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Dive into the research topics where Marco Ruzzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco Ruzzi.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Interplay of Charge State, Lability, and Magnetism in the Molecule-like Au25(SR)18 Cluster

Sabrina Antonello; Neranjan V. Perera; Marco Ruzzi; José A. Gascón; Flavio Maran

Au25(SR)18 (R = -CH2-CH2-Ph) is a molecule-like nanocluster displaying distinct electrochemical and optical features. Although it is often taken as an example of a particularly well-understood cluster, very recent literature has provided a quite unclear or even a controversial description of its properties. We prepared monodisperse Au25(SR)18(0) and studied by cyclic voltammetry, under particularly controlled conditions, the kinetics of its reduction or oxidation to a series of charge states, -2, -1, +1, +2, and +3. For each electrode process, we determined the standard heterogeneous electron-transfer (ET) rate constants and the reorganization energies. The latter points to a relatively large inner reorganization. Reduction to form Au25(SR)18(2-) and oxidation to form Au25(SR)18(2+) and Au25(SR)18(3+) are chemically irreversible. The corresponding decay rate constants and lifetimes are incompatible with interpretations of very recent literature reports. The problem of how ET affects the Au25 magnetism was addressed by comparing the continuous-wave electron paramagnetic resonance (cw-EPR) behaviors of radical Au25(SR)18(0) and its oxidation product, Au25(SR)18(+). As opposed to recent experimental and computational results, our study provides compelling evidence that the latter is a diamagnetic species. The DFT-computed optical absorption spectra and density of states of the -1, 0, and +1 charge states nicely reproduced the experimentally estimated dependence of the HOMO-LUMO energy gap on the actual charge carried by the cluster. The conclusions about the magnetism of the 0 and +1 charge states were also reproduced, stressing that the three HOMOs are not virtually degenerate as routinely assumed: In particular, the splitting of the HOMO manifold in the cation species is severe, suggesting that the usefulness of the superatom interpretation is limited. The electrochemical, EPR, and computational results thus provide a self-consistent picture of the properties of Au25(SR)18 as a function of its charge state and may furnish a methodology blueprint for understanding the redox and magnetic behaviors of similar molecule-like gold nanoclusters.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2001

Efficient Charge Separation in Porphyrin-Fullerene-Ligand Complexes

Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato; Dirk M. Guldi; Marco Ruzzi; Luigi Pasimeni

Photoprocesses associated with the complexation of a pyridine-functionalized C60 fullerene derivative to ruthenium- and zinc-tetraphenylporphyrins (tpp) have been studied by time-resolved optical and transient EPR spectroscopies. It has been found that upon irradiation in toluene, a highly efficient triplet-triplet energy transfer governs the deactivation of the photoexcited [Ru(tpp)], while electron transfer (ET) from the porphyrin to the fullerene prevails in polar solvents. Complexation of [Zn(tpp)] by the fullerene derivative is reversible and, following excitation of the [Zn(tpp)], gives rise to very efficient charge separation. In fluid polar solvents such as THF and benzonitrile, radical-ion pairs (RPs) are generated both by intramolecular ET inside the complex and by intermolecular ET in the uncomplexed form. Charge-separated states have lifetimes of about 10 micros in THF and several hundred of microseconds in benzonitrile at room temperature.


ACS Nano | 2014

Au25(SEt)18, a Nearly Naked Thiolate-Protected Au25 Cluster: Structural Analysis by Single Crystal X-ray Crystallography and Electron Nuclear Double Resonance

Tiziano Dainese; Sabrina Antonello; José A. Gascón; Fangfang Pan; Neranjan V. Perera; Marco Ruzzi; Alfonso Venzo; Alfonso Zoleo; Kari Rissanen; Flavio Maran

