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Dive into the research topics where María Moreno Oliva is active.

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Featured researches published by María Moreno Oliva.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Do [all]-S,S'-dioxide oligothiophenes show electronic and optical properties of oligoenes and/or of oligothiophenes?

María Moreno Oliva; Juan Casado; Juan T. López Navarrete; Serguei Patchkovskii; Theodore Goodson; Michael R. Harpham; J. Sérgio Seixas de Melo; Elizabeta Amir; Shlomo Rozen

A comprehensive photophysical and spectroscopic (electronic and Raman) study guided by density functional theory, DFT, CIS, and correlated ab initio calculations has been performed on a series of fully oxidized oligothiophenes with variable chain length, and up to four rings. A comparison with the properties of oligoenes and oligothiophenes is proposed. Absorption, fluorescence, lifetimes, flash-photolysis, phosphorescence, two-photon absorption, Raman, resonance Raman, and thermospectroscopy data are collected and interpreted according to the obtained theoretical results. The interest is focused on the ground electronic state and in the low-lying excited electronic states. Full oxygenation of the sulfur atoms of oligothiophenes results in: (i) restricted inter-ring isomerization such as observed from the absorption spectra; (ii) an effective quenching of fluorescence, and (iii) the appearance of dual emission. The emission features are explained by the interference of a dipole-allowed and a dipole-forbidden singlet excited states leading to simultaneous lighting from a local Frenkel and an intramolecular charge transfer photon-releasing configurations. These two excited states contribute to the broadening of the light emission spectrum. These properties highlight the similarity of these samples to that of oligoenes with comparable number of pi-electrons.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Multifaceted Regioregular Oligo(thieno[3,4-b]thiophene)s Enabled by Tunable Quinoidization and Reduced Energy Band Gap.

Feng Liu; Guzmán L. Espejo; Shuhai Qiu; María Moreno Oliva; J. Pina; J. Sérgio Seixas de Melo; Juan Casado; Xiaozhang Zhu

Thiophene-based materials have occupied a crucial position in the development of organic electronics. However, the energy band gaps of oligo- and polythiophenes are difficult to modulate without resorting to push-pull electronic effects. We describe herein a new series of monodisperse oligo(thieno[3,4-b]thiophene) derivatives with well-defined regioregular structures synthesized efficiently by direct C-H arylation. These compounds show a unique palette of colors and amphoteric redox properties with widely tunable energy band gaps. The capacity to stabilize both cations and anions results in both anodic and cathodic electrochromism. Under excitation, these compounds can produce photoionized states able to interconvert into neutral triplet or form these through singlet exciton fission or intersystem crossing. These features arise from a progressive increase in quinoidization on a fully planar platform making the largest effective conjugation length among hetero-oligomers. Oligo(thieno[3,4-b]thiophene)s might represent the more distinctive family of oligothiophenes of this decade.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011

Hexaazatriphenylene (HAT) versus tri-HAT: The Bigger the Better?

Rafael Juárez; María Moreno Oliva; Mar Ramos; José L. Segura; Carlos Alemán; Francisco Rodríguez-Ropero; David Curcó; Francisco Montilla; Veaceslav Coropceanu; Jean-Luc Brédas; Yabing Qi; Antoine Kahn; M. Carmen Ruiz Delgado; Juan Casado; Juan T. López Navarrete

A new hexaazatriphenylene (HAT) derivative formed by the fusion of three HAT units has been prepared and its electronic and molecular structures have been fully characterized by optical and vibrational Raman spectroscopy, electrochemistry, solid-state UV and inverse photoemission spectroscopy (UPS and IPES), and by quantum-chemical calculations. A comparative HAT versus tri-HAT study was performed. The fusion of three HAT molecules causes modifications in the optical and electrochemical properties consistent with enhanced π-electron delocalization attained in a bigger planar core. Such combined experimental and theoretical studies are useful to balance chemical design with supramolecular engineering directed to find enhanced characteristics for new organic semiconductor applications.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Comparison of Thiophene–Pyrrole Oligomers with Oligothiophenes: A Joint Experimental and Theoretical Investigation of Their Structural and Spectroscopic Properties

María Moreno Oliva; Ted M. Pappenfus; Jacob H. Melby; Kathryn M. Schwaderer; Jared C. Johnson; Kari A. McGee; Demetrio A. da Silva Filho; Jean-Luc Brédas; Juan Casado; Juan T. López Navarrete

