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Dive into the research topics where Riccardo Salvio is active.

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Featured researches published by Riccardo Salvio.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009

The Formation of Large-Area Conducting Graphene-Like Platelets

Riccardo Salvio; Sven O. Krabbenborg; W.J.M. Naber; Aldrik H. Velders; David N. Reinhoudt; Wilfred G. van der Wiel

The treatment of a suspension of graphite oxide (GO) with sodium azide leads to a material that, after reduction, features amino groups at the top and bottom of the sheets. These groups react through microcontact printing with an isothiocyanate monolayer on a silicon oxide substrate to form covalent bonds that strongly attach to the particles on the surface. With ultrasonication it is possible to obtain exfoliation of the sheets that are not covalently bound to the surface leaving single-layer platelets attached to the substrate. The azido derivative can be also used to functionalize the graphene oxide with long alkylic chains through a click chemistry approach. This functionalization results in the exfoliation of this material in dimethylformamide. The novel materials were fully characterized by different techniques including IR spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM), X-Ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and solid state NMR spectroscopy. The material with amino groups, after the reduction step, is conductive with a resistivity only approximately seven times larger than that of unprocessed graphite. This implies that after reduction of the GO, the conjugated sp2 network is largely restored. We consider this to be an important step towards a chemical approach for forming conducting large-area platelet films of single-layer graphene.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Nanostructure Based on Polymer Brushes for Efficient Heterogeneous Catalysis in Microreactors

Francesca Costantini; Wojciech P. Bula; Riccardo Salvio; Jurriaan Huskens; Han Gardeniers; David N. Reinhoudt; Willem Verboom

PGMA polymer brushes are successfully grown on the inner wall of a microreactor to give a nanostructure. The oxirane groups of the brushes are used for the anchoring of a catalyst. The utility of the combination of catalyst-functionalized brushes and a microreactor is clearly demonstrated for the TBD-catalyzed Knoevenagel condensation reaction of benzaldehyde and malononitrile.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012

Upper Rim Guanidinocalix[4]arenes as Artificial Phosphodiesterases

Laura Baldini; Roberta Cacciapaglia; Alessandro Casnati; Luigi Mandolini; Riccardo Salvio; Francesco Sansone; Rocco Ungaro

Calix[4]arene derivatives, blocked in the cone conformation and functionalized with two to four guanidinium units at the upper rim were synthesized and investigated as catalysts in the cleavage of the RNA model compound 2-hydroxypropyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate. When compared with the behavior of a monofunctional model compound, the catalytic superiority of the calix[4]arene derivatives points to a high level of cooperation between catalytic groups. Combination of acidity measurements with the pH dependence of catalytic rates unequivocally shows that a necessary requisite for effective catalysis is the simultaneous presence, on the same molecular framework, of a neutral guanidine acting as a general base and a protonated guanidine acting as an electrophilic activator. The additional guanidinium (guanidine) group in the diprotonated (monoprotonated) trifunctional calix[4]arene acts as a more or less innocent spectator. This is not the case with the tetrasubstituted calix[4]arene, whose mono-, di-, and triprotonated forms are slightly less effective than the corresponding di- and triguanidinocalix[4]arene derivatives, most likely on account of a steric interference with HPNP caused by overcrowding.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Quinine‐Catalyzed Asymmetric Synthesis of 2,2′‐Binaphthol‐Type Biaryls under Mild Reaction Conditions

Mauro Moliterno; Riccardo Cari; Antonio Puglisi; Achille Antenucci; Céline Sperandio; Erica Moretti; Antonio Di Sabato; Riccardo Salvio; Marco Bella

Simple quinine as an organocatalyst mediates the addition of various naphthols to halogenated quinones to afford non-C2 -symmetrical, axially chiral biaryl products, which are promising compounds as chiral ligands and organocatalysts. The rotational barrier required to have two distinct atropisomers has been evaluated in the products generated from the addition of naphthols to various quinones by means of DFT calculations and HPLC. The use of halogenated quinones as reagents was necessary to have configurationally stable enantiomeric products which can be obtained in good yield and stereoselectivity. These compounds have also been prepared in gram quantities and recrystallized to near enantiopurity.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011

General base-guanidinium cooperation in bifunctional artificial phosphodiesterases.

Riccardo Salvio; Roberta Cacciapaglia; Luigi Mandolini

Artificial phosphodiesterases that combine a guanidinium unit with a general base connected by a m-xylylene linker catalyze the transesterification of the RNA model compound 2-hydroxypropyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate (HPNP). The bifunctional catalysts presented in this work show varying extents of cooperation between catalytic units and a rate enhancement of 4 × 10(4) in the most favorable case.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Guanidine-guanidinium cooperation in bifunctional artificial phosphodiesterases based on diphenylmethane spacers; gem-dialkyl effect on catalytic efficiency.

