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Dive into the research topics where Olga Trukhina is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga Trukhina.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Phthalocyanine-Carbon Nanostructure Materials Assembled through Supramolecular Interactions.

Giovanni Bottari; Juan Antonio Suanzes; Olga Trukhina; Tomás Torres

The use of self-assembly for the construction of materials based on phthalocyanines and carbon nanostructures-fullerenes, single-walled carbon nanotubes, and graphene-has demonstrated to be a versatile strategy for the preparation of novel, multifunctional systems. Photophysical studies carried out on these photo- and electroactive supramolecular ensembles have revealed the occurrence of an efficient photoinduced electron-transfer process, thus paving the way for the utilization of these materials as active components in optoelectronic devices. This Perspective highlights the recent progress in the preparation of such materials and the potential use of these systems for the construction of nanostructured materials with singular physicochemical properties.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Porphyrin–Phthalocyanine/Pyridylfullerene Supramolecular Assemblies

Ana M. V. M. Pereira; Anita Hausmann; João P. C. Tomé; Olga Trukhina; Maxence Urbani; Maria G. P. M. S. Neves; José A. S. Cavaleiro; Dirk M. Guldi; Tomás Torres

The synthesis and photophysical properties of several porphyrin (P)-phthalocyanine (Pc) conjugates (P-Pc; 1-3) are described, in which the phthalocyanines are directly linked to the β-pyrrolic position of a meso-tetraphenylporphyrin. Photoinduced energy- and electron-transfer processes were studied through the preparation of H(2)P-ZnPc, ZnP-ZnPc, and PdP-ZnPc conjugates, and their assembly through metal coordination with two different pyridylfulleropyrrolidines (4 and 5). The resulting electron-donor-acceptor hybrids, which were formed by axial coordination of compounds 4 and 5 with the corresponding phthalocyanines, mimicked the fundamental processes of photosynthesis; that is, light harvesting, the transduction of excited-state energy, and unidirectional electron transfer. In particular, photophysical studies confirmed that intramolecular energy-transfer resulted from the S(2) excited state as well as from the S(1) excited state of the porphyrins to the energetically lower-lying phthalocyanines, followed by an intramolecular charge-transfer to yield P-Pc(.+)⋅C(60)(.-). This unique sequence of processes opens the way for solar-energy-conversion processes.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Synthesis and Photophysical Properties of Fullerene–Phthalocyanine–Porphyrin Triads and Pentads

Roger F. Enes; Juan-José Cid; Anita Hausmann; Olga Trukhina; Andreas Gouloumis; Purificación Vázquez; José A. S. Cavaleiro; Augusto C. Tomé; Dirk M. Guldi; Tomás Torres

The synthesis and photophysical properties of several fullerene-phthalocyanine-porphyrin triads (1-3) and pentads (4-6) are described. The three photoactive moieties were covalently connected in an one-step synthesis through 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition to C(60) of the corresponding azomethine ylides generated in situ by condensation reaction of a substituted N-porphyrinylmethylglycine derivative and an appropriated formyl phthalocyanine or a diformyl phthalocyanine derivative, respectively. ZnP-C(60)-ZnPc (3), (ZnP)(2)-ZnPc-(C(60))(2) (6), and (H(2)P)(2)-ZnPc-(C(60))(2) (5) give rise upon excitation of their ZnP or H(2)P components to a sequence of energy and charge-transfer reactions with, however, fundamentally different outcomes. With (ZnP)(2)-ZnPc-(C(60))(2) (6) the major pathway is an highly exothermic charge transfer to afford (ZnP)(ZnP(.+))-ZnPc-(C(60)(.-))(C(60)). The lower singlet excited state energy of H(2)P (i.e., ca. 0.2 eV) and likewise its more anodic oxidation (i.e., ca. 0.2 V) renders the direct charge transfer in (H(2)P)(2)-ZnPc-(C(60))(2) (5) not competitive. Instead, a transduction of singlet excited state energy prevails to form the ZnPc singlet excited state. This triggers then an intramolecular charge transfer reaction to form exclusively (H(2)P)(2)-ZnPc(.+)-(C(60)(.-))(C(60)). A similar sequence is found for ZnP-C(60)-ZnPc (3).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Step-by-step self-assembled hybrids that feature control over energy and charge transfer

Bruno Grimm; Julia Schornbaum; Hannelore Jasch; Olga Trukhina; Florian Wessendorf; Andreas Hirsch; Tomás Torres; Dirk M. Guldi

