X(-) group. DFT calculations on the series of calculations corroborated the experimental findings.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

A ligand field series for the 4f-block from experimental and DFT computed Ce(IV/III) electrochemical potentials.

Justin A. Bogart; Andrew J. Lewis; Michael A. Boreen; Heui Beom Lee; Scott Medling; Patrick J. Carroll; Corwin H. Booth; Eric J. Schelter

Understanding of the sensitivity of the reduction potential of cerium(IV) cations to ligand field strength has yet to benefit from systematic variation of the ligand environment. Detailed analyses for a series of seven cerium(IV) tetrakis(pyridyl-nitroxide) compounds and their cerium(III) analogues in varying ligand field strengths are presented. Electrochemical, spectroscopic, and computational results reveal a close correlation of electronic properties with ligand substituents. Together with electrochemical data for reported eight-coordinate compounds, DFT calculations reveal a broad range of the cerium(IV/III) redox potentials correlated to ligand field strengths, establishing a semiempirical, predictive model for the modulation of cerium redox thermodynamics and ligand field strengths. Applications over a variety of scientific disciplines make use of the fundamental redox thermodynamics of cerium. Such applications will benefit from a combined experimental and theoretical approach for assessing redox cycling of cerium compounds.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Spontaneous Partitioning of Californium from Curium: Curious Cases from the Crystallization of Curium Coordination Complexes

Samantha K. Cary; Mark A. Silver; Guokui Liu; Jamie C. Wang; Justin A. Bogart; Jared T. Stritzinger; Alexandra A. Arico; Kenneth Hanson; Eric J. Schelter; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

The reaction of (248)CmCl3 with excess 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid (DPA) under mild solvothermal conditions results in crystallization of the tris-chelate complex Cm(HDPA)3 · H2O. Approximately half of the curium remains in solution at the end of this process, and evaporation of the mother liquor results in crystallization of the bis-chelate complex [Cm(HDPA)(H2DPA)(H2O)2Cl]Cl·2H2O. (248)Cm is the daughter of the α decay of (252)Cf and is extracted in high purity from this parent. However, trace amounts of (249,250,251)Cf are still present in all samples of (248)Cm. During the crystallization of Cm(HDPA)3 · H2O and [Cm(HDPA)(H2DPA)(H2O)2Cl]Cl · 2H2O, californium(III) spontaneously separates itself from the curium complexes and is found doped within crystals of DPA in the form of Cf(HDPA)3. These results add to the growing body of evidence that the chemistry of californium is fundamentally different from that of earlier actinides.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Accomplishing simple, solubility-based separations of rare earth elements with complexes bearing size-sensitive molecular apertures

Justin A. Bogart; Bren E. Cole; Michael A. Boreen; Connor A. Lippincott; Brian C. Manor; Patrick J. Carroll; Eric J. Schelter

Significance Rare earth metals, La–Lu, Sc, and Y, are essential components of electronic materials and permanent magnets in diverse technologies. But, their mining and separations chemistry are unsustainable and plagued with supply problems. Recycling of consumer materials containing rare earths is a promising new source of these critical materials but similarly requires efficient separations. We report the use of a tripodal hydroxylaminato ligand, TriNOx3–, with rare earth cations that enable fast, efficient separations through a simple leaching process. This approach is expected to contribute to a new method for recycling postconsumer materials including lighting phosphors and magnets, to diversify and improve the sustainability of the rare earth metal supply chain. Rare earth (RE) metals are critical components of electronic materials and permanent magnets. Recycling of consumer materials is a promising new source of rare REs. To incentivize recycling, there is a clear need for the development of simple methods for targeted separations of mixtures of RE metal salts. Metal complexes of a tripodal hydroxylaminato ligand, TriNOx3–, featured a size-sensitive aperture formed of its three η2-(N,O) ligand arms. Exposure of cations in the aperture induced a self-associative equilibrium comprising RE(TriNOx)THF and [RE(TriNOx)]2 species. Differences in the equilibrium constants Kdimer for early and late metals enabled simple separations through leaching. Separations were performed on RE1/RE2 mixtures, where RE1 = La–Sm and RE2 = Gd–Lu, with emphasis on Eu/Y separations for potential applications in the recycling of phosphor waste from compact fluorescent light bulbs. Using the leaching method, separations factors approaching 2,000 were obtained for early–late RE combinations. Following solvent optimization, >95% pure samples of Eu were obtained with a 67% recovery for the technologically relevant Eu/Y separation.


