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Featured researches published by Pinar Batat.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

BF2-Azadipyrromethenes: Probing the Excited-State Dynamics of a NIR Fluorophore and Photodynamic Therapy Agent

Pinar Batat; Martine Cantuel; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Luca Scarpantonio; Aniello Palma; Donal F. O'Shea; Nathan D. McClenaghan

BF(2)-Azadipyrromethene dyes are a promising class of NIR emitter (nonhalogenated) and photosensitizer (halogenated). Spectroscopic studies on a benchmark example of each type, including absorption (one and two photon), time-resolved transient absorption (ps-ms) and fluorescence, are reported. Fast photodynamics reveal that intense nanosecond NIR fluorescence is quenched in a brominated analog, giving rise to a persistent (21 μs) transient absorption signature. Kinetics for these changes are determined and ascribed to the efficient population of a triplet state (72%), which can efficiently sensitize singlet oxygen formation (ca. 74%), directly observed by (1)Δ(g) luminescence. Photostability measurements reveal extremely high stability, notably for the nonhalogenated variant, which is at least 10(3)-times more stable (Φ(photodeg.) = < 10(-8)) than some representative BODIPY and fluorescein dyes.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Photocatalyzed sulfide oxygenation with water as the unique oxygen atom source.

Pascal Guillo; Olivier Hamelin; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Stéphane Ménage

In our research program aiming to develop new ruthenium-based polypyridine catalysts for oxidation we were interested in combining a photosensitizer and a catalytic fragment within the same complex to achieve catalytic light-driven oxidation. To respond to the lack of such conjugates, we report here a new catalytic system capable of using light to activate water molecules in order to perform selective sulfide oxygenation into sulfoxide via an oxygen atom transfer from H(2)O to the substrate with a TON of up to 197 ± 6. On the basis of electrochemical and photophysical studies, a proton-coupled electron-transfer process yielding to an oxidant Ru(IV)-oxo species was proposed. In particular, the synergistic effect between both partners in the dyad yielding a more efficient catalyst compared to the bimolecular system is highlighted.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Copper Catalyst Activation Driven by Photoinduced Electron Transfer: A Prototype Photolatent Click Catalyst

Lydie Harmand; Sarah Cadet; Brice Kauffmann; Luca Scarpantonio; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Dominique Lastécouères; Jean-Marc Vincent

PET cat. While the copper(II) tren ketoprofenate precatalyst 1 (see picture) is inactive at room temperature in methanol, it is quantitatively and rapidly reduced to its cuprous state upon light irradiation to provide a highly reactive click catalyst. By simply introducing air into the reaction medium the catalysis can be switched off and then switched on again by bubbling argon followed by irradiation.


Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences | 2012

Dynamics of ion-regulated photoinduced electron transfer in BODIPY-BAPTA conjugates

Pinar Batat; Guillaume Vives; Robin Bofinger; Ren-Wei Chang; Brice Kauffmann; Reiko Oda; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan

Efficient Ca(2+)-switched fluorescent sensors, where fluorescence output is governed by a light-activated ion-gated electron transfer pathway, can be obtained on combining BODIPY chromophores with a readily oxidized biocompatible and selective BAPTA receptor. Herein we report the synthesis and studies of two such conjugates, which vary in the nature of the spacer separating the two electroactive components, namely none (1) or phenyl (2). Single crystal X-ray crystallography and molecular modelling structures and calculations give information on molecular and electronic structure, while steady-state fluorescence experiments show high Ca(2+)-induced fluorescence enhancement factors of 122 and 23 and K(d) values of 0.50 μM and 0.13 μM for 1 and 2, respectively. Notably, studies of the ultrafast photoinduced processes (through transient absorption spectroscopy) give access to electron transfer dynamics in pseudo-physiological media as well as in a polar non-protic solvent and information about the fate of the excited molecules in the presence and absence of calcium. In water, electron transfer rates as high as 3.3 × 10(12) s(−1) and 8.3 × 10(11) s(−1) are measured for the ion-free, directly connected conjugate and the variant incorporating a phenyl spacer, respectively. This electron transfer pathway is efficiently blocked by the presence of an ion, restoring fluorescence.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Impact of water on the cis-trans photoisomerization of hydroxychalcones.

