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Dive into the research topics where Michael Serafin is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Serafin.


Nature | 2011

Overcoming lability of extremely long alkane carbon-carbon bonds through dispersion forces

Peter R. Schreiner; Lesya V. Chernish; Pavel A. Gunchenko; Evgeniya Yu. Tikhonchuk; Heike Hausmann; Michael Serafin; Sabine Schlecht; Jeremy E. P. Dahl; Robert M. K. Carlson; Andrey A. Fokin

Steric effects in chemistry are a consequence of the space required to accommodate the atoms and groups within a molecule, and are often thought to be dominated by repulsive forces arising from overlapping electron densities (Pauli repulsion). An appreciation of attractive interactions such as van der Waals forces (which include London dispersion forces) is necessary to understand chemical bonding and reactivity fully. This is evident from, for example, the strongly debated origin of the higher stability of branched alkanes relative to linear alkanes and the possibility of constructing hydrocarbons with extraordinarily long C–C single bonds through steric crowding. Although empirical bond distance/bond strength relationships have been established for C–C bonds (longer C–C bonds have smaller bond dissociation energies), these have no present theoretical basis. Nevertheless, these empirical considerations are fundamental to structural and energetic evaluations in chemistry, as summarized by Pauling as early as 1960 and confirmed more recently. Here we report the preparation of hydrocarbons with extremely long C–C bonds (up to 1.704 Å), the longest such bonds observed so far in alkanes. The prepared compounds are unexpectedly stable—noticeable decomposition occurs only above 200 °C. We prepared the alkanes by coupling nanometre-sized, diamond-like, highly rigid structures known as diamondoids. The extraordinary stability of the coupling products is due to overall attractive dispersion interactions between the intramolecular H•••H contact surfaces, as is evident from density functional theory computations with and without inclusion of dispersion corrections.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Stable Alkanes Containing Very Long Carbon–Carbon Bonds

Andrey A. Fokin; Lesya V. Chernish; Pavel A. Gunchenko; Evgeniya Yu. Tikhonchuk; Heike Hausmann; Michael Serafin; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Peter R. Schreiner

The metal-induced coupling of tertiary diamondoid bromides gave highly sterically congested hydrocarbon (hetero)dimers with exceptionally long central C-C bonds of up to 1.71 Å in 2-(1-diamantyl)[121]tetramantane. Yet, these dimers are thermally very stable even at temperatures above 200 °C, which is not in line with common C-C bond length versus bond strengths correlations. We suggest that the extraordinary stabilization arises from numerous intramolecular van der Waals attractions between the neighboring H-terminated diamond-like surfaces. The C-C bond rotational dynamics of 1-(1-adamantyl)diamantane, 1-(1-diamantyl)diamantane, 2-(1-adamantyl)triamantane, 2-(1-diamantyl)triamantane, and 2-(1-diamantyl)[121]tetramantane were studied through variable-temperature (1)H- and (13)C NMR spectroscopies. The shapes of the inward (endo) CH surfaces determine the dynamic behavior, changing the central C-C bond rotation barriers from 7 to 33 kcal mol(-1). We probe the ability of popular density functional theory (DFT) approaches (including BLYP, B3LYP, B98, B3LYP-Dn, B97D, B3PW91, BHandHLYP, B3P86, PBE1PBE, wB97XD, and M06-2X) with 6-31G(d,p) and cc-pVDZ basis sets to describe such an unusual bonding situation. Only functionals accounting for dispersion are able to reproduce the experimental geometries, while most DFT functionals are able to reproduce the experimental rotational barriers due to error cancellations. Computations on larger diamondoids reveal that the interplay between the shapes and the sizes of the CH surfaces may even allow the preparation of open-shell alkyl radical dimers (and possibly polymers) that are strongly held together exclusively by dispersion forces.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Structural Analyses of N‐Acetylated 4‐(Dimethylamino)pyridine (DMAP) Salts

Volker Lutz; Jörg Glatthaar; Christian Würtele; Michael Serafin; Heike Hausmann; Peter R. Schreiner

We have studied the formation of several N-acetyl-4-(dimethylamino)pyridine (DMAP) salts (with Cl(-), CH(3)COO(-), and CF(3)COO(-) counterions), which are considered to be the catalytically active species in DMAP-catalyzed acetylation reactions of alcohols. Combined crystal structure analyses, variable temperature matrix IR and NMR spectroscopy as well as computational techniques at the UAHF-PCM-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p)//B3LYP/6-31G(d) level were utilized to examine the structures and dynamics of salt formation. We found clear evidence for the formation of tight ion pairs that are stabilized by dynamic hydrogen-bonding interactions. In nonpolar solvents, the nucleophilicity of acetate in its N-acetyl-DMAP salt only allows a steady-state concentration smaller 1% at room temperature. Thus, we propose additional hydrogen-bonding interactions with alcohols to be the key stabilization factor in subsequent acetylations.