Dalton Transactions | 2011

Oxidation of a guanine derivative coordinated to a Pt(IV) complex initiated by intermolecular nucleophilic attacks

Sunhee Choi; Michelle L. Personick; Justin A. Bogart; DaWeon Ryu; Romany M. Redman; Edith Laryea-Walker

In this study we report that fac-[Pt(IV)(dach)(9-EtG)Cl(3)](+) (dach = d,l-1,2-diaminocyclohexane, 9-EtG = 9-ethylguanine) in high pH (pH 12) or phosphate solution (pH 7.4) produces 8-oxo-9-EtG and Pt(II) species. The reaction in H(2)(18)O revealed that the oxygen atom in hydroxide or phosphate ends up at the C8 position of 8-oxo-G. The kinetics of the redox reaction was first order with respect to both Pt(IV)-G and free nucleophiles (OH(-) and phosphate). The oxidation of G initiated by hydroxide was approximately 30∼50 times faster than by phosphate in 100 mM NaCl solutions. The large entropy of activation of OH(-1) (ΔS(‡) = 26.6 ± 4.3 J mol(-1) K(-1)) due to the smaller size of OH(-) is interpreted to be responsible for the faster kinetics compared to phosphate (ΔS(‡) = -195.5 ± 11.1 J mol(-1) K(-1)). The enthalpy of activation for phosphate reaction is more favorable relative to the OH(-) reaction (ΔH(‡) = 35.4 ± 3.5 kJ mol(-1) for phosphate vs. 96.6 ± 11.4 kJ mol(-1) for OH(-1)). The kinetic isotope effect of H8 was determined to be 7.2 ± 0.2. The rate law, kinetic isotope effect, and isotopic labeling are consistent with a mechanism involving proton ionization at the C8 position as the rate determining step followed by two-electron transfer from G to Pt(IV).


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis and Characterization of Aluminum Complexes of Redox-Active Pyridyl Nitroxide Ligands

Andrew M. Poitras; Justin A. Bogart; Bren E. Cole; Patrick J. Carroll; Eric J. Schelter; Christopher R. Graves

The aluminum complexes ((R)pyNO(-))2AlCl ((R)pyNO(-) = N-tert-butyl-N-(2-pyridyl)nitroxyl; R = H (1), CH3 (2), CF3 (3)) were prepared in 80-98% yield through the protonolysis reaction between the pyridyl hydroxylamine ligand precursors (R)pyNOH and dimethylaluminum chloride. Complex 1 was also prepared using a salt metathesis route in 92% yield. Complexes 1-3 were characterized using (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopies. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of the complexes revealed that 1-3 are isostructural, with the Al(III) cation in all cases being five coordinate with distorted square pyramidal geometries. The geometry of complex 1 was studied using DFT, which showed primarily ligand-based frontier molecular orbitals. Reaction of 1 with NaOt-Bu gave (pyNO(-))2AlOt-Bu (4), while reaction of 1 with AgBPh4 gave [(pyNO(-))2Al(THF)2][BPh4] (5) in 54% and 87% yields, respectively. Compounds 4 and 5 were both characterized using (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopies and compound 5 by X-ray diffraction. Complexes 1-5 were also characterized by UV-vis electronic absorption spectroscopy and electrochemistry. The cyclic voltammograms of the complexes show two separate oxidation process, the potentials of which are dependent on both the substitution pattern of the (R)pyNO(-) ligands and the anion that completes the aluminum coordination sphere. A correlation was determined between the chemical shift of the t-Bu of the (R)pyNO(-) ligand in the (1)H NMR spectroscopy and the potentials of the redox events for complexes 1-4.

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Eric J. Schelter

University of Pennsylvania

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Bren E. Cole

University of Pennsylvania

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Andrew J. Lewis

University of Pennsylvania

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Corwin H. Booth

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Heui Beom Lee

University of Pennsylvania

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Brian C. Manor

University of Pennsylvania

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