Yoann Leydet; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Sergey A. Denisov; João C. Lima; A. Jorge Parola; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Fernando Pina

The photochromism of a 2-hydroxychalcone has been studied in CH3CN and H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), as well as in analogous deuterated solvents using steady-state (UV-vis absorption, (1)H and (13)C NMR) and time-resolved (ultrafast transient absorption and nanosecond flow flash photolysis) spectroscopies. Whereas the irradiation of trans-chalcone (Ct) under neutral pH conditions leads to the formation of the same final chromene derivative (B) in both media, two distinct photochemical mechanisms are proposed in agreement with thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the chemical reaction network at the ground state. Following light excitation, the first steps are identical in acetonitrile and aqueous solution: the Franck-Condon excited state rapidly populates the trans-chalcone singlet excited state (1)Ct* (LE), which evolves into a twisted state (1)P*. This excited state is directly responsible for the photochemistry in acetonitrile in the nanosecond time scale (16 ns) leading to the formation of cis-chalcone (Cc) through a simple isomerization process. The resulting cis-chalcone evolves into the chromene B through a tautomerization process in the ground state (τ = 10 ms). Unlike in acetonitrile, in H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), the P* state becomes unstable and evolves into a new state attributed to the tautomer (1)Q*. This state directly evolves into B in one photochemical step through a consecutive ultrafast tautomerization process followed by electrocyclization. This last case represents a new hypothesis in the photochromism of 2-hydroxychalcone derivatives.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2009

Photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer in a 2,7-diaminofluorene chromophore decorated with two benzophenone subunits

Ming Jin; Jean-Pierre Malval; Fabrice Morlet-Savary; Hélène Chaumeil; Albert Defoin; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas

An extensive photophysical analysis of a 2,7-bis-(N-4-methoxyphenyl-N-phenylamino)fluorene derivative covalently linked with two benzophenone moieties is presented. A systematic comparison with a model chromophore without benzophenone was performed. For both chromophores, the electronic properties of the ground states are completely equivalent indicating that benzophenone subunits do not exhibit any electronic interaction with the diaminofluorene core. However, at the singlet excited state, the presence of benzophenones induces the occurrence of additional non-radiative de-excitation pathways. Even the intersystem crossing rate is significantly increased with respect to that of the model one. A photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer (PIET) from diaminofluorene to benzophenone subunits is proposed as the most efficient quenching process. At low polar solvent, the emission of an exciplex confirms the PIET process and the occurrence of a partial charge separation between donor and acceptor parts.


ChemPhysChem | 2014

Artificial Iono‐ and Photosensitive Membranes Based on an Amphiphilic Aza‐Crown‐Substituted Hemicyanine

Pinar Batat; Christine Grauby-Heywang; Sophiya Selektor; Daria Silantyeva; V. V. Arslanov; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Gediminas Jonusauskas

Artificial iono- and photosensitive membranes based on an amphiphilic aza-crown-substituted hemicyanine are assembled on liquid and solid supports and their aggregation behaviour, which is influenced by the binding of metal cations and surface density, is studied. The photoinduced charge-transfer properties of an analogous non-amphiphilic hemicyanine in solution are also demonstrated. An asymmetric sandwich dimer model is proposed and existence of such dimers in solution is evidenced by transient absorption and fluorescence anisotropy experiments. Changes in absorption and emission spectra, as well as compression isotherms of the amphiphile observed in the presence of cations, are discussed in terms of 2D molecular reorganisation. Surface-pressure-controlled reversible excimer formation at the air-water interphase and excimer-type emission of Langmuir-Blodgett films in the presence of cations are demonstrated and are discussed on the basis of fibre-optic fluorimetry and fluorescence microscopy results.


ChemPhysChem | 2011

Photomodulation of the Magnetisation of Co Nanocrystals Decorated with Rhodamine B

Miguel Comesaña-Hermo; Robert Estivill; Diana Ciuculescu; Catherine Amiens; M. Farle; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Pierre Lecante; Catherine Tardin; Serge Mazères

We demonstrated fast terahertz spectral computed tomography by using real-time line projection of a terahertz beam. Two types of cross-sectional images of continuously rotating samples have been measured in only a few seconds. From temporal data, a peak-to-peak sinogram and cross sections have been reconstructed using a filtered backprojection algorithm. Using fast Fourier transform from temporal data, spectral cross sections of the sample have been obtained


Chemical Communications | 2011

Facile functionalization of a fully fluorescent perfluorophenyl BODIPY: photostable thiol and amine conjugates

Guillaume Vives; Carlo Giansante; Robin Bofinger; Guillaume Raffy; André Del Guerzo; Brice Kauffmann; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2011

C3-triiodocyclotriveratrylene as a key intermediate to fluorescent probes: application to selective choline recognition.

Lisa Peyrard; Sabine Chierici; Sandra Pinet; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Noël Pinaud; Pierre Meyrand; Isabelle Gosse

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Sarah Cadet

University of Bordeaux

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Jean-Marc Vincent

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Vives

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Robin Bofinger

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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