Riccardo Salvio; Luigi Mandolini; Claudia Savelli

Diphenylmethane derivatives 1-3, decorated with two guanidine units, are effective catalysts of HPNP transesterification. Substitution of the methylene group of the parent diphenylmethane spacer with cyclohexylidene and adamantylidene moieties enhances catalytic efficency, with gem-dialkyl effect accelerations of 4.5 and 9.1, respectively. Activation parameters and DFT calculations of the rotational barriers around the C-Ar bonds indicate that a major contribution to the driving force for enhanced catalysis is entropic in nature.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

The guanidinium unit in the catalysis of phosphoryl transfer reactions: from molecular spacers to nanostructured supports.

Riccardo Salvio

Examples of guanidinium-based artificial phosphodiesterases are illustrated in this review article. A wide set of collected catalytic systems are presented, from the early examples to the most recent developments of the use of this unit in the design of supramolecular catalysts. Special attention is dedicated to illustrate the operating catalytic mechanism and the role of guanidine/ium units in the catalysis. One or more of these units can act by themselves or in conjunction with other active units. The analogy with the mechanism of enzymatic systems is presented and discussed. In the last part of this overview, recent examples of guanidinophosphodiesterases based on nanostructured supports are reported, namely gold-monolayer-protected clusters and polymer brushes grafted to silica nanoparticles. The issue of the dependence of the catalytic performance on the preorganization of the spacer is tackled and discussed in terms of effective molarity, a parameter that can be taken as a quantitative measurement of this preorganization for both conventional molecular linker and nanosized supports.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Ribonuclease Activity of an Artificial Catalyst That Combines a Ligated CuII Ion and a Guanidinium Group at the Upper Rim of a cone-Calix[4]arene Platform

Riccardo Salvio; Stefano Volpi; Roberta Cacciapaglia; Alessandro Casnati; Luigi Mandolini; Francesco Sansone

A cone-calix[4]arene derivative, featuring a guanidinium group and a Cu(II) ion ligated to a 1,4,7-triazacyclononane (TACN) ligand at the 1,3-distal positions of the upper rim, effectively catalyzes the cleavage of 2-hydroxypropyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate (HPNP) and a number of diribonucleoside 3,5-monophosphates (NpN). Kinetic and potentiometric measurements support the operation of a general-base/general-acid mechanism and demonstrate that the hydroxo form of the ligated Cu(II) ion is the sole catalytically active species. Rate enhancements relative to the background hydrolysis reaction at 1 mM catalyst concentration are 6 × 10(5)-fold for HPNP and cluster around 10(7)-fold with the most favorable catalyst-NpN combinations.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015

Guanidine-Based Polymer Brushes Grafted onto Silica Nanoparticles as Efficient Artificial Phosphodiesterases

Claudia Savelli; Riccardo Salvio

Polymer brushes grafted to the surface of silica nanoparticles were fabricated by atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) and investigated as catalysts in the cleavage of phosphodiesters. The surfaces of silica nanoparticles were functionalized with an ATRP initiator. Surface-initiated ATRP reactions, in varying proportions, of a methacrylate moiety functionalized with a phenylguanidine moiety and an inert hydrophilic methacrylate species afforded hybrid nanoparticles that were characterized with potentiometric titrations, thermogravimetric analysis, and SEM. The activity of the hybrid nanoparticles was tested in the transesterification of the RNA model compound 2-hydroxypropyl para-nitrophenylphosphate (HPNP) and diribonucleoside monophosphates. A high catalytic efficiency and a remarkable effective molarity, thus overcoming the effective molarities previously observed for comparable systems, indicate the existence of an effective cooperation of the guanidine/guanidinium units and a high level of preorganization in the nanostructure. The investigated system also exhibits a marked and unprecedented selectivity for the diribonucleoside sequence CpA. The results presented open up the way for a novel and straightforward strategy for the preparation of supramolecular catalysts.


Supramolecular Chemistry | 2013

Reactivity of carbonyl and phosphoryl groups at calixarenes

Roberta Cacciapaglia; Stefano Di Stefano; Luigi Mandolini; Riccardo Salvio

Examples of reactivity of carbonyl and phosphoryl compounds controlled by calixarenes are illustrated in this review article. The molecular framework of calixarenes has been widely used as a versatile molecular platform for the dynamic arrangement of one or more structural units working as recognition and/or catalytic sites, in many cases with considerable levels of cooperation. The calixarene cavity itself has also been involved as a recognition unit for inclusion of the substrate or of part-structures of the substrate. Unique reactivity patterns of carbonyl or phosphoryl functional groups organised at the upper or lower rim of calixarenes will also be illustrated.

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Luigi Mandolini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Bella

Sapienza University of Rome

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Achille Antenucci

Sapienza University of Rome

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Antonio Puglisi

Sapienza University of Rome

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