Organic Letters | 2009

Oxygen-Doped Nanodiamonds: Synthesis and Functionalizations†

Andrey A. Fokin; Tatyana S. Zhuk; Alexander E. Pashenko; Pavlo O. Dral; Pavel A. Gunchenko; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Tatyana V. Koso; Michael Serafin; Peter R. Schreiner

Oxadiamondoids representing a new class of carbon nanoparticles were prepared from the respective diamondoid ketones via an effective two-step procedure involving addition of methyl magnesium iodide and oxidation with trifluoroperacetic acid in trifluoroacetic acid. The reactivities of the oxacages are determined by the position of the dopant and are in good agreement with computational predictions.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

Monoprotection of Diols as a Key Step for the Selective Synthesis of Unequally Disubstituted Diamondoids (Nanodiamonds)

Hartmut Schwertfeger; Christian Würtele; Michael Serafin; Heike Hausmann; Robert M. Carlson; Jeremy E. Dahl; Peter R. Schreiner

The monoprotection (desymmetrization) of diamondoid, benzylic, and ethynyl diols has been achieved using fluorinated alcohols such as 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) under acidic conditions. This practical acid-catalyzed S(N)1 reaction opens the door for the synthesis of novel bifunctional diamondoids. With diamantane as an example, we show that the resulting monoethers can be used to prepare selectively, for instance, amino or nitro alcohols and unnatural amino acids. These are important compounds in terms of the exploration of electronic, pharmacological, and material properties of functionalized nanodiamonds.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

Reactivities of the Prism‐Shaped Diamondoids [1(2)3]Tetramantane and [12312]Hexamantane (Cyclohexamantane)

Andrey A. Fokin; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Natalie A. Fokina; Heike Hausmann; Michael Serafin; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. K. Carlson; Peter R. Schreiner

Various functional groups have been incorporated into the structures of the naturally occurring diamondoids [1(2)3]tetramantane and [12312]hexamantane (cyclohexamantane), which represent hydrogen-terminated prism-shaped nanodiamonds. The selectivities of the C-H substitutions in [1(2)3]tetramantane depend on the reagent employed and give products substituted at either central (through bromination) or peripheral (through nitroxylation and photo-oxidation) positions. The hydrogen-coupled electron-transfer mechanism of C-H nitroxylation with the model electrophile NO(2)(+)...HNO(3) was verified computationally at the B3PW91 and MP2 levels of theory by utilizing the 6-31G(d) and cc-pVDZ basis sets. The thermodynamically controlled nitroxylation/isomerization of [1(2)3]tetramantane allows the preparation of peripherally trisubstituted derivatives, which were transformed into tripod-like nanodiamond building blocks. The bromination of cyclohexamantane selectively gives the 2-bromo derivative, reproducing the chemical behavior of the {111} surface of the hydrogen-terminated diamond.


Journal of The Less Common Metals | 1980

Zur kenntnis von RbNbO3 — ein metaniobat mit pyrgomstruktur

Michael Serafin; R. Hoppe

Zusammenfassung RbNbO3, farblos, durch Wasser sofort zersetzt, kristallisiert triklin mit a = 8,882(3) A , b = 8,395(3) A , c = 5,109(2) A , α = 94,60(3)°, β = 93,53(3)° γ = 113,83(3)°, Z = 4 und Raumgruppe P 1 . Die Kristallstruktur wurde mit Hilfe von Vierkreisdiffraktometerdaten aufgeklart ( 4° ⩽ θ


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Toward an Understanding of Diamond sp2-Defects with Unsaturated Diamondoid Oligomer Models

Tatyana S. Zhuk; Tatyana V. Koso; Alexander E. Pashenko; Ngo Trung Hoc; Vladimir N. Rodionov; Michael Serafin; Peter R. Schreiner; Andrey A. Fokin

32° ; 1768 hkl; Mo Kα; R = 4,6%). Es liegen tetragonale Pyramiden [NbO5] vor, die (gemass 1∞[NbO 1 1 (O 1 2 )4] verknupft “Pyrgome” bilden, die ihrerseits uber Rb+ verknupft sind. Der Madelunganteil der Gitterenergie (MAPLE) sowie effektive Koordinationszahlen (ECoN) werden berechnet und diskutiert.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B | 1987

Die Kristallstruktur von Mangantetrafluorid The Crystal / Structure of Manganese Tetrafluoride

B. G. Müller; Michael Serafin

Nanometer-sized doubly bonded diamondoid dimers and trimers, which may be viewed as models of diamond with surface sp(2)-defects, were prepared from corresponding ketones via a McMurry coupling and were characterized by spectroscopic and crystallographic methods. The neutral hydrocarbons and their radical cations were studied utilizing density functional theory (DFT) and ab initio (MP2) methods, which reproduce the experimental geometries and ionization potentials well. The van der Waals complexes of the oligomers with their radical cations that are models for the self-assembly of diamondoids, form highly delocalized and symmetric electron-deficient structures. This implies a rather high degree of σ-delocalization within the hydrocarbons, not too dissimilar to delocalized π-systems. As a consequence, sp(2)-defects are thus also expected to be nonlocal, thereby leading to the observed high surface charge mobilities of diamond-like materials. In order to be able to use the diamondoid oligomers for subsequent surface attachment and modification, their C-H-bond functionalizations were studied, and these provided halogen and hydroxy derivatives with conservation of unsaturation.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

Selective Preparation of Diamondoid Phosphonates

Andrey A. Fokin; Raisa I. Yurchenko; Boryslav A. Tkachenko; Natalie A. Fokina; Maria A. Gunawan; Didier Poinsot; Jeremy E. Dahl; Robert M. Carlson; Michael Serafin; Hélène Cattey; Jean-Cyrille Hierso; Peter R. Schreiner

Single crystals of dark blue MnF4 have been obtained by high pressure fluorination (pF2 = 3 kbar) of MnF2. There exist two modifications: α-MnF4 crystallizes tetragonally body centered with a = 12.63(1), c = 6.049(5) Å, space group I41/a-C4h6 (No. 88). Z = 16; the structure of β-MnF4, (probably) rhombohedral with a = 19.56(2). c = 13.00(1) Å, Z = 72, is yet unknown in detail. MnF4 is paramagnetic with ,μeff (301.2 K) = 3.87 B. M. . The Curie-Weiss law is obeyed down to 22.4 K; the Madelung Part of lattice energy (MAPLE) is calculated to be 2475 kcal/mol.

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R. Hoppe

University of Giessen

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