In the current work, we have documented the use of two complementary supramolecular motifs, namely multipoint hydrogen bonding and metal complexation, as a means to control the step-by-step assembly of a panchromatically absorbing and highly versatile solar energy conversion system. On one hand, two different perylenediimides (1a/1b) have been integrated together with a metalloporphyrin (2) by means of the Hamilton receptor/cyanuric acid hydrogen bonding motif into energy transduction systems 1a•2 or 1b•2. Steady-state and time-resolved measurements corroborated that upon selective photoexcitation of the perylenediimides (1a/1b), an energy transfer evolved from the singlet excited state of the perylenediimides (1a/1b) to that of the metalloporphyrin (2). On the other hand, fullerene (3) and metalloporphyrin (2) form the electron donor–acceptor system 2•3 via axial complexation. Photophysical measurements confirm that an electron transfer prevails from the singlet excited state of 2 to the electron-accepting 3. The correspondingly formed radical ion pair state decays with a lifetime of 1.0 ± 0.1 ns. As a complement to the aforementioned, the energy transduction features of 1a•2 were combined with the electron donor–acceptor characteristics of 2•3 to afford 1a•2•3. To this end, time-resolved measurements reveal that the initially occurring energy-transfer interaction (53 ± 3 ps) between 1a/1b and 2 is followed by an electron transfer (12 ± 1 ps) from 2 to 3. From multiwavelength analyses, the lifetime of the radical ion pair state in 1a•2•3—as a product of a cascade of light-induced energy and electron transfer—was derived as 3.8 ± 0.2 ns.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Scrutinizing the chemical nature and photophysics of an expanded hemiporphyrazine: the special case of [30]trithia-2,3,5,10,12,13,15,20,22,23,25,30-dodecaazahexaphyrin.

Olga Trukhina; M. Salomé Rodríguez-Morgade; Silke Wolfrum; Esmeralda Caballero; Natalia Snejko; Elena A. Danilova; Enrique Gutiérrez-Puebla; Mikhail K. Islyaikin; Dirk M. Guldi; Tomás Torres

Thirty π-electron-expanded hemiporphyrazines 1a-c have been prepared by crossover condensation reaction of 2,5-diamino-1,3,4-thiadiazole and the corresponding phthalonitrile (3) or diiminoisoindoline (4) derivatives. The expanded azaporphyrin hexamers have been unequivocally characterized by means of spectroscopic, crystallographic, and electrochemical techniques. Weak intramolecular hydrogen bonding imposes a planar conformation to macrocycles. However, the overall electronic delocalization is low, and the nature of the resulting [30]heteroannulene is nonaromatic, as confirmed by NMR studies, XR diffraction analysis, and calculation of the NICS(0) value. Studies on a wide range of physicochemical features including ground, excited, reduced, and oxidized states provide evidence for the wide applicability of these 30 π-electron-expanded hemiporphyrazines in processes involving electron transfer. A key asset of our work is the systematic development of spectroscopic and kinetic markers for the formation and decay of all of the aforementioned species. Thirty π-electron-expanded hemiporphyrazines evolve as broadly absorbing light harvesters with excited state energies of around 2.3 eV that are susceptible to facile one-electron reduction and one-electron oxidation reactions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Bidirectional Electron Transfer Capability in Phthalocyanine–Sc3N@Ih–C80 Complexes

Olga Trukhina; Marc Rudolf; Giovanni Bottari; Takeshi Akasaka; Luis Echegoyen; Tomás Torres; Dirk M. Guldi

To activate oxidative and/or reductive electron transfer reactions, N-pyridyl-substituted Sc3N@I(h)-C80 (4) and C60 (3) fulleropyrrolidines have been prepared and axially coordinated to electron-rich (1) or electron-deficient (2) Zn(II)phthalocyanines (Zn(II)Pcs) through zinc-pyridyl, metal-ligand coordination affording a full-fledged family of electron donor-acceptor ensembles. An arsenal of photophysical assays as they were carried out with, for example, 1/4 and 2/4 show unambiguously that a Zn(II)Pc-to-Sc3N@I(h)-C80 photoinduced electron transfer takes place in the former ensemble, whereas a Sc3N@I(h)-C80-to-Zn(II)Pc electron transfer occurs in the latter ensemble. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that a fullerene-based molecular building block shows an electron transfer dichotomy, namely acting both as electron-acceptor or electron-donor, and its outcome is simply governed by the electronic nature of its counterpart. In light of the latter, the present work, which involves the use of Sc3N@I(h)-C80, one of the most abundant and easy-to-purify endohedral metallofullerenes, is, on one hand, a paradigmatic change and, on the other hand, an important milestone en-route toward the construction of easy-to-prepare molecular materials featuring switchable electron transfer reactivity.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Mediating Reductive Charge Shift Reactions in Electron Transport Chains