X-ray crystallography has been fundamental in discovering fine structural features of ultrasmall gold clusters capped by thiolated ligands. For still unknown structures, however, new tools capable of providing relevant structural information are sought. We prepared a 25-gold atom nanocluster protected by the smallest ligand ever used, ethanethiol. This cluster displays the electrochemistry, mass spectrometry, and UV-vis absorption spectroscopy features of similar Au25 clusters protected by 18 thiolated ligands. The anionic and the neutral form of Au25(SEt)18 were fully characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, which confirmed the monolayers properties and the paramagnetism of neutral Au25(SEt)18(0). X-ray crystallography analysis of the latter provided the first known structure of a gold cluster protected by a simple, linear alkanethiolate. Here, we also report the direct observation by electron nuclear double resonance (ENDOR) of hyperfine interactions between a surface-delocalized unpaired electron and the gold atoms of a nanocluster. The advantages of knowing the exact molecular structure and having used such a small ligand allowed us to compare the experimental values of hyperfine couplings with DFT calculations unaffected by structures approximations or omissions.


ACS Nano | 2014

Gold nanowired: a linear (Au25)(n) polymer from Au25 molecular clusters.

Marco De Nardi; Sabrina Antonello; De-en Jiang; Fangfang Pan; Kari Rissanen; Marco Ruzzi; Alfonso Venzo; Alfonso Zoleo; Flavio Maran

Au25(SR)18 has provided fundamental insights into the properties of clusters protected by monolayers of thiolated ligands (SR). Because of its ultrasmall core, 1 nm, Au25(SR)18 displays molecular behavior. We prepared a Au25 cluster capped by n-butanethiolates (SBu), obtained its structure by single-crystal X-ray crystallography, and studied its properties both experimentally and theoretically. Whereas in solution Au25(SBu)18(0) is a paramagnetic molecule, in the crystal it becomes a linear polymer of Au25 clusters connected via single Au-Au bonds and stabilized by proper orientation of clusters and interdigitation of ligands. At low temperature, [Au25(SBu)18(0)]n has a nonmagnetic ground state and can be described as a one-dimensional antiferromagnetic system. These findings provide a breakthrough into the properties and possible solid-state applications of molecular gold nanowires.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Demonstration of a Chemical Transformation Inside a Fullerene. The Reversible Conversion of the Allotropes of H2@C60

Nicholas J. Turro; Angel A. Martí; Judy Y.-C. Chen; Steffen Jockusch; Ronald G. Lawler; Marco Ruzzi; Elena Sartori; Shih-Ching Chuang; Koichi Komatsu; Yasujiro Murata

The interconversion of the two allotropes of the hydrogen molecule (para-H2 and ortho-H2) incarcerated inside the fullerene C60 is reported (oH2@C60 and pH2@C60, respectively). For conversion, oH2@C60 was adsorbed at the external surface of the zeolite NaY and immersed into liquid oxygen at 77 K. Equilibrium was reached in less than 0.5 h. Rapid removal of oxygen provides a sample of enriched pH2@C60 that is stable for many days in the absence of paramagnetic catalysts (half-life approximately 15 days). Enriched pH2@C60 is nonvolatile and soluble in organic solvents. At room temperature in the presence of a paramagnetic catalyst (dissolved O2 or the nitroxide Tempo) a slow back conversion into oH2@C60 was observed by 1H NMR. A bimolecular rate constant for conversion of pH2@C60 to oH2@C60 using Tempo of kTempo approximately 4 x 10-5 M-1 s-1 was observed, which is approximately 3 orders of magnitudes slower than that for dissolved pH2 in organic solvents which is not protected by the C60 shell.


Applied Magnetic Resonance | 1997

Spin polarization in fullerene derivatives containing a nitroxide group. Observation of the intermediate photoexcited quartet state in radical triplet pair interaction

Carlo Corvaja; Michele Maggini; Marco Ruzzi; Gianfranco Scorrano; Antonio Toffoletti

