Maxim S. Panov
Bowling Green State University
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Featured researches published by Maxim S. Panov.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Valentyna Voskresenska; R. Marshall Wilson; Maxim S. Panov; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; Jeanette A. Krause; Shubham Vyas; Arthur H. Winter; Christopher M. Hadad
Phenyl azides with powerful electron-donating substituents are known to deviate from the usual photochemical behavior of other phenyl azides. They do not undergo ring expansion but form basic nitrenes that protonate to form nitrenium ions. The photochemistry of the widely used photoaffinity labeling system 4-amino-3-nitrophenyl azide, 5, has been studied by transient absorption spectroscopy from femtosecond to microsecond time domains and from a theoretical perspective. The nitrene generation from azide 5 occurs on the S(2) surface, in violation of Kashas rule. The resulting nitrene is a powerful base and abstracts protons extremely rapidly from a variety of sources to form a nitrenium ion. In methanol, this protonation occurs in about 5 ps, which is the fastest intermolecular protonation observed to date. Suitable proton sources include alcohols, amine salts, and even acidic C-H bonds such as acetonitrile. The resulting nitrenium ion is stabilized by the electron-donating 4-amino group to afford a diiminoquinone-like species that collapses relatively slowly to form the ultimate cross-linked product. In some cases in which the anion is a good hydride donor, cross-linking is replaced by reduction of the nitrenium ion to the corresponding amine.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Denis I. Nilov; Dmitry Y. Komarov; Maxim S. Panov; Kanykey E. Karabaeva; Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; R. Marshall Wilson
Oxidative damage to purine nucleic acid bases proceeds through quinoidal intermediates derived from their corresponding 8-oxo-7,8-dihydropurine bases. Oxidation studies of 8-oxo-7,8-dihyroadenosine and 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroinosine indicate that these quinoidal species can produce stable cross-links with a wide variety of nucleophiles in the 2-positions of the purines. An azide precursor for the adenosine iminoquinone has been synthesized and applied in ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopic studies. Thus, the adenosine iminoquinone can be observed directly, and its susceptibility to nucleophilic attack with various nucleophiles as well as the stability of the resulting cross-linked species have been evaluated. Finally, these observations indicate that this azide might be a very useful photoaffinity labeling agent, because the reactive intermediate, adenosine iminoquinone, is such a good mimic for the universal purine base adenosine.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Maxim S. Panov; Valentyna Voskresenska; Mikhail N. Ryazantsev; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; R. Marshall Wilson
The photochemistry of a new photoaffinity labeling (PAL) agent, 5-azido-2-(N,N-diethylamino)pyridine, was studied in aprotic and protic solvents using femtosecond-to-microsecond transient absorption and product analysis, in conjunction with ab initio multiconfigurational and multireference quantum chemical calculations. The excited singlet S1 state is spectroscopically dark, whereas photoexcitation to higher-lying singlet excited S2 and S3 states drives the photochemical reaction toward a barrierless ultrafast relaxation path via two conical intersections to S1, where N2 elimination leads to the formation of the closed-shell singlet nitrene. The singlet nitrene undergoes intersystem crossing (ISC) to the triplet nitrene in aprotic and protic solvents as well as protonation to form the nitrenium ion. The ISC rate constants in aprotic solvents increase with solvent polarity, displaying a direct gap effect, whereas an inverse gap effect is observed in protic solvents. Transient absorption actinometry experiments suggest that a solvent-dependent fraction from 20% to 50% of nitrenium ions is generated on a time scale of a few tens of picoseconds. The closed-shell singlet and triplet nitrene are separated by a small energy gap in protic solvents. As a result, the unreactive triplet state nitrene undergoes delayed, thermally activated reverse ISC to reform the reactive closed-shell singlet nitrene, which subsequently protonates, forming the remaining fraction of nitrenium ions. The product studies demonstrate that the resulting nitrenium ion stabilized by the electron-donating 4-amino group yields the final cross-linked product with high, almost quantitative efficiency. The enhanced PAL function of this new azide with respect to the widely applied 4-amino-3-nitrophenyl azide is discussed.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Pavel K. Olshin; Kanykey E. Karabaeva; Maxim S. Panov; R. Marshall Wilson; Vladimir A. Kochemirovsky; Mikhail Yu. Skripkin; Yury S. Tveryanovich; Alexander N. Tarnovsky