Maximilian Wolf; Carmen Villegas; Olga Trukhina; Juan Luis Delgado; Tomás Torres; Nazario Martín; Timothy Clark; Dirk M. Guldi

We report the synthesis of a full-fledged family of covalent electron donor-acceptor1-acceptor2 conjugates and their charge-transfer characterization by means of advanced photophysical assays. By virtue of variable excited state energies and electron donor strengths, either Zn(II)Porphyrins or Zn(II)Phthalocyanines were linked to different electron-transport chains featuring pairs of electron accepting fullerenes, that is, C60 and C70. In this way, a fine-tuned redox gradient is established to power a unidirectional, long-range charge transport from the excited-state electron donor via a transient C60•- toward C70•-. This strategy helps minimize energy losses in the reductive, short-range charge shift from C60 to C70. At the forefront of our investigations are excited-state dynamics deduced from femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopic measurements and subsequent computational deconvolution of the transient absorption spectra. These provide evidence for cascades of short-range charge-transfer processes, including reductive charge shift reactions between the two electron-accepting fullerenes, and for kinetics that are influenced by the nature and length of the respective spacer. Of key importance is the postulate of a mediating state in the charge-shift reaction at weak electronic couplings. Our results point to an intimate relationship between triplet-triplet energy transfer and charge transfer.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Regio‐, Stereo‐, and Atropselective Synthesis of C60 Fullerene Bisadducts by Supramolecular‐Directed Functionalization

Giovanni Bottari; Olga Trukhina; Axel Kahnt; Michael Frunzi; Yasujiro Murata; Antonio Rodríguez-Fortea; Josep M. Poblet; Dirk M. Guldi; Tomás Torres

The regio- and stereocontrolled synthesis of fullerene bisadducts is a topic of increasing interest in fullerene chemistry and a key point for the full exploitation of these derivatives in materials science. In this context, while the tether-directed remote functionalization strategy offers a valid approach to this synthetic challenge, no examples of such control have yet been reported using nontethered species. Presented here is a conceptually novel, supramolecular-directed functionalization approach in which noncovalent interactions between untethered residues have been used, for the first time, to amplify (>2800-fold) the regio-, stereo-, and atropselective formation of a C60 fullerene bisadduct racemate from a complex mixture of 130 bisadducts. Remarkably, both enantiomers, which present a sterically demanding cis-1 C60 addition pattern, represent the first examples of fullerene derivatives which combine central, axial, and helical chirality.


Journal of Porphyrins and Phthalocyanines | 2011

Synthesis and thermal behavior of unsubstituted (30)trithia-2,3,5,10,12,13,15,20,22,23,25,30- dodecaazahexaphyrin

Olga Trukhina; Yuri A. Zhabanov; Aleksander V. Krasnov; Elena A. Danilova; Mikhail K. Islyaikin

The parent compound of the trithiadodecaazahexaphyrins has been prepared for the first time. Its thermal stability has been found to be the highest reported to date among the porphyrinoid family.


Journal of Porphyrins and Phthalocyanines | 2013

Molecular structure and tautomers of (30)trithia- 2,3,5,10,12,13,15,20,22,23,25,30-dodecaazahexaphyrin

Yuriy A. Zhabanov; Alexander V. Zakharov; Sergei A. Shlykov; Olga Trukhina; Elena A. Danilova; Oscar I. Koifman; Mikhail K. Islyaikin

The gas-phase molecular structure of the unsubstituted [30]trithia-2,3,5,10,12,13,15,20,22,23,25,30-dodecaazahexaphyrin (C30H15N15S3) has been studied by a synchronous gas electron diffraction and mass spectrometric experiment and density functional theory calculations using the B3LYP hybrid method and cc-pVTZ basis sets. The molecule has an equilibrium structure of D3h symmetry with a planar macrocycle and the thiadiazole rings oriented in such a way that the sulfur atoms point outwards from the inner cavity. Tautomers of this compound have been studied by DFT computations.

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Dirk M. Guldi

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Mikhail K. Islyaikin

Ivanovo State University of Chemistry and Technology

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Elena A. Danilova

Ivanovo State University of Chemistry and Technology

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German Zango

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Maxence Urbani

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Marc Rudolf

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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