A series of C60 fullerene derivatives containing a nitroxide group has been photoexcited by short LASER pulses in the microwave cavity of a cw-EPR spectrometer. Strongly spin polarized signals have been observed, in glassy matrix as well as in liquid solution, for both the ground electronic state and the excited quartet state. In the quartet state the excitation resides in the fullerene part and the molecule constitutes a triplet-radical pair with the partner covalently linked. The absorptive or emissive character of the transitions is explained in terms of the mechanism of radicaltriplet interaction producing spin polarization. Opposite initial sign and polarization patterns are observed for molecules with different spacer between nitroxide and fullerene. The time evolution of the relevant sublevel populations is fitted by a kinetic model taking into account quartet decay constants, quartet and doublet spin-lattice relaxation rates and branching ratios.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Magnetic Properties and Vapochromic Reversible Guest-Induced Transformation in a Bispyrazolato Copper(II) Polymer: an Experimental and Dispersion-Corrected Density Functional Theory Study

Alessandro Bencini; Maurizio Casarin; Daniel Forrer; Lorenzo Franco; Federica Garau; Norberto Masciocchi; Luciano Pandolfo; Claudio Pettinari; Marco Ruzzi; Andrea Vittadini

Dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D) calculations, Electron Spin Resonance spectroscopy (EPR), and variable temperature magnetic moment measurements were used to investigate the structure and the electronic/magnetic properties of bispyrazolato-copper(II) coordination polymer and of its hydration product. The Cu(II) ions are antiferromagnetically coupled through the sigma system of the pyrazolate rings in both compounds. Theoretical electron density maps reveal that water molecules interact simultaneously and to a comparable extent with two Cu(II) centers (through the electronegative O end) and two pyrazolate rings (through the partly positively charged H atoms), which is compatible with the observed internuclear distances. DFT-D calculations indicate that low kinetic barriers are involved in the rearrangement of the host structure.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Paramagnet enhanced nuclear relaxation of H2 in organic solvents and in H2@C60.

Elena Sartori; Marco Ruzzi; Nicholas J. Turro; Koichi Komatsu; Yasujiro Murata; Ronald G. Lawler; Anatoly L. Buchachenko

We have measured the bimolecular contribution (relaxivity) R1 (M(-1) s(-1)) to the spin-lattice relaxation rate for the protons of H2 and H2@C60 dissolved in organic solvents in the presence of paramagnet nitroxide radicals. It is found that the relaxation effect of the paramagnets is enhanced 5-fold in H2@C60 compared to H2 under the same conditions. 13C relaxivity in C60 induced by nitroxide has also been measured. The resulting value of R1 for 13C is substantially smaller relative to the 1H relaxation in H2@C60 than expected solely on the basis of the smaller magnetic moment of 13C. The observed values of R1 have been analyzed quantitatively using an outer-sphere model for bimolecular spin relaxation to extract an encounter distance, d, as the dependent variable. The resulting values of d for H2 and (13)C60 are similar to the sum of the van der Waals radii for the radical and the corresponding molecule. The value of d for (1)H2@C60 is substantially smaller than the corresponding van der Waals estimates, corresponding to larger than expected values of R1. A possible explanation for the enhanced relaxivity is a contribution from hyperfine coupling. Based on the results reported here, it seems that not only is the hydrogen molecule in H2@C60 not insulated from magnetic contact with the outside world but also the interaction with paramagnets is even stronger than expected based on distance alone.


Chemical Communications | 2002

Solar cells based on a fullerene–azothiophene dyad

Michele Maggini; Giorgia Possamai; Enzo Menna; Gianfranco Scorrano; Nadia Camaioni; Giovanni Ridolfi; G. Casalbore-Miceli; Lorenzo Franco; Marco Ruzzi; Carlo Corvaja

A power conversion efficiency of 0.37%, under white light of 80 mW cm-2 intensity, was obtained when a fullerene-azothiophene dyad was used as the active layer of a photovoltaic cell.


Chemical Communications | 1999

A noncovalently linked, dynamic fullerene porphyrin dyad. Efficient formation of long-lived charge separated states through complex dissociation

Tatiana Da Ros; Maurizio Prato; Dirk M. Guldi; Enzo Alessio; Marco Ruzzi; Luigi Pasimeni

Photoexcitation of a Zn–tetraphenyl porphyrin–fullerene complex leads to electron-transfer with very long lifetimes of the charge-separated pairs.

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