Copper(II) complexes are extremely labile with typical ligand exchange rate constants on the order of 10(6)-10(9) M(-1) s(-1). As a result, it is often difficult to identify the actual formation mechanism of these complexes. In this work, using UV-vis transient absorption when probing in a broad time range (20 ps to 8 μs) in conjunction with DFT/TDDFT calculations, we studied the dynamics and underlying reaction mechanisms of the formation of extremely labile copper(II) CuCl4(2-) chloro complexes from copper(II) CuCl3(-) trichloro complexes and chloride ions. These two species, produced via photochemical dissociation of CuCl4(2-) upon 420 nm excitation into the ligand-to-metal-charge-transfer electronic state, are found to recombine into parent complexes with bimolecular rate constants of (9.0 ± 0.1) × 10(7) and (5.3 ± 0.4) × 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) in acetonitrile and dichloromethane, respectively. In dichloromethane, recombination occurs via a simple one-step addition. In acetonitrile, where [CuCl3](-) reacts with the solvent to form a [CuCl3CH3CN](-) complex in less than 20 ps, recombination takes place via ligand exchange described by the associative interchange mechanism that involves a [CuCl4CH3CN](2-) intermediate. In both solvents, the recombination reaction is potential energy controlled.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016
Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Pavel K. Olshin; Olesya S. Myasnikova; Maxim S. Panov; Vladimir A. Kochemirovsky; Mikhail Yu. Skripkin; Pavel Moroz; Mikhail Zamkov; Alexander N. Tarnovsky
Photochemistry of copper(II) monochlorocomplexes in methanol and acetonitrile solutions is studied by UV-pump/broadband deep-UV-to-near-IR probe femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Upon 255 and 266 nm excitation, the complexes in acetonitrile and methanol, respectively, are promoted to the excited ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) state, which has a short (sub-250 fs) lifetime. From the LMCT state, the complexes decay via internal conversion to lower-lying ligand field (LF) d-d excited states or the vibrationally hot ground electronic state. A minor fraction of the excited complexes relaxes to the LF electronic excited states, which are relatively long-lived with lifetimes >1 ns. Also, in methanol solutions, about 3% of the LMCT-excited copper(II) monochlorocomplexes dissociate forming copper(I) solvatocomplexes and chlorine atoms, which then further react forming long-lived photoproducts. In acetonitrile, about 50% of the LMCT-excited copper(II) monochlorocomplexes dissociate forming radical and ionic products in a ratio of 3:2. Another minor process observed following excitation only in methanol solutions is the re-equilibration between several forms of the copper(II) ground-state complexes present in solutions. This re-equilibration occurs on a time scale from sub-nanoseconds to nanoseconds.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Sergey M. Matveev; Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Maxim S. Panov; Alexander N. Tarnovsky
Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy is used to investigate the radiationless relaxation dynamics of CuCl4(2-) and IrBr6(2-) complexes directly promoted into their lowest-energy excited metal-centered states upon near-infrared femtosecond excitation at 2000 nm. Both the excited CuCl4(2-) (2)E and IrBr6(2-) (2)Ug(T2g) states undergo internal conversion to the ground electronic states, yet with significantly different lifetimes (55 fs and 360 ps, respectively) despite the fact that the (2)E and (2)Ug(T2g) states are separated by the same energy gap (∼5000 cm(-1)) from the respective ground state. This difference likely arises from the predominance of the Jahn-Teller effect in a Cu(2+) ion and the spin-orbit coupling effect in an Ir(4+) ion. The approach documented in this work may be used for elucidating the role of low-energy metal-centered states in relaxation cascades of a number of coordination compounds, allowing for design of efficient light-triggered metal complexes.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Olesya S. Myasnikova; Maxim S. Panov; Vladimir A. Kochemirovsky; Mikhail Yu. Skripkin; Darya S. Budkina; Alexander N. Tarnovsky
Nonradiative relaxation dynamics of CuCl42- complexes photoexcited into the highest-energy ligand-field electronic state (2A1) is studied in acetonitrile, dichloromethane, and chloroform solvents, as well as in acetonitrile-water and in acetonitrile-deuterated water mixtures. Due to ultrafast internal conversion, this excited state directly converts to the electronic ground state in dichloromethane and chloroform. The nonradiative relaxation constant is similar in anhydrous acetonitrile. Addition of water to acetonitrile solutions efficiently quenches the excited ligand-field 2A1 state. The quenching is proposed to be due to the diffusion-controlled formation of an electronically excited pentacoordinated [CuCl4H2O]2- encounter complex or a short-lived exciplex of similar structure, in which the electronic excitation energy transfers into the O-H stretch of the coordinated H2O molecule. This is followed by the dissociation of the pentacoordinated species, resulting in the reformation of the ground-state CuCl42- and free H2O molecules.
ACS Nano | 2012
Timothy O’Connor; Maxim S. Panov; Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Alexander N. Tarnovsky; Ryan Lorek; Dimuthu Perera; Geoffrey Diederich; Scott Lambright; Pavel Moroz; Mikhail Zamkov
Applied Sciences | 2017
Nikolai Grechukha; Kseniya Gorshkova; Maxim S. Panov; Ilya I. Tumkin; Elizaveta O. Kirillova; Vladimir Lukianov; Natalia Kirillova; Vladimir A. Kochemirovsky
EPJ Web of Conferences | 2013
E. V. Butaeva; Andrey S. Mereshchenko; Maxim S. Panov; Alexander N. Tarnovsky