Massimiliano Tomasulo
University of Miami
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Massimiliano Tomasulo.
Organic Letters | 2005
Françisco M. Raymo; Massimiliano Tomasulo
[reaction: see text] We have designed a chromogenic oxazine for the colorimetric detection of cyanide. Indeed, the [1,3]oxazine ring of our compound opens to form a 4-nitrophenylazophenolate chromophore in response to cyanide. This quantitative chromogenic transformation permits the detection of micromolar concentrations of cyanide in water. Furthermore, our chromogenic oxazine is insensitive to the presence of large concentrations of fluoride, chloride, bromide, or iodide anions, which are generally the principal interferents in the colorimetric detection of cyanide.
Langmuir | 2011
Erhan Deniz; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Janet Cusido; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo
The stringent limitations imposed by diffraction on the spatial resolution of fluorescence microscopes demand the identification of viable strategies to switch fluorescence under optical control. In this context, the photoinduced and reversible transformations of photochromic compounds are particularly valuable. In fact, these molecules can be engineered to regulate the emission intensities of complementary fluorophores in response to optical stimulations. On the basis of this general design logic, we assembled a functional molecular construct consisting of a borondipyrromethene fluorophore and a nitrospiropyran photochrome and demonstrated that the emission of the former can be modulated with the interconversion of the latter. This fluorophore-photochrome dyad, however, has a slow switching speed and poor fatigue resistance. To improve both parameters, we developed a new family of photochromic switches based on the photoinduced opening and thermal closing of an oxazine ring. These compounds switch back and forth between ring-closed and -open isomers on nanosecond-microsecond timescales and tolerate thousands of switching cycles with no sign of degradation. In addition, the attachment of appropriate chromophoric fragments to their switchable oxazine ring can be exploited to either deactivate or activate fluorescence reversibly in response to illumination with a pair of exciting beams. Specifically, we assembled three dyads, each based on either a borondipyrromethene or a coumarin fluorophore and an oxazine photochrome, and modulated their fluorescence in a few microseconds with outstanding fatigue resistance. The unique photochemical and photophysical properties of our fluorophore-photochrome dyads can facilitate the development of switchable fluorophores for superresolution imaging and, ultimately, provide valuable molecular probes for the visualization of biological samples on the nanometer level.
Chemical Communications | 2009
Serena Silvi; Edwin C. Constable; Catherine E. Housecroft; Jonathon E. Beves; Emma L. Dunphy; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Françisco M. Raymo; Alberto Credi
Photoluminescence in the far red spectral region and photosensitised generation of singlet oxygen, with associated near-IR emission, are reversibly controlled by near-UV or violet light in a communicating ensemble of molecular switches.
Australian Journal of Chemistry | 2006
Massimiliano Tomasulo; Ibrahim Yildiz; Françisco M. Raymo
We have attached a photochromic spiropyran to the surface of CdSe–ZnS core–shell quantum dots, relying on a dithiolane anchoring group. In the resulting assembly, the reversible interconversion of the photochromic component activates and suppresses an energy transfer pathway from the excited quantum dots to the coloured state of the ligand. As a result, the luminescence intensity decreases by 45% with the photoinduced colouration of the spiropyran and returns to the original value after the thermal reisomerization of the ligand.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010
Erhan Deniz; Shuvasree Ray; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Stefania Impellizzeri; Salvatore Sortino; Françisco M. Raymo
We designed and synthesized three compounds incorporating a BODIPY fluorophore and an oxazine photochrome within the same molecular skeleton and differing in the nature of the linker bridging the two functional components. The [1,3]oxazine ring of the photochrome opens in less than 6 ns upon laser excitation in two of the three fluorophore-photochrome dyads. This process generates a 3H-indolium cation with a quantum yield of 0.02-0.05. The photogenerated isomer has a lifetime of 1-3 μs and reverts to the original species with first-order kinetics. Both photochromic systems tolerate hundreds of switching cycles with no sign of degradation. The visible excitation of the dyads is accompanied by the characteristic fluorescence of the BODIPY component. However, the cationic fragment of their photogenerated isomers can accept an electron or energy from the excited fluorophore. As a result, the photoinduced transformation of the photochromic component within each dyad results in the effective quenching of the BODIPY emission. Indeed, the fluorescence of these photoswitchable compounds can be modulated on a microsecond time scale with excellent fatigue resistance under optical control. Thus, our operating principles and choice of functional components can ultimately lead to the development of valuable photoswitchable fluorescent probes for the super-resolution imaging of biological samples.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2010
Erhan Deniz; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Richard A. DeFazio; Brant D. Watson; Françisco M. Raymo
A BODIPY-spiropyran dyad was embedded within poly(methyl methacrylate) films spin-coated on glass slides. Visible illumination of the resulting materials excites selectively the BODIPY fragment, which then deactivates radiatively by emitting light in the form of fluorescence. Ultraviolet irradiation promotes the isomerization of the spiropyran component to the corresponding merocyanine. This photoinduced transformation activates electron and energy transfer pathways from the fluorescent to the photochromic fragment. Consistently, the BODIPY fluorescence is effectively suppressed within the photogenerated isomer. As a result, ultraviolet illumination with a laser, producing a doughnut-shaped spot on the sample, confines the fluorescent species within the doughnut hole. This behavior is an essential requisite for the implementation of super-resolution imaging schemes based on fluorescence photodeactivation. Thus, the operating principles governing the photochemical and photophysical response of this molecular switch can ultimately lead to the development of innovative probes for fluorescence nanoscopy.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2006
Salvatore Sortino; Sabrina Conoci; Ibrahim Yildiz; Massimiliano Tomasulo; Françisco M. Raymo
A bipyridinium bisthiol adsorbs spontaneously on the surface of optically-transparent platinum electrodes to form electrochromic multilayers.
Chemical Society Reviews | 2005
Françisco M. Raymo; Massimiliano Tomasulo
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2006
Massimiliano Tomasulo; Salvatore Sortino; and Andrew J. P. White; Françisco M. Raymo
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2005
Françisco M. Raymo; Massimiliano Tomasulo