We have prepared a new series of mixed thiophene-pyrrole oligomers to investigate the electronic benefits arising from the combination of these two heterocycles. The oligomers are functionalized with several hexyl and aryl groups to improve both processability and chemical robustness. An analysis of their spectroscopic (absorption and emission), photophysical, electrochemical, solid state, and vibrational properties is performed in combination with quantum-chemical calculations. This analysis provides relevant information regarding the use of these materials as organic semiconductors. The balance between the high aromatic character of pyrrole and the moderate aromaticity of thiophene allows us to address the impact of the coupling of these heterocycles in conjugated systems. The data are interpreted on the basis of the aromaticity, molecular conformations, ground and excited electronic state structures, frontier orbital topologies and energies, oxidative states, and quinoidal versus aromatic competition.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Ferrocenyl‐Ended Thieno–Vinylene Oligomers: Donor–Acceptor Polarization and Mixed‐Valence Properties with Emphasis on the Raman Mapping of Localized‐to‐Delocalized Transitions

Juan Casado; Sandra Rodríguez González; M. Carmen Ruiz Delgado; María Moreno Oliva; Juan T. López Navarrete; Rubén Caballero; Pilar de la Cruz; Fernando Langa

Whats your role? New oligothiophene-vinylene compounds have been synthesized to study the role of the conjugated chain in two different cases (see scheme; MV=mixed valence). The electronic and molecular structures were analyzed by means of electronic, X-ray photoelectron, and Raman spectroscopy, together with thermo spectroscopy, electrochemistry, and DFT calculations.New oligothiophene-vinylene compounds have been synthesized in order to study the role of the conjugated chain in two different cases: 1) when push-pull action operates between an electron-donor and an electron-acceptor group at the ends of the thiophene-vinylene conjugated chain, and 2) when mixed-valence action is induced by single oxidation of the same chain functionalized at both terminal positions with ferrocene groups leading to competition between the donor groups. The electronic and molecular structures are analyzed by means of electronic, X-ray photoelectron and Raman spectroscopies, together with thermospectroscopy, electrochemistry and density functional theory calculations. The cyclic voltammetry processes have been followed by spectrochemistry. It is shown that the radical cation of the diferrocenyl derivative is a class III mixed-valence system (i.e., fully delocalized) according to its Raman spectrum. Moreover, by Raman thermo-spectroscopy the thermal transition of this radical cation from a delocalized (class III, room temperature) to a localized (class II, -160 degrees C) state is scanned. In all cases the Raman study is paralleled by an electronic absorption spectroscopic analysis. Structure-property relationships are proposed for molecules of two important fields of very active research as that of the non-linear optics (i.e., organic optoelectronic) and that of the mixed-valence systems (i.e., charge-transfer processes).


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Synthesis, Spectroscopy, Nonlinear Optics, and Theoretical Investigations of Thienylethynyl Octopoles with a Tunable Core

María Moreno Oliva; Juan Casado; Juan T. López Navarrete; Gunther Hennrich; Stijn Van Cleuvenbergen; Inge Asselberghs; Koen Clays; M. Carmen Ruiz Delgado; Jean-Luc Brédas; J. Sérgio Seixas de Melo; Luisa De Cola

We have synthesized three new molecules that have three thienylethynyl arms substituting a central benzene core and different electron donor/acceptor groups in the three remaining phenyl positions. The absorption, fluorescence, phosphorescence, and transient triplet-triplet spectra are analyzed in the light of the electronic structure of the ground and excited states obtained from quantum-chemical calculations. From the above, the relevant photophysical data (including quantum yields, lifetimes, and rate constants) could be derived. It was found that the major deactivation pathway is internal conversion, which competes with the fluorescence and intersystem crossing processes. For the three investigated compounds, we provide convincing theoretical support corroborating these findings and further conclusions based on the theoretical information obtained. These molecules are one of the very few cases in which the depolarization ratios, obtained from the NLO optical measurements, clearly reflect the octopolar configuration. Molecular hyperpolarizabilities have been measured and display a typical dependence on the donor-acceptor substitution pattern.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Vibrational fingerprint of the structural tuning in push-pull organic chromophores with quinoid or proaromatic spacers

Juan Casado; María Moreno Oliva; M. Carmen Ruiz Delgado; Juan T. López Navarrete; Luis Sánchez; Nazario Martín; Raquel Andreu; Laura Carrasquer; Javier Garín; Jesús Orduna

The Raman spectra of a series of push-pull molecules containing probenzenoid or quinoid spacers which are substituted with 1,3-dithiol-2-ylidene as donor and dicyano-methylene or barbituric acid as acceptors have been analyzed. The experimental spectra have been assigned and interpreted according to density functional theory calculations. Correlations between the Raman spectra of the isolated spacers and of the substituted molecules have been done. Raman bands in the 1620-1560 cm-1 interval provide vibrational markers of the quinoid<-->aromatic structural evolution. This finding is supported by a careful inspection of geometrical parameters, namely, bond length alteration data and particular bond distances. As a result, the peak positions and relative intensities of these Raman features can be used to evaluate the benzenoid character of the spacer as a function of the donor/acceptor substitution pattern. This paper shows that Raman spectroscopy is a powerful spectroscopic tool for the analysis of the conjugational properties (i.e., intramolecular donor-->acceptor charge transfer) of new organic materials.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Theoretical understanding of the increment of β upon protonation of pyridine peripheral octupolar molecules: Toward nonlinear optical sensors

M. Carmen Ruiz Delgado; Jesús Orduna; María Moreno Oliva; Juan Casado; Juan T. López Navarrete

In this article, we present a computational study of the nonlinear optical properties of pyridine-based octupolar molecules in their neutral and fully triprotonated states. The effect of the core substitution and the degree of conjugation with the periphery has been also established and confirms the possibility of fine-tuning the nonlinear optical response. Computations involving the time-dependent density-functional theory approach serve to further explore the existence of excited states with nonzero dipole moment. From these results, the origin of the high second-order nonlinear optical activity upon protonation is addressed.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Photoinduced Charge Transfer in a Conformational Switching Chlorin Dimer–Azafulleroid in Polar and Nonpolar Media

Taru Nikkonen; María Moreno Oliva; Axel Kahnt; Mikko Muuronen; Juho Helaja; Dirk M. Guldi

In the present study, a biomimetic reaction center model, that is, a molecular triad consisting of a chlorin dimer and an azafulleroid, is synthesized and its photophysical properties are studied in comparison with the corresponding molecular dyad, which consists only of a chlorin monomer and an azafulleroid. As evidenced by (1) H NMR, UV/Vis, and fluorescence spectroscopy, the chlorin dimer-azafulleroid folds in nonpolar media into a C2 -symmetric geometry through hydrogen bonding, resulting in appreciable electronic interactions between the chlorins, whereas in polar media the two chlorins diverge from contact. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy studies reveal longer charge-separated states for the chlorin dimer-azafulleroid; ≈1.6 ns in toluene, compared with the lifetime of ≈0.9 ns for the corresponding chlorin monomer-azafulleroid in toluene. In polar media, for example, benzonitrile, similar charge-separated states are observed, but the lifetimes are inevitably shorter: 65 and 73 ps for the dimeric and monomeric chlorin-azafulleroids, respectively. Nanosecond transient absorption and singlet oxygen phosphorescence studies corroborate that in toluene, the charge-separated state decays indirectly via the triplet excited state to the ground state, whereas in benzonitrile, direct recombination to the ground state is observed. Complementary DFT studies suggest two energy-minima conformations, that is, a folded chlorin dimer-azafulleroid, which is present in nonpolar media, and another conformation in polar media, in which the two hydrophobic chlorins wrap the azafulleroid. Inspection of the frontier molecular orbitals shows that in the folded conformation, the HOMO on each chlorin is equivalent and is shared owing to partial π-π overlap, resulting in delocalization of the conjugated π electrons, whereas the wrapped conformation lacks this stabilization. As such, the longer charge-separated lifetime for the dimer is rationalized by both the electron donor-acceptor separation distance and the stabilization of the radical cation through delocalization. The chlorin folding seems to change the photophysical properties in a manner similar to that observed in the chlorophyll dimer in natural photosynthetic reaction centers.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Synthesis, Aromaticity and Photophysical Behaviour of Ferrocene‐ and Ruthenocene‐Appended Semisynthetic Chlorin Derivatives

Taru Nikkonen; María Moreno Oliva; Stefan Taubert; Michele Melchionna; Axel Kahnt; Juho Helaja

Two novel synthetic strategies to covalently link a metallocene electron-donor unit to a chlorin ring are presented. In one approach, pyropheophorbide a is readily converted into its 13(1) -ferrocenyl dehydro derivative by nucleophilic addition of the ferrocenyl anion to the 13(1) -carbonyl group. In another approach, the corresponding 13(1) -pentamethylruthenocenyl derivative is synthesised from 13(1) -fulvenylchlorin by a facile ligand exchange/deprotonation reaction with the [RuCp*(cod)Cl] (Cp*=pentamethylcyclopentadienyl; cod=1,5-cyclooctadiene) complex. The resulting metallocene-chlorins exhibit reduced aromaticity, which was unequivocally supported by ring-current calculations based on the gauge-including magnetically induced current (GIMIC) method and by calculated nucleus-independent chemical shift (NICS) values. The negative ring current in the isocyclic E ring suggests the antiaromatic character of this moiety and also clarifies the spontaneous reactivity of the complexes with oxygen. The oxidation products were isolated and their electrochemical and photophysical properties were studied. The ruthenocene derivatives turned out to be stable under light irradiation and showed photoinduced charge transfer with charge-separation lifetimes of 152-1029 ps.

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Dirk M. Guldi

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Gunther Hennrich

Autonomous University of Madrid

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